No edit summary Tag: Reverted |
Reverted edits by Robbiezomb2000 (talk) to last revision by Toffa on TV Tag: Rollback |
||
Line 1:
|aka = <i>Chapter Four: Series 1</i>
|title1 = Season 53 - 2019|doctor = [[Fifteenth Doctor]]|executive_producers = [[Adrian Hodges]]
Line 15:
[[Colin Wratten]]
[[Matthew Bird]]|end_date = [[25 December (releases)|25 December]] [[2019]]|country_emoji = United Kingdom}}
{{Realworld}}
'''Season 53''' of [[Doctor Who (TV Series)|Doctor Who]], ''also known as'' '''Series 1''' premiered in January 2019 and continued right through to December with its serials interspersed throughout the year. It featured [[Adjoa Andoh]] as [[Fifteenth Doctor|The Doctor]] and [[Alex Jennings]] as [[Bertie Reynolds]].
This was the first to have [[Adrian Hodges]] as the
This was the last season to feature [[Adjoa Andoh]] as [[Fifteenth Doctor|The Doctor]].
Line 26 ⟶ 28:
Executive Producer [[Adrian Hodges]] stepped in as new showrunner, to whom the BBC had entrusted this season of Doctor Who to. [[Jane Espenson]], who was made acting showrunner following [[Ronald D. Moore]]'s firing, remained on solely as an executive producer alongside Hodges and [[Gaynor Holmes]].
There was a complete change in co-executive producers under Hodges' new regime and following the firing of some of those during production of Season 52. The four new co-execs were [[Douglas Aarniokoski]] who had worked on various
=== New Format ===
|
Revision as of 20:11, 27 July 2023
The following article is written from an Out of Universe perspective. |
Season 53 of Doctor Who, also known as Series 1 premiered in January 2019 and continued right through to December with its serials interspersed throughout the year. It featured Adjoa Andoh as The Doctor and Alex Jennings as Bertie Reynolds.
This was the first to have Adrian Hodges as the showrunner.
This was the last season to feature Adjoa Andoh as The Doctor.
Overview
Production Team
Executive Producer Adrian Hodges stepped in as new showrunner, to whom the BBC had entrusted this season of Doctor Who to. Jane Espenson, who was made acting showrunner following Ronald D. Moore's firing, remained on solely as an executive producer alongside Hodges and Gaynor Holmes.
There was a complete change in co-executive producers under Hodges' new regime and following the firing of some of those during production of Season 52. The four new co-execs were Douglas Aarniokoski who had worked on various Star Trek series, Stephen McDonogh who previously worked with Hodges on The Musketeers, Simon Tyrrell, a recurring writer of the 2008 adaptation of Survivors and Carissa Hope Lynch, script editor of Stan Lee's Lucky Man and Cold Feet. For the first time, the vast majority of the Co-Execs didn't write a single episode of the season and instead were there to devise the creative overall vision for the series with Hodges.
New Format
Together with the BBC, Hodges came up with an action plan to get the viewing figures for Doctor Who back up, and they decided to try and make Doctor Who proper event television. This meant Season 53 had some of the most experimental scheduling ever seen on the show.
The idea was for each serial to air throughout the entire calendar year. With most serials being two-parters, this meant that Doctor Who was on for just two weeks every couple of months, which each serial being promoted with its own poster, trailer etc, as kind of its own mini-series, in order to make each serial seem like its own event, and so more people tune in, instead of just 12 continuous weeks of Doctor Who.
The BBC commissioned 13 episodes of Doctor Who to be produced, with the first 10 being split into 5 different two-part serials, and the final three making up the final three-part serial, which was to air over the Christmas period and be Adjoa Andoh’s regeneration story. The episode running time was down from 60 minutes to 50 minutes to accommodate the format change and behind the scenes issues.
In addition, the show moved from 60-minute episodes to a shorter, and more cost-effective, 50-minute episode format, placing the season at 650 minutes, as opposed to 780 minutes.
A New Chapter
The biggest change for the season was that it wasn’t Series 5 but rather Series 1, this time of Chapter Five, as Espenson and Hodges made the decision to begin Chapter Five, in an attempt to, not just, shake off the sour image of Chapter Four’s last two series, but also to refresh the series and rebrand. However, this decision was quite rushed, only being made about a month before the broadcast of the Doomsday Cannon, and only announcement a fortnight before.
