31/05/2014

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0:00:36 > 0:00:37I think I have everything!

0:00:39 > 0:00:42We're still going, yeah? We're still going to have our proper holiday?

0:00:48 > 0:00:50OK, you're worrying me now. Stop worrying me.

0:00:52 > 0:00:55- Doctor?- Who am I? Where am I? And who are you?

0:00:58 > 0:01:00You've actually done it, haven't you?

0:01:00 > 0:01:03Last thing you said to me before I went out, "I've got to

0:01:03 > 0:01:06"remember to repair the interface or I'll completely wipe my memory."

0:01:06 > 0:01:09I don't remember saying that! I don't remember saying anything!

0:01:09 > 0:01:13In fact, here's a theory - don't laugh. Promise me you won't laugh.

0:01:13 > 0:01:15(I think, whoever I am, I've lost my memory.)

0:01:18 > 0:01:20All 1,200 years?

0:01:20 > 0:01:23That sounds like a lot. Is that a lot? That sounds like a lot.

0:01:23 > 0:01:26- First things first, what's my name? - I don't know, nobody knows.

0:01:26 > 0:01:29- Well, that's a good start!- You call yourself the Doctor.- Oh, I like it.

0:01:29 > 0:01:33Doctor Who. Ha! Yes! Nobody knows! That's the thing!

0:01:33 > 0:01:36- Wait a second.- OK. Be cool...

0:01:44 > 0:01:47- You showed me this once. - Right.- It might help.

0:01:47 > 0:01:50All your life, everything you've ever done, all written in here.

0:01:52 > 0:01:57The Doctor, is he a good person? Who are his friends? Who are his enemies?

0:01:57 > 0:01:59Open it, find out.

0:01:59 > 0:02:00Oh... OK...

0:02:01 > 0:02:05So, Doctor...who are you?

0:02:09 > 0:02:12Welcome to Doctor Who: The Ultimate Guide,

0:02:12 > 0:02:14where we celebrate 50 years of Doctor Who.

0:02:14 > 0:02:16After nearly 800 episodes,

0:02:16 > 0:02:2011 incarnations and thousands of adventures,

0:02:20 > 0:02:23it's the longest-running sci-fi show of all time.

0:02:23 > 0:02:25Guess who! Ha!

0:02:25 > 0:02:29Tonight, we're going to take you on a journey across the Whoniverse...

0:02:29 > 0:02:30You want moves, I'll give you moves.

0:02:30 > 0:02:33..charting the history of the time-travelling Doctor

0:02:33 > 0:02:34and his many faces.

0:02:34 > 0:02:37I have to face my fear.

0:02:37 > 0:02:40In Doctor Who: The Ultimate Guide.

0:02:45 > 0:02:47Come with me.

0:02:49 > 0:02:51So...

0:02:51 > 0:02:56all of time and space, everything that ever happened or ever will.

0:02:56 > 0:02:58Where do you want to start?

0:02:58 > 0:03:00How about we start at the very beginning?

0:03:06 > 0:03:07We are at...

0:03:07 > 0:03:10the very beginning!

0:03:10 > 0:03:14Meet the first Doctor, William Hartnell.

0:03:14 > 0:03:20In 1963 he landed on our screens and changed British television for ever.

0:03:24 > 0:03:26But why do you have to destroy?

0:03:26 > 0:03:28Hm... Well, we are in a pickle, aren't we?

0:03:30 > 0:03:33- OLD MAN'S VOICE: - Don't mess with me, young man!

0:03:33 > 0:03:36A new birth...of a sun...

0:03:36 > 0:03:38and its planets!

0:03:40 > 0:03:42I watched the very first episode of Doctor Who.

0:03:42 > 0:03:45I'd come in that Saturday from somewhere.

0:03:45 > 0:03:48I leaned on the door when I came in because it was just starting,

0:03:48 > 0:03:51and I was still leaning there 25 minutes later when it finished.

0:03:51 > 0:03:53It was new, it was different,

0:03:53 > 0:03:55it appealed to the young men that we were.

0:03:55 > 0:03:58The character at that stage, we didn't know where he'd come from,

0:03:58 > 0:04:00we didn't know what his back story was.

0:04:00 > 0:04:03So there's a lot of mystery about him.

0:04:03 > 0:04:07- Your arrogance is nearly as great as your ignorance.- Open the door!

0:04:07 > 0:04:08We are the masters of the Earth!

0:04:08 > 0:04:10Not for long.

0:04:10 > 0:04:14The show was unlike anything seen on our screens before

0:04:14 > 0:04:18and the character of the Doctor immediately became a TV icon.

0:04:18 > 0:04:20Yes, indeed.

0:04:20 > 0:04:22'The look of him, the sound of him,'

0:04:22 > 0:04:26the aura, was naturally authoritative.

0:04:26 > 0:04:30The Doctor started out as a kind of cool, trendy grandfather

0:04:30 > 0:04:31that was really clever and could

0:04:31 > 0:04:34teach you a thing or two about science.

0:04:34 > 0:04:37I should say originally it was some pliable metal

0:04:37 > 0:04:39held together by a magnetic field.

0:04:39 > 0:04:43So the curiosity was enormous. Hm!

0:04:43 > 0:04:46Well, yes, quite fascinating. Hm...

0:04:46 > 0:04:49In the modern era, we are used to seeing the Doctor

0:04:49 > 0:04:51being very off-the-cuff.

0:04:51 > 0:04:52Bada-boom!

0:04:52 > 0:04:53Spontaneous.

0:04:53 > 0:04:55You only live once.

0:04:55 > 0:04:57You know, thinking on his feet.

0:04:57 > 0:04:58Run!

0:05:00 > 0:05:04With Hartnell, everything he seemed to do and everything that went

0:05:04 > 0:05:07right for him seemed to be because of his experience.

0:05:07 > 0:05:09That city down there is a magnificent subject for study

0:05:09 > 0:05:11and I don't intend to leave here

0:05:11 > 0:05:13until I've thoroughly investigated it.

0:05:13 > 0:05:16And as we got to know this elderly alien with his unconventional

0:05:16 > 0:05:19time machine, it became clear that the Doctor

0:05:19 > 0:05:21was far from your typical small-screen hero.

0:05:21 > 0:05:23He was kind of grumpy, he was mysterious.

0:05:23 > 0:05:26Oh, child, if only you'd think as an adult sometimes.

0:05:26 > 0:05:28He also seemed...

0:05:28 > 0:05:29difficult.

0:05:29 > 0:05:32Geniuses can be a bit rude and a bit blunt.

0:05:32 > 0:05:36William Hartnell definitely had a bit of that in him.

