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    Originally posted by Blencathra View Post
    EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee indeed! So exciting!!!

    There was more in that trailer than the one released earlier today.
    Ditto for the eeeeeeeeeeeeeeee! Great trailer.
    sigpic

    Comment


      The Day of the Doctor Extended Trailer Breakdown.

      http://blogtorwho.blogspot.co.uk/201...trailer_9.html

      Take a closer look at the pictures on the walls.

      Comment


        Originally posted by Blencathra View Post
        The Day of the Doctor Extended Trailer Breakdown.

        http://blogtorwho.blogspot.co.uk/201...trailer_9.html

        Take a closer look at the pictures on the walls.
        Which walls are we looking at?

        Comment


          Originally posted by Teddybrown View Post
          Which walls are we looking at?
          Here: http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-Rd-w-Tvve5...t+21.24.49.png

          and here:
          http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-v6d1GX3OzV...t+21.26.39.png

          THE TARDIS DATA CORE - Encyclopaedia and reference site covering DOCTOR WHO, K-9 AND COMPANY, TORCHWOOD, THE SARAH JANE ADVENTURES,
          K-9, CLASS and much more...

          Comment


            okay, I blew them up, and I'm not able to identify all of them
            Spoiler:
            sigpic

            Comment


              Originally posted by Teddybrown View Post
              Spoiler:
              And what's up with the two Kate Stewarts?
              Spoiler:
              Presumably it's either a coincidentally similar looking colleague or perhaps
              Spoiler:
              a Zygon

              Comment


                Originally posted by Nolamom View Post
                okay, I blew them up, and I'm not able to identify all of them
                Spoiler:
                In those pics I can

                Spoiler:
                see Ace, Kamelion & Susan.

                and in this one I can see Sarah Jane, Leela and Romana I







                Tweet last night from DW Casting Director Andy Pryor (@pryorandy)

                50th is close. Many more treats in store than you can imagine. #DoctorWho50

                Comment


                  Who owns the Tardis? Son of man who invented Doctor Who's time machine is suing BBC over breach of copyright

                  http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-en...t-8930947.html

                  "Get a load of this, boys: Tardis. Time and Relative Dimension in Space." Stef Coburn remembers the moment when he was nine years old, sitting at the family dinner table with his younger brother, and his dad announced that he had created what is now the most recognisable symbol of the world's longest-running science fiction television series.

                  The blue police phone box that is bigger inside than out has now landed in the middle of a row that threatens to overshadow the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who later this month. The son of the writer of the show's first episode is in dispute with the BBC, claiming that it is failing to give his father "the public recognition that should by rights always have been his due" for inventing the Tardis time machine.

                  Tony Coburn was an Australian who moved to Britain 13 years before he wrote An Unearthly Child, the first episode of the serial, which went on to become one of the UK's top cultural exports. In the first story the mysterious Doctor, played by William Hartnell, is followed by two teachers who are worried about his granddaughter, one of their pupils. They discover that he appears to live in the phone box in a junk yard.

                  Now Mr Coburn's son claims that the BBC has been in breach of copyright since his father's death in 1977. He has demanded that the corporation either stop using the Tardis in the show or pay his family for its every use since then.

                  Stef Coburn claims that upon his father's death, any informal permission his father gave the BBC to use his work expired and the copyright of all of his ideas passed to his widow, Joan. Earlier this year she passed it on to him.

                  He said: "It is by no means my wish to deprive legions of Doctor Who fans (of whom I was never one) of any aspect of their favourite children's programme. The only ends I wish to accomplish, by whatever lawful means present themselves, involve bringing about the public recognition that should by rights always have been his due, of my father James Anthony Coburn's seminal contribution to Doctor Who, and proper lawful recompense to his surviving estate."

                  The BBC says it is looking into the complaint, but that there have been no challenges to the copyright since it registered it in the 1980s. Mr Coburn says he would have taken action earlier had he owned the rights.

                  The Tardis's inspiration, he says, came from a walk on Wimbledon Common, in south-west London, when his father saw two blue police boxes. Struck by the alien sight, he says, Coburn was inspired to make them the physical basis of his fantastical machine.

                  To mark the show's birthday, the BBC will show a one-off dramatisation of how the programme came to be created. Mr Coburn said he was "extremely angry" that the programme excludes his father.

                  The BBC said: "The film reflects on myriad issues behind the scenes of the production, and to ensure the strongest narrative possible focuses on the core team of Sydney Newman, Verity Lambert, William Hartnell and Waris Hussein."