Therefore, things like the title sequence stayed the same, with only minor changes. One of those such changes was the new Chapter Five logo, which was only revealed during the broadcast of the episode – and all the promotion, trailers and posters used the Chapter Four logo. In addition, the footage in the title sequence, which had previously been from old Doctor Who episodes, was swapped out for new footage featured in the first three stories from Season 53. Bear McCreary left the show and was replaced by Jeff Russo, who arranged a new version of the Doctor Who theme.
Teasing the New Doctor
In order to build up hype, and to accommodate the new schedule, whereby Season 54 would begin airing 1 week after the end of Season 53, for the first time since 2000, the BBC announced who the new Doctor would be beforehand, in a live show following the conclusion of the fourth serial, on 7 September.
New Companions
Obviously, a new companion was created for this season, as all three of the Fifteenth Doctor’s previous companions departed in the Season 52 finale. Hodges cast Shakesperian actor, Alex Jennings, to play Bertie Reynolds. In addition, Sophie Rundle was cast in a recurring capacity as Bertie’s daughter, Sam.
Big Changes
Other changes included, for a start, the way Doctor Who was referred to. The Doctor Who marketing team decided calling it, publicly, ‘Chapter Five’ would be confusing to the public, so they decided to just have the season referred to as ‘Doctor Who: Series 1’ (with it’s full title being ‘Chapter Five: Series 1’. Therefore, the show was listed on BBC iPlayer for example as five separate shows and the seasons would have been in the style of ‘Doctor Who – Chapter One: Series 1’ etc, through to ‘Doctor Who – Chapter Four: Series 4’, essentially abolishing the long-held larger numbers of Doctor Who seasons. However, Doctor Who – Chapter Five was just listed on iPlayer as simply ‘Doctor Who’, with Season 53 as it’s first season.
The final large change to the show was the addition of a new TARDIS interior and exterior design, replacing the exterior which had been in use in 2010 and the interior since 2013. The new interior was far larger and more cathedral-like, while also using a state-of-the-art way of building sets out of 3D printed sculpted metal.
The exterior of the set, upon Hodges' request, returned far more to the look of the original Met Box, including the fact that it was thinned down to its original size, from the last few designs more ‘fat’ versions.
Cast
Regular
Recurring
- The Rogue - David Thewlis
- Sam Reynolds - Sophie Rundle
- Wilson - Bradley Gardner
- Michael Apperley - Hugh Quarshie
- The Toymaker - David Bailie
Guest
- Meena Patel - Balvinder Sopal
- Malhotra - Kerri McLean
- Ananta - Gina Gangar
- Kisling - Gbemisola Ikumelo
- Uthman - Nick Mohammed
- Gilead - Maya Sansa
- Emunah - Tosh Wanogho-Maud
- Patrobus - David Westhead
- Aradhana - Amie Francis
- Bhatt - Natasha Magigi
- Vijay - Sam Otto
- DI Curtis - Fiona Dolman
- DS Pike - John Stahl
- Tunstuoma - David Shields
- Hugh Waynethorpe - Mark Frost
- Viv Kalanak - Jaye Griffiths
- Martin Snupps - Hugh Sachs
- Jason Rowland-Morris - Nathan Wright
- Wilson - Bradley Gardner
- Stacey - Bronagh Waugh
- Jimmy - Luke Pierre
- Dave - Jack Deam
- Rolf - John Burton
- Sonia - Nicola Stephenson
- Penny - Nancy Carroll
- Andrew Marr as himself
- Ed Balls as himself
- Ian Hislop as himself
- Paul Merton as himself
- Emily Davison - Carey Mulligan
- Mrs Pankhurst - Jacqueline King
- The King - Stuart Bowman
- Queen Mary - Jennifer Hennessy
- Mrs Harris - Rula Lenska
- Mrs Andrews - Barbara Knox