0:05:36 > 0:05:38Please stop bothering me.

0:05:38 > 0:05:42- Yes, the first Doctor was rude... - Mind your own business.

0:05:42 > 0:05:45- ..patronising...- I can see by your face that you don't understand.

0:05:45 > 0:05:47I knew you wouldn't. Never mind.

0:05:47 > 0:05:50..and despite looking like a pensioner,

0:05:50 > 0:05:51he could certainly handle himself.

0:05:51 > 0:05:55- OLD MAN'S VOICE:- Oh, you want to fight, do you? Come on, then!

0:05:55 > 0:05:58I'll just unravel my cravat.

0:06:00 > 0:06:02Yes, the first Doc was no day at the beach.

0:06:02 > 0:06:05Don't call me Doc. Now, do I make myself clear?

0:06:07 > 0:06:10But over time, he began to mellow and went on to time-travel

0:06:10 > 0:06:14with a host of new friends, or companions, over the years.

0:06:14 > 0:06:17- Are you going to come with us? - If you'll have me.

0:06:17 > 0:06:18HE CHUCKLES

0:06:18 > 0:06:20He began to develop a softer side,

0:06:20 > 0:06:23and when granddaughter Susan grew up and fell in love...

0:06:23 > 0:06:27Oh, David, I do love you! I do! I do!

0:06:27 > 0:06:31..he sent her off with a memorable and emotional farewell speech.

0:06:31 > 0:06:35There must be no regrets, no tears, no anxieties.

0:06:35 > 0:06:39Just go forward in all your beliefs

0:06:39 > 0:06:43and prove to me that I am not mistaken in mine.

0:06:43 > 0:06:46And soon the first Doctor was saying his own goodbyes,

0:06:46 > 0:06:48leaving as a changed character.

0:06:48 > 0:06:53He enters almost as the villain, and leaves as the eccentric,

0:06:53 > 0:06:54passionate hero.

0:06:54 > 0:06:59'You know, became this hugely popular figure in popular culture,'

0:06:59 > 0:07:02and if he has a legacy, it's that the show is still running today

0:07:02 > 0:07:04and that's got to be down to him.

0:07:04 > 0:07:07By the end of his spell in the TARDIS, the Doctor had laid

0:07:07 > 0:07:11the foundations for the next 50 years of time-travelling adventures.

0:07:11 > 0:07:13And far from being the end,

0:07:13 > 0:07:16the demise of the first Doctor was only the beginning.

0:07:22 > 0:07:24Patrick Troughton had the hard job.

0:07:24 > 0:07:25Patrick Troughton was the actor

0:07:25 > 0:07:27who established that the Doctor can change.

0:07:27 > 0:07:32It wasn't somebody pretending to do what William Hartnell did,

0:07:32 > 0:07:34he completely reinvented the character.

0:07:34 > 0:07:36And he took hold of that part,

0:07:36 > 0:07:42flipped it on its side, wiggled its legs in the air and he became

0:07:42 > 0:07:47this wonderful, loving cosmic hobo, who was disarming and charming.

0:07:47 > 0:07:50EXPLOSIONS AND SHOUTING

0:07:52 > 0:07:56I loved Patrick Troughton's Doctor.

0:07:56 > 0:07:59Just so subtle and clever and quick-changing.

0:07:59 > 0:08:01Interesting.

0:08:01 > 0:08:03Funny and so characterful.

0:08:03 > 0:08:07Logic, my dear Zoe, merely enables one to be wrong with authority.

0:08:07 > 0:08:09Yes, we are in trouble, aren't we?

0:08:09 > 0:08:12Why? What's all this about?

0:08:12 > 0:08:14I don't know, but we've got to be careful.

0:08:14 > 0:08:16We've got to be very, very careful.

0:08:16 > 0:08:20Patrick was a proper character actor.

0:08:20 > 0:08:23How can I be a traitor when I don't even know where I am?

0:08:23 > 0:08:25Where am I?

0:08:25 > 0:08:28He was a bit clown-like.

0:08:28 > 0:08:29SHE SCREAMS

0:08:29 > 0:08:32I'm sure we can talk this over.

0:08:32 > 0:08:35He invents how the Doctor is going to be from then on,

0:08:35 > 0:08:38so he's not just the hero, he's the comedy hero.

0:08:38 > 0:08:39Sausages!

0:08:39 > 0:08:43Patrick Troughton's Doctor is sort of more recognisable

0:08:43 > 0:08:46to modern audiences, I think. He's more the centre of the action.

0:08:46 > 0:08:49If not for Patrick Troughton, there wouldn't be a Matt Smith today.

0:08:49 > 0:08:50Oh, you've redecorated!

0:08:50 > 0:08:52I don't like it.

0:08:52 > 0:08:55You've had this place redecorated, haven't you? Don't like it.

0:08:55 > 0:08:58But Troughton wasn't just a clown, he was musical.

0:08:58 > 0:09:00TOOTING

0:09:00 > 0:09:04- Sort of. And he was the first to use...- This is a sonic screwdriver.

0:09:04 > 0:09:06Now, where can I demonstrate it?

0:09:06 > 0:09:09His three-year reign came to an abrupt end

0:09:09 > 0:09:11when he was captured by his fellow Time Lords.

0:09:11 > 0:09:14And it was only then that we found out more about who this mysterious

0:09:14 > 0:09:16time-traveller actually was.

0:09:16 > 0:09:18You have repeatedly broken our most important law

0:09:18 > 0:09:22of non-interference in the affairs of other planets.

0:09:22 > 0:09:26What have you to say? Do you admit these actions?

0:09:26 > 0:09:30I not only admit them, I am proud of them.

0:09:30 > 0:09:32We start to learn more about the fact that the Doctor

0:09:32 > 0:09:36is a Time Lord, and we learn more about their code.

0:09:36 > 0:09:40All these evils I have fought while you have done nothing but observe.

0:09:40 > 0:09:43You can observe the affairs of the universe,

0:09:43 > 0:09:45but you can't intervene, you can't join in.

0:09:45 > 0:09:47But the Doctor naturally feels that you should,

0:09:47 > 0:09:50and we learn a lot more about his moral code.

0:09:50 > 0:09:53True, I AM guilty of interference, just as you are guilty of failing

0:09:53 > 0:09:57to use your great powers to help those in need!

0:09:57 > 0:10:00By way of punishment, his TARDIS was grounded.

0:10:00 > 0:10:03And we also saw the beginnings of the Doctor's love affair

0:10:03 > 0:10:04with our fair planet.

0:10:04 > 0:10:07We have noted your particular interest in the planet Earth.