                  Comment


                    Originally posted by Nolamom View Post
                    okay, I blew them up, and I'm not able to identify all of them
                    Spoiler:
                    Ok, in the first photo, the pic at the top is
                    Spoiler:
                    Capt. Mike Yates and Dr. Liz Shaw (looks like a publicity shot from "The Five Doctors" to me),
                    the middle one is
                    Spoiler:
                    Kamellion,
                    , to the right of that is
                    Spoiler:
                    someone in a modern UNIT uniform, possibly Capt. Mogambo,
                    next it's
                    Spoiler:
                    Brigadier Bambera and Ace
                    under that it's a picture of
                    Spoiler:
                    Melanie Bush
                    .

                    Second photo,
                    Spoiler:
                    Susan, Barbara, and Ian
                    Last edited by BruTak; 10 November 2013, 04:03 AM.
                    sigpic
                    Long before you and I were born, others beat these benches with their empty cups,
                    To the night and its stars, to the here and now with who we are.

                    Another sunrise with my sad captains, with who I choose to lose my mind,
                    And if it's all we only pass this way but once, what a perfect waste of time.

                    Comment


                      BBCA trailer

                      Comment


                        Awesome trailers!! Thanks for posting. I can't wait!

                        Comment



                          THE TARDIS DATA CORE - Encyclopaedia and reference site covering DOCTOR WHO, K-9 AND COMPANY, TORCHWOOD, THE SARAH JANE ADVENTURES,
                          K-9, CLASS and much more...

                          Comment


                            Jenna Coleman: just what the Doctor ordered

                            http://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-ra...-peter-capaldi

                            San Diego's Comic-Con festival, held each July, is the densest concentration of nerds in our galaxy. For the duration, grown men and women walking around in superhero costumes is the norm, not the exception. Earlier this year, Jenna Coleman – the 27-year-old actor formerly known as Jenna-Louise Coleman (only her mum still calls her Jenna-Louise apparently) – went to her first Comic-Con. There were 130,000-plus attendees; tickets had sold out in 93 minutes. Along with Matt Smith, her co-star in Doctor Who, she spent four days being spirited through hotel kitchens, out of back doors and into cars with forbiddingly opaque windows.

                            Not that Coleman and Smith remained incognito for long. "Nice costumes!" they screamed out of the car window at one middle-aged couple dressed as the Doctor and Clara, their characters from the series. The man didn't recognise them, but "Clara" did, and appeared to start convulsing on the pavement. "The most embarrassing thing is that the traffic is so bad that you don't go anywhere," says Coleman. "So all you can do is sit there and put the window up."

                            Comic-Con was Coleman's first proper exposure to the fanaticism of the Whovians. She had never watched Doctor Who before she became the new "companion", but the responses to her performances have been effusive, bordering on obsessive. Doctor Who blogs – of which there are legion – praise her as quick-witted and independent yet vulnerable, and are particularly taken with the flirtatious relationship she has with Smith's Doctor – a spark that was absent with his previous companion Amy Pond, played by Karen Gillan. Or, as Matt Smith himself put it: "Clara's different from Amy. He has more chance of snogging Clara."

                            While Coleman knew Doctor Who inspired extreme passions, it had not really hit home until Comic-Con. "I was always asked how I had found the fans, but I'd just been filming in Cardiff," she says. "At Comic-Con it was amazing to see how far-reaching it is. I thought I'd be overwhelmed, but I was humbled. It's something that Matt says: the star is the show."

                            hat maxim is more obvious than ever this year as Doctor Who celebrates its 50th birthday. The centrepiece is a 75-minute special on 23 November called the Day of the Doctor, which was shot in 3D and will be shown on BBC1 and in 400 cinemas across eight countries. The episode will bring together Smith and Coleman with some of their predecessors, including David Tennant and Billie Piper, and introduce a new "dark" Doctor, John Hurt.

                            After that, Smith will be hanging up his bow tie and vintage Harris Tweed jacket in the Christmas special. The speculation over his successor, which shared a hysteria in common with the announcement of a new pope, ended in August when Peter Capaldi was unveiled on primetime television as the new pontiff – sorry, 12th Doctor. Coleman only found out herself a short time before the rest of us.

                            "They told me and Matt when Prince Charles and Camilla came to the set," says Coleman. "We were both: 'Ahhh, of course.' It takes you a few moments – I don't think he was on any of the original lists. People were talking about Rory Kinnear and people like that, but as soon as you say it, you're like: 'Of course.' As Steven Moffat [Doctor Who's lead writer] said: 'He's the Doctor.' And it's brilliant that we've gone so different from Matt."

                            Smith's final appearance, however, will clearly be a wrench. "I just read the script the other night," says Coleman. "I'd been putting it off for ages and ages, because once you read the last page, that's it, the story is over. So I read 10 pages on the tube and I stopped, and then I picked it up again the other day and finished it. I was an absolute mess, an absolute wreck. But it's good; it's sad, but it's what needs to happen. It's perfect."

