When A Nerd Turns Manic

**Warning:Nerd Alert**

We have heard rumours before-some missing Doctor Who episodes have been miraculously re-discovered. Sometimes they are rumours. Sometimes they are hoaxes, although how anyone can be so evil is beyond me.

You may have to humour me a little, but to Whovian geeks it is a big deal.

Then a newspaper reported that over 100-yes 100- long-lost episodes had been found in Ethiopia. It sounded like our Nag Hammadi watershed moment. But experience has taught us to take things with a pinch of salt.  But the excitement was building.

Then came an announcement from the BBC: several missing episodes had been discovered, although the number claimed wasn’t accurate.

You had to feel for my wife, Jen.

Since the over 100 claim, I had been regaling her with the myths concerning the missing 106 episodes. How the BBC in their wisdom had wiped or destroyed many of the early stories featuring the first two Doctors, and ever since the rise of videos and dvds they had been searching high and low to reclaim copies. How some episodes have turned up on church fairs and in garages, and how some were located in the dust gathering vaults of overseas broadcasters.

In 1991 every episode of The Tomb Of the Cybermen, part of the Who Holy Grail, was found in Hong Kong. Finding a story in its entirety is fantastic, as it tends to be just the odd episode of missing stories that turn up, and even then it is a rare find.

There is a DVD, fittingly entitled Lost In Time, that gathers together various isolated episodes from stories that we have had to accept will never exist in their totality again.

Lostintime

Having initially read the ‘over 100 episodes’ claim, I admit that I may have casually mentioned this once or twice in conversation. I know I definitely spotted Jen’s eyes roll a couple of times. But I had to remind myself nothing had been confirmed officially. Try to keep a lid on it.

Being a long time fan of this great British instituion, my favourite Doctor was always the one who held the mantle when I was a kid-that great eccentric Tom Baker whose scalf was a sharp reminder to knitters everywhere to not get carried away.

tom_baker_scarf

Do you remember him Jen? Do you want a jelly baby?

Maybe not.

These are the old ‘classic’ Doctor Who stories, before they were reinvented with the benefit of high budget special effects and made into short, fast paced stories for today’s generation of kids who don’t have the attention span to sit and watch six or seven episode stories. Back in those days I didn’t think there had ever been any other Doctors-the Doctor was Tom Baker. Who the hell had heard of someone regenerating?

Wasn’t that something that worms did?

I can still recall being knelt up in front of the tv on the Saturday that the Doctor fell from that dish at Jodrell Bank, and turned into Peter Davidson. Emitting a ten year old’s confused and high pitched  “Who is that?” No pun intended.

I shared such stories with Jen. Cue deep sighs and rolling of eyes. She is a poet and she doesn’t want to know it.

For the sake of my marriage I kept things to a minimum. Tried not to speculate. No news is good news.

Then a BBC spokesman played things down, saying  the 100 episodes in Ethiopia claim was ‘inaccurate’. But when asked if there were some episodes to be announced at a forthcoming press conference, admitted “There is a connection.”

Oh you enigmatic little…..

What the hell did that actually mean- inaccurate, but a connection. I couldn’t contain myself.

Jen they have found some new ones! Or rather new old ones! But if it’s not 100, how many? 90? Could we dare to dream, Jen, could we? Why couldn’t they just tell us which ones? Or was it just the country that was innacurate and not the figure? Why are you doing that thing again with your eyes Jen?

A press conference was scheduled for the beginning of the week-as the day approached my wife was conspicuous by her absence. The imagination went into overdrive-would they be Hartnell or Troughton stories? Great though the first Doctor was, the second Troughton is a close second to Baker as my favourite. Clips like this, featuring both Doctors so not to give the game away, added to the anticipation:

.

Unbelievably, no time was given as when the conference was taking place, so I intended to arm myself with the tv remote for teletext and my Ipad  for Google search. I would have preferred a ‘breaking news flash’.

But then we were told by the BBC that they were ‘not quite ready’ and the press conference had been put back towards the end of the week. Not quite ready? In what way? And end of the week was too vague. When end of the week?

And then, came the comment

We want everything to be ready for this announcement to excite fans so they will have to wait a few days longer. They have been waiting nearly 50 years for this , so a

couple

of

days

shouldn’t

make

any

difference.”

I tried to rip open my cushions with my teeth. My dog scarpered upstairs, and Jen blocked my calls.

Somewhere, in the dark BBC corridors of power, a Machiavellian tyrant was rubbing his hands and chuckling ‘ that jackdaw guy will be ripping out his feathers!’

News then leaked that old Doctor’s companions Frazer Hines and Deborah Watling had been invited to help make the announcement, which indicated that the found episodes would indeed be from the Troughton period, as this was the Doctor that they had both worked with.

Finally, finally, the date of the reveal in which the episodes would be announced, and a couple of them screened, was given as Thursday, betwen 3.30pm and 7.00pm.

What the hell? A three and half hour window? Why could they not just give the damn time? Was I going to have to trawl the internet again for hours? Just how long was they going to string this out for?

Millie’s toy Winnie the Pooh was launched into the kitchen.