0:10:07 > 0:10:10Earth seems more vulnerable than others, yes.

0:10:10 > 0:10:14For that reason, you will be sent back to that planet, in exile.

0:10:14 > 0:10:17No! No!

0:10:17 > 0:10:19And so ended the story of the second Doctor.

0:10:20 > 0:10:24He's the one who sort of nails exactly how it's going to be,

0:10:24 > 0:10:27so his legacy to the part is huge.

0:10:27 > 0:10:30'If he hadn't been so brilliant,'

0:10:30 > 0:10:33the show could have just gone by the wayside.

0:10:33 > 0:10:34The audience stuck

0:10:34 > 0:10:39and that very act of re-creation has allowed the series to live on.

0:10:39 > 0:10:43Our lives are different to anybody else's. That's the exciting thing.

0:10:44 > 0:10:47There's nobody in the universe can do what we're doing.

0:10:49 > 0:10:52He is the actor to whom all the subsequent Doctors

0:10:52 > 0:10:55look for inspiration. In particular Matt Smith.

0:11:01 > 0:11:05Now, if there was one man who knew how to take out a Dalek in style,

0:11:05 > 0:11:09it's Doctor number three, all-round man of action, Jon Pertwee.

0:11:09 > 0:11:12Probably the most flamboyant Doctor of the lot,

0:11:12 > 0:11:14number three became known as a bit of a dandy.

0:11:14 > 0:11:16Do you mean me?

0:11:16 > 0:11:19- Enormously flamboyant. - It's an excellent vintage.

0:11:19 > 0:11:21It's really a completely different phase.

0:11:21 > 0:11:23There was a bit of espionage about him.

0:11:23 > 0:11:25Nobody sends me anywhere, I'm a free agent.

0:11:25 > 0:11:28Very...majestic and powerful.

0:11:28 > 0:11:30I am a Time Lord.

0:11:30 > 0:11:34When Pertwee takes over the Doctor, he's established as the eccentric,

0:11:34 > 0:11:35amusing scientist.

0:11:35 > 0:11:37What Jon Pertwee brings to it, for the first time,

0:11:37 > 0:11:39is the action hero.

0:11:39 > 0:11:41Imprisoned on Earth

0:11:41 > 0:11:44and with his TARDIS grounded by his fellow Time Lords,

0:11:44 > 0:11:47the Doctor's adventures were now very much based in the modern world.

0:11:47 > 0:11:48That's interesting.

0:11:48 > 0:11:51He even had a proper job, working for UNIT,

0:11:51 > 0:11:53where his new companions included Liz Shaw...

0:11:53 > 0:11:55That's impossible.

0:11:55 > 0:11:58..Jo Grant, Sarah Jane Smith...

0:11:58 > 0:12:00We need somebody to make the coffee.

0:12:00 > 0:12:02..and favourite sparring partner, the Brigadier...

0:12:02 > 0:12:05- The Brigadier is an idiot.- ..with whom he rarely saw eye to eye.

0:12:05 > 0:12:09- I wouldn't like to have to order you.- I wouldn't advise you to try.

0:12:09 > 0:12:13It's this great voice, with this fiery energy behind it.

0:12:13 > 0:12:15If you cannot reverse the energy drain,

0:12:15 > 0:12:18the fabric of the entire universe could be torn apart.

0:12:20 > 0:12:22Though he never managed to fix his knackered TARDIS,

0:12:22 > 0:12:26the Doctor more than made up for it with his fleet of vehicles.

0:12:26 > 0:12:30The third Doctor was every inch the action man.

0:12:30 > 0:12:33He was a real adventurer in real life.

0:12:33 > 0:12:36And so any time there was

0:12:36 > 0:12:38a motorbike or anything,

0:12:38 > 0:12:41we were there, we were playing. It was fun.

0:12:41 > 0:12:44A bit more of a James Bond than we'd seen before.

0:12:45 > 0:12:47Yes, from motorbikes to Jet Skis.

0:12:47 > 0:12:49I remember he had a hover car.

0:12:49 > 0:12:50He had it all,

0:12:50 > 0:12:54including his trademark bright yellow Edwardian roadster, Bessie.

0:12:54 > 0:12:57Soon, even Bessie was left in the garage

0:12:57 > 0:13:01and he upgraded to his own specially created pimp wagon, the Whomobile.

0:13:01 > 0:13:04This new car of mine is exactly what I need.

0:13:04 > 0:13:07Pertwee spent five years as the Doctor,

0:13:07 > 0:13:09featuring in over 100 episodes.

0:13:09 > 0:13:12But the all-action third Doctor eventually succumbed

0:13:12 > 0:13:15to his inevitable demise at the hands of a huge

0:13:15 > 0:13:17and not entirely convincing spider.

0:13:17 > 0:13:20HIDEOUS SCREECHING

0:13:20 > 0:13:22Doctor!

0:13:22 > 0:13:24The Planet Of The Spiders. It was very sad.

0:13:24 > 0:13:26I didn't want him to go.

0:13:26 > 0:13:29Please...don't die.

0:13:31 > 0:13:32A tear, Sarah Jane?

0:13:32 > 0:13:34A tear...

0:13:34 > 0:13:36Sarah Jane?

0:13:36 > 0:13:38Don't cry, don't cry.

0:13:38 > 0:13:40And then...

0:13:40 > 0:13:42this regeneration happened.

0:13:46 > 0:13:49Well...here we go again.

0:13:49 > 0:13:51And so third regenerated to fourth

0:13:51 > 0:13:54and the role of the Doctor was never the same again.

0:13:54 > 0:13:58Once Jon Pertwee lays down those tracks, the other Doctors run on it.

0:13:58 > 0:14:01They're always a little bit action-y after that.

0:14:01 > 0:14:05- You're going to need a car.- Don't worry, I commandeered a vehicle.

0:14:05 > 0:14:07SIREN WAILS

0:14:07 > 0:14:11You would have this wonderful comfort, that no matter how dreadful

0:14:11 > 0:14:15the aliens were, Jon Pertwee's Doctor would protect you

0:14:15 > 0:14:19and you were OK, and you just sort of travelled in his wake.

0:14:19 > 0:14:21He didn't pretend to be anything

0:14:21 > 0:14:23other than the cleverest man in the room.

0:14:33 > 0:14:37Well, I'm 45 years old. So my favourite Doctor is Tom Baker.

0:14:37 > 0:14:39HE WHISTLES

0:14:39 > 0:14:41Would you like a jelly baby?

0:14:41 > 0:14:42I've no choice about that.

0:14:42 > 0:14:44Spending seven years in the TARDIS,

0:14:44 > 0:14:49Tom Baker's Doctor was the longest serving and the most unpredictable.