                            Everything is looking good for Coleman right now, but, over a coffee in an east London café, there is a wariness as she talks about her career. It is not so long, after all, since she was unable to book an audition – for anything. She worked in a bar and attempted to get into Rada, but froze in her admission interview, forgot all her lines and was turned away. "I'd always wanted to be an actress," she admits. "I was like: 'What if I've been wrong all along?'"

                            Coleman does not come from a long line of performers. She was born in Blackpool ("a great place for a Doctor Who episode: it's weird, quite romantic, but it's not found what it's supposed to be now") and her dad – who has a business, with her brother, fitting the interiors of bars and shops – would watch her in school productions and wonder where the acting bug had come from. Aged 11, Coleman appeared as a bridesmaid in the musical Summer Holiday with Darren Day, and the singer gave her a Debenhams voucher as a thank you.

                            She had some wild moments in her teens – "I was a bit rebellious from 14 to 17, if you know what I mean" – but pulled it round to become head girl at Arnold School and get good grades. Coleman had a place at York University to study English literature, but was offered a spot on Emmerdale and took that instead. It was great – lots of acting experience, decent pay, living in Leeds – until her storylines dried up. "I had about six months where I wasn't doing very much on a day-to-day basis, just going into the pub and sat having a chat," she recalls. "So that's when I decided to leave, and that's when I ended up getting storylines."

                            Coleman's not kidding. In short order, her character Jasmine Thomas had a lesbian affair with her best friend Debbie and became pregnant by her father, Cain Dingle. She had an abortion and another fling with a local copper, Shane Doyle, before clubbing him to death with a chair leg and being sent to the slammer.

                            But after almost four years on the soap, Coleman couldn't get another job. She moved to London, took some bar shifts and started an Open University degree in English before deciding to try her luck in Los Angeles. There she rented a room off an old lady in West Hollywood and went to auditions most days.

                            "I was going for parts I was never in a million years going to get," she says. "Like a 30-year-old wife, and at this point I looked so young – not that I look much older now. But it wasn't about that. I just relished walking into an audition room with people with an open mind and getting to read. I must have had 40-odd auditions in three months – it was relentless, but I came back to England a lot more fearless."

                            Coleman did get one part: the "tiniest, tiniest thing" in the 2011 tights-and-fights action film Captain America: The First Avenger. But that was enough. It led to a bigger role in the BBC4 adaptation of John Braine's novel Room at the Top, which led to Julian Fellowes casting her in Titanic, which led to Stephen Poliakoff choosing her for Dancing on the Edge, which aired on BBC2 this year.

                            Any struggles certainly seem long distant now. Next month Coleman will appear in the BBC three-parter Death Comes to Pemberley, PD James's smart, what-happened-next take on Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. The action starts six years on and Coleman plays Lydia Wickham (née Bennet), Elizabeth's younger and perennially self-absorbed sister.

                            "Lydia's basically very hysterical, and I've had a lot of licence to go wild with it," Coleman says. "I went through the book and I wrote down all the words she's described as and it's like: ignorant, idle, wild, volatile, indulgent. The director was like: 'We should want to slap you in the face.'"

                            Between Doctor Who and Death Comes to Pemberley, time travel and period drama, Coleman says she has had a hectic few months. She has barely been home and hardly seen her boyfriend, Richard Madden, who has been quite busy himself as Robb Stark in Game of Thrones. "We're both young and I want us both to have our adventures and do our thing," she says. "But if you want something to work, it'll work."

                            In fact, the problem, Coleman finds, is the real world becomes rather dull when you are not slaying Cybermen all day. "Doing Doctor Who you're on a cloud, doing stunts, being dropped in gloop," she says. "Then suddenly you stop and I'll be walking round thinking: 'Real life is actually a bit boring.'"

                            The 50th-anniversary Doctor Who episode, Day of the Doctor, is on BBC1 on 23 November

                            Comment


                              http://www.doctorwhotv.co.uk/coleman...tion-55159.htm
                              Coleman on Smiths regeneration

                              http://www.doctorwhotv.co.uk/the-day...tors-55149.htm
                              More Day of the Doctor pics.

                              Comment


                                BBC to release free-to-play mobile game Doctor Who: Legacy

                                http://www.polygon.com/2013/11/10/50...tor-who-legacy

                                BBC will release a free-to-play game called Doctor Who: Legacy to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the popular sci-fi show, according to the game's official Twitter account.

                                Doctor Who: Legacy is being developed for iOS and Android by Tiny Rebel Studios and Seed Studios and is "coming soon." No other details about a release date were announced, though more information will be released in the weeks to come.

                                The new title has no connection to Supermassive Games, the developer behind Doctor Who: The Eternity Clock. Last week, the developer confirmed to Polygon that it would not be making any more Doctor Who games.

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