I made a mental note for when the time came: don’t create a scene while the kids are eating…keep quiet while Jen is reading. Time passed by. Several googles of ‘Doctor Who episodes found‘ was returning nothing but old news.

I boiled in silent frustration. The night wore on with nothing. Then:

The conference had been held, the episodes revealed but, the BBC had

imposed

a

news

embargo

until

midnight

tonight.

“WHAT THE FUCKING HELL ARE THEY PLAYING AT??!!!!”

I apologise now for the language as I apologised then. Jen almost scalded herself with her cup of tea, the dog briefly levitated. Thankfully, thankfully, the kids didn’t wake.

I responded to Jen’s shrieked questions with a barrage of incoherent quick-fire staccato garble.

Someone who pulls the strings was really getting off on this.

But, this is the best bit- screw you BBC, this is the 21st Century! News leaked out through Twitter and Facebook. Your cold war capers don’t work anymore.

There were new episodes, Patrick Troughton ones too! There were nine, okay, not 100 as promised by that damn second rate journalist, but I think the confusion was that the amount of missing episodes in total numbered 106. But anyhow,new episodes, episodes long written off as lost to us, had been recovered. Regenerated even, from a tv station in Nigeria.

Episodes 1,2,4,5, and 6 of the six part story The Enemy Of The World was now complete as there was already episode 3 in the archives. And now the six part The Web Of Fear was missing only episode 3. As the audio soundtracks to all the Doctor Who stories exist, this last story would no doubt be released with the missing episode replaced by an animated one, as had been done with other stories that were missing just the odd episode.

I knew Jen was familiar with this trailer for a more modern Doctor Who story:

(clip)

so in order to try and sell her a bit of enthusiasm for The Web Of Fear, I replaced the excitedly given line

“Dinosaurs, on a spaceship!” with

“Yetis,  on the underground !”

yetib

She looked, then said “They look like fluffy teddy bears gone wrong.”

Deep breaths. Forget you heard it. Put the heavy PC down.

Never mind. I am already looking forward to my Second Doctor Night.

And the number of missing episodes now has fallen from 106 to 97.

There must be more out there. We have to keep looking

Jen stop doing that, you look like Marty Feldman.

marty

11 thoughts on “When A Nerd Turns Manic

  1. I have just chuckled my way through this post with my Husband asking what I was laughing at and me saying he could read it once I’ve finished. As soon as I finished he whipped the lap top off me to have a swatch, and guess what?

    As a fellow Doctor Who nerd he couldn’t understand why I was laughing and thinks all your actions and reactions are totally rational for any grown-up – I joined with Jen in rolling my eyes!

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  2. Amazing news!! Thanks for this play-by-play. I started watching Doctor Who ages ago when it wasn’t considered “cool.” My dad and I watched it on Sunday nights on PBS. Tom Baker was my “Doctor.” And Elisabeth Sladen was the companion for a while. I also loved Louise Jameson as Leela. I was so excited to see Elisabeth Sladen on the revamped Doctor Who (series three). I was sorry though when she passed away.

    My niece and nephew now watch Doctor Who. Matt Smith is their “Doctor.” (Though not for much longer.) I’m glad to see another generation of Whovians. But I can’t get them to watch the old episodes. They see them as “cheesy.” I can barely get them to watch the Christopher Eccleston episodes!

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    • I grew up with the two Bakers and Davidson. I have to admit I don’t know about the Seventh Doctor as I abandoned him. I just didn’t like McCoy, and when I heard Bonnie Langford was joining (I’ll squeem and squeem and squeem) it was the last straw. I should revisit him as an adult and see what I think.
      I have all the old-the ones not missing!!- stories on DVD, I like Pertwee’s flamboyance and sarcasm, Hartnell could be a little unsettling, and I have good memories of watching Davidson, but it has always been Tom Baker and Troughton for me. Ecclestone onwards, well it’s a whole new show, but I like the connections to the past that they make. Especially with the big one coming up, this being the 50th anniversary year. Tennant and Smith together.
      I could now go into favourite companions, but I fear Jen is contemplating divorce.

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  3. Yes. What WERE they playing at, leaving loyal fans perched on the edges of their recliners? I have only seen a few Dr. Who episodes but look forward to knowing that when I finally sit down to enjoy the series, there will be nine more for me to see!

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  4. Damn. I just wrote a whole long comment, only to try to post and be told the comment couldn’t be posted. Perhaps because mindfulmagpie and I were trying to post at the exact same time?

    Well, I really enjoyed your recount of the BIG announcement buildup. And I am also a Doctor Who fan, though a more recent convert because of being located in the US. And I was able to visit the Doctor Who Experience in Cardiff in August and LOVED it.

    That’s about the sum of my “lost” comment. Talk about irony.

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    • I have been there-a long comment, or message via FB, that gets lost, and then I no longer have the will to repeat it! I like to think you and Magpie were duelling on Jackdaw 🙂
      I have yet to visit Cardiff-I know my kids would love it as they are big fans of ‘modern’ Doctor Who. My late night ‘classic’ Who tends to be solitary vigils. And Jen-don’t go there.
      Thank you for your re-cap 🙂

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