0:14:49 > 0:14:52You simply don't know what's going to come out of that man's mouth

0:14:52 > 0:14:55or what is going on behind those remarkable eyes.

0:14:55 > 0:14:57All change at Venus for the Brighton line.

0:14:57 > 0:14:59SHE SIGHS HEAVILY

0:14:59 > 0:15:00BANG

0:15:00 > 0:15:04- Was that bang big enough for you, Brigadier?- Nicely done, Doctor.

0:15:04 > 0:15:08- Tom Baker was eccentric, flamboyant. - You mustn't believe all they say.

0:15:08 > 0:15:11- His eyes!- Keep looking into my eyes!

0:15:12 > 0:15:16And sort of walking around like that. Casting a very big shadow.

0:15:16 > 0:15:20He was quite sort of imposing, quite sort of grand.

0:15:20 > 0:15:23- AS TOM BAKER:- Oh, my God, it's, like, all kicking off and that.

0:15:23 > 0:15:28- This is, like, so well bad, I'm going to have to totally, like, sort this out and that.- You stay here.

0:15:29 > 0:15:33With his playful nature and trademark flowing scarf,

0:15:33 > 0:15:37it didn't take long for the fourth Doctor to capture the public's imagination.

0:15:37 > 0:15:39Enormous zest.

0:15:40 > 0:15:43Bigger than the screen in which he was appearing, and yet it worked.

0:15:43 > 0:15:48He embodies, in all its weirdness, what the Doctor is,

0:15:48 > 0:15:49what the Doctor means.

0:15:49 > 0:15:53After the third Doctor's exile on Earth, this Doctor brought with him

0:15:53 > 0:15:55a new sense of adventure.

0:15:55 > 0:15:58I can't waste any more time. Things to do, places to go.

0:15:58 > 0:16:02He took us on a journey of dark tales in otherworldly universes

0:16:02 > 0:16:06which gave his era a Hammer horror feel.

0:16:06 > 0:16:07Mwa-ha-ha-ha-ha!

0:16:09 > 0:16:12By the end of Tom Baker's era, he'd defeated more villains

0:16:12 > 0:16:16and travelled to more places in time than any other Doctor before him.

0:16:16 > 0:16:18And if that wasn't enough,

0:16:18 > 0:16:21he was even crowned President of the Time Lords.

0:16:22 > 0:16:24I invest you...

0:16:24 > 0:16:28Lord President of the Supreme Council.

0:16:28 > 0:16:31In the end, the fourth Doctor succumbed to his regeneration

0:16:31 > 0:16:33in a suitably heroic fashion -

0:16:33 > 0:16:36saving the Earth from his evil nemesis, the Master.

0:16:38 > 0:16:41Leaving behind the legacy of creating arguably the most

0:16:41 > 0:16:43iconic Doctor of all time.

0:16:43 > 0:16:46I think whenever the Doctor's a bit quirky and eccentric,

0:16:46 > 0:16:50it makes them more human and more warm and lovable,

0:16:50 > 0:16:54and I think Tom Baker definitely had a lot of that about him.

0:16:58 > 0:17:02He was completely mesmerising. Full stop, Tom Baker.

0:17:03 > 0:17:04It's the end.

0:17:09 > 0:17:12Time now for a bit of a sporting departure.

0:17:12 > 0:17:14Peter Davison was a part-time cricketer.

0:17:16 > 0:17:17# I say, I don't like cricket... #

0:17:17 > 0:17:20- Did he actually like cricket? - I love cricket.

0:17:20 > 0:17:22# I love it... #

0:17:22 > 0:17:25There seems to be something distinctly wrong.

0:17:25 > 0:17:29OK, sorry, apart from loving cricket, he was also the fifth Doctor.

0:17:36 > 0:17:38It was a real pleasant surprise

0:17:38 > 0:17:42when the floppy-haired Peter Davison emerged.

0:17:42 > 0:17:45Peter Davison, I feel like he's my Doctor.

0:17:45 > 0:17:48My earliest memories of Doctor Who are Peter Davison.

0:17:48 > 0:17:49He's so soft and warm.

0:17:49 > 0:17:53He'd saved all the animals in another life as a vet.

0:17:54 > 0:17:56And he's reckless and innocent,

0:17:56 > 0:17:58and he has qualities of youth about him,

0:17:58 > 0:18:01which we'd never, ever seen in the Doctor before.

0:18:01 > 0:18:03These things are irrelevant.

0:18:03 > 0:18:06For some people, small, beautiful events is what life is all about!

0:18:06 > 0:18:10This nice-guy fifth Doctor was certainly a departure from the fourth.

0:18:10 > 0:18:14I enjoyed the contrast of his Doctor

0:18:14 > 0:18:19to the sort of confidence of Tom Baker's Doctor.

0:18:19 > 0:18:21Are you all right?

0:18:21 > 0:18:25Just a twinge of cosmic angst.

0:18:25 > 0:18:29I think I wanted to introduce a bit of self-doubt into the character.

0:18:29 > 0:18:31He'd been a bit too assured,

0:18:31 > 0:18:33too absolutely self-confident he could just...

0:18:33 > 0:18:35everything was going to be sorted out.

0:18:35 > 0:18:38'And I just felt, partly because it was a nice thing to play as an actor,'

0:18:38 > 0:18:41that I wanted to make my character a little fallible.

0:18:41 > 0:18:43There can't be much time left. What can we do?

0:18:43 > 0:18:46Abandon methodical procedure for blind instinct.

0:18:46 > 0:18:49At times it felt like almost a lack of confidence in himself

0:18:49 > 0:18:52as the Doctor, and that made him very interesting and quite,

0:18:52 > 0:18:53you know, human.

0:18:53 > 0:18:55I give you my word.

0:18:55 > 0:18:58Just as you gave your word to Tegan?

0:18:58 > 0:18:59That's not fair.

0:18:59 > 0:19:02The fifth Doctor's reign came to an heroic end

0:19:02 > 0:19:05when he saved companion Peri's life.

0:19:05 > 0:19:08Open your mouth. You must drink this.

0:19:08 > 0:19:11# Never fall away... #

0:19:12 > 0:19:16From my experience, particularly as Peri,

0:19:16 > 0:19:19he's a heroic Doctor,

0:19:19 > 0:19:22because for Peri's sake,

0:19:22 > 0:19:24he is prepared to go through regeneration,

0:19:24 > 0:19:28so he quite literally dies for the sake of his companion,

0:19:28 > 0:19:30whom he hasn't known very long.

0:19:30 > 0:19:33- Where is it?- What?- The bat's milk!