- Journalist - Miriam Lucia
- Voice of the Memporhians - Nicholas Briggs
- Jake Willis - Warren Brown
- Adam Lang - Matthew McNulty
- Gabriela Camara - Joana Borja
- Suki Cheng - Molly Harris
- Jamila Velez - Gabriela Toloi
- Joyce - Soo Drouet
- Jason Rowland-Morris - Nathan Wright
- Zach Olson - Tristan de Beer
- Aramu - Thapelo Maropefela
- Voice of the Nestene Consciousness - Nicholas Briggs
- Martha - Stephanie Davis
- Deborah - Rita Simons
- Andy - Richard Blackwood
- Jeremy - Tony Hirst
- Donald - Danny Mac
- Edith - Georgia Slowe
- Bill - Kai Owen
- Rolf - Dan Tetsell
- Oswald Moseley - Sam Claflin
- Old Man Povey - Clive Russell
- Customers - Sean Connolly, Beth Fitzgerald, Robyn Lewis, Emma Kay
- Mrs Pocket - Pauline Collins
- Daisy Barnbary - Antonia Bernath
- Georgia Winchester - Neve McIntosh
- Timothy Dean - Adrian Rawlins
- Harrison Darnley - David Shields
- Martin Snupps - Hugh Sachs
- Jason Rowland-Morris - Nathan Wright
- Police Officer - Richard Price
- Huw Edwards as himself
- Ricky Boleto as himself
- Emily Maitlis as herself
- Suzie - Chloe Pirrie
- Dave - Steve Speirs
- The Doktor - Janusz Gajos
- The Doctor - Ace Bhatti
Television Stories
Main Season
Serial | # | Title | Writer | Director | Air Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | The Doomsday Cannon | Adrian Hodges | Andy Hay | 1 January 2019 |
2 | 6 January 2019 | ||||
2 | 3 | Homeland | David Hare | Mick Jackson | 21 April 2019 |
4 | 28 April 2019 | ||||
3 | 5 | The Long Struggle | Simon Tyrrell | Aisling Walsh | 26 May 2019 |
6 | 2 June 2019 | ||||
4 | 7 | Praxeus | Pete McTighe | Jamie Magnus Stone | 25 August 2019 |
8 | Pete McTighe & Adrian Hodges | 1 September 2019 | |||
5 | 9 | The March of Evil | Simon Allen | Anthony Byrne | 3 November 2019 |
10 | 10 November 2019 | ||||
6 | 11 | Her Final Stand | Adrian Hodges | Lee Haven Jones | 15 December 2019 |
12 | 22 December 2019 | ||||
13 | 25 December 2019 |
Production
Crew
To be added.
Shooting Blocks
Block | Serial | Director | Producer | DOP | Editor |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1/A | Andy Hay | Ella Kelly | Vanessa Whyte | Colin Monie |
2 | 1/B | Mick Jackson | Ivan Strasburg | Justine Wright | |
3 | 1/C | Aisling Walsh | Colin Wratten | Lukas Strebel | Alex Mackie |
4 | 1/D | Jamie Magnus Stone | Catherine Goldschmidt | Rebecca Trotman | |
5 | 1/E | Anthony Byrne | Matthew Bird | Si Bell | Paul Knight |
6 | 1/F | Lee Haven Jones | Luke Bryant | Joel Skinner |
Filming
To be added.
Aliens and Enemies
- The Gaians
- The Flood
- The Silurians
- The Memporhians
- Suki Cheng
- The Nestene
- The British Union of Fascists
- The Rogue
- The Toymaker
Viewing Figures
No. | Title | Official BARB Figures (7-day) | Official BARB Figures (28-day) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Consolidated (m) | Weekly Rank | Consolidated (m) | Weekly Rank | ||
1 | The Doomsday Cannon, Part One | 7.51 | 11 | 8.05 | 8 |
2 | The Doomsday Cannon, Part Two | 7.12 | 15 | 7.71 | 11 |
3 | Homeland, Part One | 7.86 | 3 | 8.33 | 3 |
4 | Homeland, Part Two | 7.02 | 4 | 7.59 | 4 |
5 | The Long Struggle, Part One | 6.41 | 6 | 6.92 | 3 |
6 | The Long Struggle, Part Two | 6.16 | 16 | 6.70 | 13 |
7 | Praxeus, Part One | 6.56 | 2 | 7.14 | 2 |
8 | Praxeus, Part Two | 6.31 | 5 | 6.77 | 6 |
9 | The March of Evil, Part One | 5.98 | 22 | 6.50 | 22 |
10 | The March of Evil, Part Two | 5.42 | 25 | 6.03 | 22 |
11 | Her Final Stand, Part One | 5.55 | 17 | 6.16 | 10 |
12 | Her Final Stand, Part Two | 6.51 | 8 | 7.18 | 4 |
13 | Her Final Stand, Part Three | 7.02 | 7 | 7.79 | 4 |
Series Average | 6.14 | 7.14 |
Physical Media
To be added.