0:19:33 > 0:19:36Finished. Only enough for you.

0:19:36 > 0:19:39It was certainly a moving end to the reign of the fifth Doctor,

0:19:39 > 0:19:42but it will always be remembered for a couple of reasons.

0:19:42 > 0:19:45Peter Davison, no doubt if you're speaking to him,

0:19:45 > 0:19:47he will say that he has an overriding

0:19:47 > 0:19:51memory of the scene that he was upstaged by part of my anatomy.

0:19:51 > 0:19:53You kind of...

0:19:53 > 0:19:54You try to be in a moment,

0:19:54 > 0:19:58but in the end, you're basically just looking at Peri's chest.

0:19:58 > 0:19:59'Nicola Bryant's cleavage.'

0:19:59 > 0:20:02Which I thought somewhat took away from the great performance

0:20:02 > 0:20:05I was giving about a foot and a half below the cleavage.

0:20:05 > 0:20:09# She's got me spinning... #

0:20:09 > 0:20:11HE LAUGHS

0:20:11 > 0:20:14And you would sort of...I guess feel a bit sorry for Peter Davison

0:20:14 > 0:20:19who is giving, arguably, the performance of his career.

0:20:19 > 0:20:21And the majority of the audience, I think,

0:20:21 > 0:20:23are just sort of going, "Oh, Peri."

0:20:23 > 0:20:25I'm going soon.

0:20:25 > 0:20:27It's time to say goodbye.

0:20:27 > 0:20:29Don't give up.

0:20:29 > 0:20:31You can't leave me now.

0:20:31 > 0:20:34I might regenerate.

0:20:34 > 0:20:36So apart from a memorable farewell,

0:20:36 > 0:20:39what was the legacy of the fifth Doctor?

0:20:39 > 0:20:41I'd like people to think of the fifth Doctor as introducing

0:20:41 > 0:20:45an element of humanness to the Doctor.

0:20:45 > 0:20:51He brings the idea of the Doctor as a young, reckless genius.

0:20:51 > 0:20:54And, really, it lays down a new path for the show

0:20:54 > 0:20:56when he takes it over.

0:20:56 > 0:21:00So I'd like to think that I started that trend that others followed later.

0:21:00 > 0:21:04Look at you! The hat, the coat, the crickety cricket stuff, the...

0:21:04 > 0:21:07stick of celery. Brave choice, celery.

0:21:07 > 0:21:10But fair play to you, not a lot of men can carry off a decorative vegetable.

0:21:10 > 0:21:12Shut up!

0:21:18 > 0:21:21- Doctor? - You're expecting someone else?

0:21:21 > 0:21:25When the sixth incarnation of the Doctor burst onto our screens,

0:21:25 > 0:21:28almost straightaway we knew what we were going to get.

0:21:28 > 0:21:31- What's happened?- Change, my dear.

0:21:31 > 0:21:32Change, my dear.

0:21:32 > 0:21:35And it seems not a moment too soon.

0:21:35 > 0:21:38The changeover from fifth to sixth hadn't been an easy one

0:21:38 > 0:21:40for our beloved Doctor.

0:21:40 > 0:21:44Instead of having a normal, quite comfortable regeneration,

0:21:44 > 0:21:48he was going to go through this sort of trauma.

0:21:48 > 0:21:53- You still seem a little unstable. - Unstable?

0:21:53 > 0:21:54Unstable?!

0:21:54 > 0:21:56UNSTABLE?!

0:21:56 > 0:22:00He was going to be psychologically damaged for a while by his regeneration.

0:22:00 > 0:22:02- You're bonkers.- That's debatable.

0:22:02 > 0:22:07For the first time, we began to see a side of the Doctor that wasn't so easy to like.

0:22:07 > 0:22:10Colin Baker allows the Doctor to finally express his own ego.

0:22:10 > 0:22:14I'm a Time Lord! A man of science, temperament.

0:22:14 > 0:22:17I've never seen this side of you before.

0:22:17 > 0:22:20Yes, the era of the nice-guy fifth Doctor was now truly over,

0:22:20 > 0:22:22and in a now famous scene,

0:22:22 > 0:22:25our new Time Lord asks for a bit of patience from the haters.

0:22:25 > 0:22:27And I would suggest, Peri,

0:22:27 > 0:22:30that you wait a little before criticising my new persona.

0:22:30 > 0:22:33You may well find it isn't quite as disagreeable as you think.

0:22:34 > 0:22:36Well, I hope so.

0:22:37 > 0:22:43Whatever else happens, I AM the Doctor.

0:22:44 > 0:22:47Whether you like it or not.

0:22:47 > 0:22:48You tell 'em, Doc.

0:22:48 > 0:22:52OK, the sixth Doctor had his faults, but at least he looked cool, right?

0:22:54 > 0:22:57Multicoloured monstrosity of a coat.

0:22:57 > 0:23:00'I've been moaning about my outfit for 30 years.'

0:23:00 > 0:23:04- I suddenly feel conspicuous. - I'm not surprised in that coat(!)

0:23:04 > 0:23:07They asked me what I'd like to wear as the Doctor.

0:23:07 > 0:23:08And what I described

0:23:08 > 0:23:12was pretty much what Chris Eccleston got.

0:23:12 > 0:23:15I'm not convinced he could have pulled off cool.

0:23:15 > 0:23:18- Joseph and his Technicolor explosion. - It was spectacular.

0:23:18 > 0:23:21- I mean, dreadful. - You can't go out dressed like that.

0:23:21 > 0:23:23- Why ever not?- You look dreadful!

0:23:23 > 0:23:27The perfect marriage of awful and really good.

0:23:27 > 0:23:30Yes, the sixth Doctor was certainly a departure from the previous five,

0:23:30 > 0:23:34as he blazed a darker trail that later Doctors went on to follow.

0:23:34 > 0:23:39The Doctor's ego becomes rampant in the form of the sixth Doctor.

0:23:39 > 0:23:44Let's exercise the grey cells for once, shall we?

0:23:44 > 0:23:45Rather than the muscles.

0:23:47 > 0:23:51It did strike me that a man who is 900 years old

0:23:51 > 0:23:52and has two hearts,

0:23:52 > 0:23:56comes from a planet of Time Lords called Gallifrey,

0:23:56 > 0:23:59might behave a little differently from a bloke who

0:23:59 > 0:24:02lives in Surbiton and commutes to the City every day,

0:24:02 > 0:24:06and that some of his actions might be hard for us to understand.

0:24:07 > 0:24:08HE YELLS

0:24:10 > 0:24:11Forgive me if I don't join you.

0:24:14 > 0:24:16My last appearance was getting into the TARDIS,

0:24:16 > 0:24:19saying "carrot juice" and disappearing into oblivion.

0:24:21 > 0:24:23Carrot juice, carrot juice, carrot juice...

0:24:26 > 0:24:31I understand that some impostor called Sylvester McCoy

0:24:31 > 0:24:35swaddled himself in my clothes, with a blonde wig on pretending to be me.

0:24:38 > 0:24:41And there you have it, the sixth Doctor, defiant to the last.

0:24:41 > 0:24:43I AM the Doctor.

0:24:43 > 0:24:46Whether you like it or not.

0:25:01 > 0:25:04The seventh Doctor, played by Sylvester McCoy

0:25:04 > 0:25:07was, on the face of it, a bit of a clown.

0:25:07 > 0:25:09I know that woman from somewhere.

0:25:09 > 0:25:12I guess my favourite doctor is Sylvester McCoy.

0:25:12 > 0:25:15Look at me. I can see.

0:25:15 > 0:25:19My doctor was much lighter, Buster Keaton-esque, Chaplin-esque.

0:25:19 > 0:25:22Sylvester started off

0:25:22 > 0:25:26in a borrowed coat from Colin Baker.

0:25:26 > 0:25:29Where am I? Who am I? And who are you?

0:25:29 > 0:25:31He may have started in a borrowed coat,

0:25:31 > 0:25:34but he soon developed his own unique identity.

0:25:34 > 0:25:38His wardrobe was off the scale.

0:25:38 > 0:25:40Thank goodness in this regeneration I have

0:25:40 > 0:25:44regained my impeccable sense of haute couture.

0:25:44 > 0:25:46Like, I loved his hat and his swagger.

0:25:46 > 0:25:47HE SIGHS

0:25:47 > 0:25:49I think that's quite a good sentence.

0:25:50 > 0:25:53He worked with props so well, so like his hat.

0:25:53 > 0:25:55And his umbrella.

0:25:55 > 0:25:58He plays the spoons, which he always does in everything.

0:26:00 > 0:26:02Oh!

0:26:02 > 0:26:05McCoy is a brilliant comedic actor.

0:26:05 > 0:26:10His Doctor was a kind of trickstery, magician.

0:26:10 > 0:26:13- Things don't just vanish.- No.

0:26:15 > 0:26:18But it soon became apparent that under this playful exterior

0:26:18 > 0:26:21lay a more complex character.

0:26:21 > 0:26:24He had a specific... transformation

0:26:24 > 0:26:26within his character.

0:26:26 > 0:26:30The more I know me, the less I like me.

0:26:30 > 0:26:33I realised when I was playing the role that there was so much

0:26:33 > 0:26:35more to this character.

0:26:35 > 0:26:38On the surface he's a comical little man

0:26:38 > 0:26:39but, underneath that,

0:26:39 > 0:26:41he's actually one of the coldest

0:26:41 > 0:26:44and most manipulative of the Doctors.

0:26:44 > 0:26:48It wasn't until the second series that I think my Doctor became,

0:26:48 > 0:26:51started to become more mysterious.

0:26:51 > 0:26:55Look me in the eye, pull the trigger.

0:26:55 > 0:26:57End my life.

0:26:57 > 0:26:59Yes, the seventh Doctor was certainly manipulative.

0:26:59 > 0:27:02And in the story The Curse Of Fenric,

0:27:02 > 0:27:04he even used his sidekick Ace as a pawn

0:27:04 > 0:27:07in the psychological game of chess.

0:27:07 > 0:27:10Time for the one final game.

0:27:11 > 0:27:13Suddenly, you realise, hang on a minute,

0:27:13 > 0:27:17- he's actually using her for his own ends.- She's an emotional cripple.

0:27:18 > 0:27:22I wouldn't waste my time on her, unless I had to use her somehow.

0:27:22 > 0:27:23No!

0:27:23 > 0:27:26MAN LAUGHS My Doctor did play chess a lot.

0:27:26 > 0:27:28There's reasons, but he did stitch her up.

0:27:28 > 0:27:33He would be making moves, sometimes hoping, or driving

0:27:33 > 0:27:36the opposition into making the moves that would destroy them.

0:27:36 > 0:27:39His betrayal of her helps him defeat his foe

0:27:39 > 0:27:43and eventually Ace forgives and learns to trust him again.

0:27:43 > 0:27:45Where to now, Ace?

0:27:45 > 0:27:48- Home.- Home?

0:27:48 > 0:27:51- The TARDIS.- Yes, the TARDIS.

0:27:53 > 0:27:55The mystery had gone as far as I was concerned,

0:27:55 > 0:27:56I wanted to bring that back.

0:27:56 > 0:27:58That was very important.

0:27:58 > 0:28:01I wanted the "Who" to be, you know, the question mark again,

0:28:01 > 0:28:02"who is this person?"

0:28:02 > 0:28:05The sad clown, McCoy embodied that.

0:28:05 > 0:28:07You know, and it works.

0:28:07 > 0:28:10It will always work.

0:28:12 > 0:28:13Sylvester McCoy.

0:28:13 > 0:28:17A wonderful, magical, wizard-like clowning Doctor.

0:28:17 > 0:28:19Yeah, terrific.

0:28:29 > 0:28:33The seventh Doctor's journey came to an end on the streets of San Francisco.

0:28:33 > 0:28:36But after some ill-advised, dodgy double open-heart surgery,

0:28:36 > 0:28:38the eighth Doctor materialised.

0:28:41 > 0:28:46Paul McGann's Doctor, I think, created a wonderful intriguing mystique,

0:28:46 > 0:28:49that that sense of when a Doctor is freshly regenerated

0:28:49 > 0:28:53and the early hours of behaviour is very erratic, very confused.

0:28:53 > 0:28:55He spends the first 10 minutes going, "Who am I?"

0:28:55 > 0:28:59And that was an opportunity, of course, to find the costume.

0:28:59 > 0:29:02I said, "OK I'll put that on, but I don't want to wear the scarf."

0:29:02 > 0:29:06He was elegant. He looked Byron-esque.

0:29:06 > 0:29:08A great alien quality as well.

0:29:08 > 0:29:12A meteor storm. The sky above us was dancing with light!

0:29:13 > 0:29:15Purple, green, red and yellow. Yes!

0:29:15 > 0:29:16I think he was quite sweet.

0:29:18 > 0:29:19A sweet Doctor.

0:29:19 > 0:29:22These shoes - they fit perfect.

0:29:22 > 0:29:26Like the fourth Doctor before, the eighth had a love for Jelly babies.

0:29:26 > 0:29:28And with his sugar levels shooting through the roof,

0:29:28 > 0:29:31the ladies certainly saw him as a bit of eye candy.

0:29:31 > 0:29:34Here we go again!

0:29:34 > 0:29:36# You're nobody till somebody loves you... #

0:29:36 > 0:29:40Paul McGann is the first, but not the last of the romantic Doctors.

0:29:40 > 0:29:43He's a dashing, great looking guy.

0:29:43 > 0:29:46In a way, one of the first sex symbols and the women went,

0:29:46 > 0:29:49"Whoa, this Doctor is absolutely gorgeous."

0:29:49 > 0:29:51Yes, this space-travelling stud

0:29:51 > 0:29:54was going to take us to a place we'd never been before.

0:29:56 > 0:29:58Quite radical at the time.

0:29:58 > 0:30:00But my goodness, they've all been at it ever since.

0:30:00 > 0:30:02Are you any good at setting alarm clocks?

0:30:02 > 0:30:06But not everyone was impressed by the Doctor's new-found sexual appetite.

0:30:06 > 0:30:11It turned a bit soapy... Soppy, and soapy.

0:30:11 > 0:30:14Grace says that you have a big secret.

0:30:14 > 0:30:21I had no conception at all that this chaste kiss was going to cause any bother.

0:30:21 > 0:30:25He's an alien. What's he messing around with human women for? For heaven's sake.

0:30:25 > 0:30:28But, of course, nor did we realise, in a little way...

0:30:28 > 0:30:31we might be pioneers.

0:30:31 > 0:30:36You know, Doctor Who had been very successful for nearly 30 years without a canoodle anywhere.

0:30:36 > 0:30:39Cos now I just think that now everybody has a kiss, don't they?

0:30:39 > 0:30:42There's always a snog in Doctor Who, isn't there? Isn't there?

0:30:42 > 0:30:43We got there first.

0:30:45 > 0:30:48Ground-breaking smooch aside, he was still the Doctor,

0:30:48 > 0:30:52and wherever the Doctor may be, trouble is never far behind.

0:30:52 > 0:30:55Once the regeneration has happened,

0:30:55 > 0:31:01and then realises the Master is also there, he has to save the day.

0:31:04 > 0:31:09He's planning to take my body so that he will live and I will die!

0:31:09 > 0:31:12But will he make it? We don't know, the clock is ticking.

0:31:12 > 0:31:17- And to make things worse, it's New Year's Eve.- Champagne?- Grace?

0:31:17 > 0:31:19Cos it's a race against time, literally.

0:31:21 > 0:31:24Midnight is going to mean the end of everything.

0:31:24 > 0:31:27He's got him where he wants him. He keeps him trapped at one point.

0:31:28 > 0:31:29Tortures him.

0:31:32 > 0:31:34It's the perils of the Doctor.

0:31:34 > 0:31:38He becomes a fantastic hero who saves the universe yet again.

0:31:38 > 0:31:40And with the Master sent packing,

0:31:40 > 0:31:42it was time for the Doctor to get on his way.

0:31:42 > 0:31:46And for us to join him on an incredible journey.

0:31:46 > 0:31:48Oh, no, that was it.

0:31:48 > 0:31:55The eighth Doctor just about made it into the pantheon of Doctors.

0:31:55 > 0:31:58You know what they called me? The longest and the shortest.

0:31:58 > 0:32:02I was the Doctor for the longest, just by default.

0:32:02 > 0:32:04But I wear the name with pride.

0:32:12 > 0:32:14Hello.

0:32:14 > 0:32:17The Doctor's brand-new, rebooted, 9th incarnation in the shape of

0:32:17 > 0:32:20Christopher Eccleston was the ultimate tough guy Time Lord.

0:32:20 > 0:32:23He looked like he would have sorted out a couple of nightclub bouncers

0:32:23 > 0:32:25on a Friday if you need help.

0:32:25 > 0:32:27Leather jacket, short hair.

0:32:27 > 0:32:28He made it relevant.

0:32:28 > 0:32:31It was just cool. The Doctor was suddenly cool.

0:32:31 > 0:32:34MUSIC: "Underdog" by Kasabian

0:32:34 > 0:32:38Suddenly here was somebody who looked like a bloke.

0:32:38 > 0:32:41Somebody who blended into the background.

0:32:41 > 0:32:43So that for a start I thought was wonderful.

0:32:43 > 0:32:47No scarves or bow ties here, just a leather jacket

0:32:47 > 0:32:48and a come-and-have-a-go attitude.

0:32:48 > 0:32:50Are you going to witter on all night?

0:32:51 > 0:32:56It wasn't important that he was liked, I liked that.

0:32:56 > 0:32:58He looked like a gangster. You know.

0:32:58 > 0:33:00- NORTHERN ACCENT:- I'm not wearing that scarf.

0:33:00 > 0:33:03I'm not wearing that twiddly bow tie.

0:33:03 > 0:33:06I'm wearing black leather and a T-shirt.

0:33:06 > 0:33:10They decided to make it regional, give him a working class accent.

0:33:10 > 0:33:13He's northern, so you just feel a bit more scared of him.

0:33:13 > 0:33:14He's just got that edge.

0:33:14 > 0:33:16Swagger, slightly angry.

0:33:16 > 0:33:18Sort of had it up to here with aliens.

0:33:18 > 0:33:21I'm busy trying to save the life of every stupid ape

0:33:21 > 0:33:23blundering about on top of this planet, all right?

0:33:23 > 0:33:25- All right. - Yes, it is!

0:33:25 > 0:33:29We'd almost got to the point where we'd forgotten that there was

0:33:29 > 0:33:32a real person inside all those comic book excesses.

0:33:32 > 0:33:33What?

0:33:33 > 0:33:38But here was a very serious, slightly gloomy hero again,

0:33:38 > 0:33:41and he brought genuine proper gravitas

0:33:41 > 0:33:42and drama to the part of the Doctor.

0:33:42 > 0:33:44Your race is dead.

0:33:44 > 0:33:45You all burn, all of you.

0:33:45 > 0:33:47Ten million ships on fire.

0:33:47 > 0:33:50The entire Dalek race wiped out in one second.

0:33:50 > 0:33:54The emotional power that he conveys talking to a Dalek,

0:33:54 > 0:33:57I don't think I've ever seen anything quite as strong as that.

0:33:57 > 0:33:58You lie!

0:33:58 > 0:34:00I watched it happen.

0:34:00 > 0:34:01I made it happen!

0:34:01 > 0:34:04You destroyed us?

0:34:04 > 0:34:07But this Doctor wasn't all grim, northern grit...

0:34:08 > 0:34:11MUSIC: "Blurred Lines" by Robin Thicke

0:34:11 > 0:34:12This is fantastic.

0:34:12 > 0:34:13Fantastic. Fantastic.

0:34:13 > 0:34:16Fantastic. Fantastic.

0:34:16 > 0:34:19Yes, he had several reasons to be cheerful - apart from a brand-new,

0:34:19 > 0:34:21all singing, all dancing TARDIS,

0:34:21 > 0:34:24he also introduced us to psychic paper.

0:34:24 > 0:34:26Look, I've got an invitation. Look. There, you see it?

0:34:26 > 0:34:28It's fine. See. "The Doctor plus one."

0:34:28 > 0:34:31I'm the Doctor. This is Rose Tyler, she's my plus one.

0:34:31 > 0:34:32Is that all right?

0:34:32 > 0:34:34The psychic paper is awesome.

0:34:34 > 0:34:37That is something which would be the coolest thing to have in real life.

0:34:37 > 0:34:39Shows them whatever I want them to see.

0:34:39 > 0:34:40Saves a lot of time.

0:34:40 > 0:34:43As a teenager, the damage I would have done with that.

0:34:43 > 0:34:49And of course he had his upgraded, slimline sonic screwdriver.

0:34:49 > 0:34:52But the most important addition to the ninth Doctor's weaponry

0:34:52 > 0:34:53was his new companion Rose.

0:34:53 > 0:34:56I think when Billie Piper came in, that kind of changed things,

0:34:56 > 0:34:58- you know. - You look beautiful.

0:34:58 > 0:35:01Cos she was pretty to look at, but she was, ah...

0:35:02 > 0:35:04..she was mean.

0:35:04 > 0:35:05Rose was a great companion.

0:35:05 > 0:35:07A very modern companion.

0:35:07 > 0:35:10Rose was the companion that it needed to be for the new age.

0:35:10 > 0:35:12You see, I'm prepared for anything.

0:35:12 > 0:35:14She was just every girl, Jane Bloggs, you know.

0:35:14 > 0:35:16- I want chips. - Me too.

0:35:16 > 0:35:19That street kid...but got a job on the TARDIS.

0:35:19 > 0:35:20I'm a chav!

0:35:20 > 0:35:23See you later, I got a job on the TARDIS, yeah.

0:35:23 > 0:35:25But Rose came with baggage.

0:35:25 > 0:35:26Mickey.

0:35:26 > 0:35:27Fat lot of good you were.

0:35:27 > 0:35:30And when she was forced to pick between him and the Doctor...

0:35:30 > 0:35:32it was a no-brainer.

0:35:32 > 0:35:36The moment the Doctor appeared, Mickey never stood a chance.

0:35:36 > 0:35:38I think a lot of women maybe would...

0:35:38 > 0:35:41love to be swept off their feet by a mysterious guy...

0:35:41 > 0:35:43maybe not in a blue box...

0:35:43 > 0:35:45That would be weird.

0:35:45 > 0:35:47Did I mention it also travels in time.

0:35:47 > 0:35:49Poor Mickey, man, in his Ford Focus.

0:35:49 > 0:35:52It's no match for a time machine.

0:35:52 > 0:35:55The time machine. Laters.

0:35:55 > 0:35:57Rose and the Doctor battled farting aliens...

0:35:57 > 0:35:59- HE FARTS - Blimey!

0:35:59 > 0:36:02..Victorian ghosts and paid a visit to the end of the world.

0:36:04 > 0:36:07But wherever they went there were two words that kept cropping up.

0:36:07 > 0:36:09Blaidd Drwg.

0:36:09 > 0:36:10What's it mean?

0:36:10 > 0:36:12Bad Wolf.

0:36:12 > 0:36:14But I've heard that before.

0:36:14 > 0:36:16Bad Wolf. I've heard that lots of times.

0:36:16 > 0:36:20The Bad Wolf storyline, that was very confusing.

0:36:20 > 0:36:23Yes, if we're going to talk about the ninth Doctor,

0:36:23 > 0:36:26then we have to talk about the Bad Wolf.

0:36:26 > 0:36:27The big bad wolf.

0:36:27 > 0:36:30You know, all those messages, but we'll come back to that.

0:36:30 > 0:36:31Okey-doke.

0:36:31 > 0:36:32So, where were we?

0:36:32 > 0:36:35When uber-baddies the Daleks turn up,

0:36:35 > 0:36:37it appears that nothing can stop them this time.

0:36:37 > 0:36:41So the Doctor sends Rose off in the TARDIS to keep her out of harm's way

0:36:41 > 0:36:45while he threatens to go kamikaze and blow everyone to smithereens.

0:36:45 > 0:36:46I'll do it!

0:36:46 > 0:36:49Then prove yourself, Doctor!

0:36:49 > 0:36:52What are you - coward or killer?

0:36:54 > 0:36:58Well, I guess he wasn't such a tough guy after all.

0:36:58 > 0:36:59Coward.

0:36:59 > 0:37:02Meanwhile back on Earth, Rose is starting to realise that

0:37:02 > 0:37:04maybe this Bad Wolf thing is something to do with her.

0:37:04 > 0:37:06It's a link between me and the Doctor.

0:37:06 > 0:37:09Bad Wolf here, Bad Wolf there.

0:37:09 > 0:37:12Rose knows about the power locked beneath the TARDIS console,

0:37:12 > 0:37:14so she and Mickey break it open.

0:37:14 > 0:37:17She then looks into the space time vortex which gives her

0:37:17 > 0:37:20amazing powers enabling her to save Captain Jack.

0:37:20 > 0:37:23And not before she destroys the Daleks and saves the world.

0:37:23 > 0:37:24Rose, you've done it. Now stop.

0:37:24 > 0:37:28It also gives her the power to leave all those messages through her past

0:37:28 > 0:37:30to lead her to become the Bad Wolf.

0:37:30 > 0:37:31Like I said before...

0:37:31 > 0:37:33It's a message.

0:37:33 > 0:37:35..it's a pre-destination paradox.

0:37:35 > 0:37:36Ah, it's simple really.

0:37:36 > 0:37:39Anyway, it turns out that looking into the time vortex

0:37:39 > 0:37:40is really bad for you.

0:37:40 > 0:37:43You've got the entire vortex running through your head.

0:37:43 > 0:37:44You're going to burn.

0:37:44 > 0:37:46But the Doctor won't let Rose die, oh, no.

0:37:46 > 0:37:48I think you need a Doctor.

0:37:48 > 0:37:51He cheekily nabs himself a kiss from a rose...

0:37:51 > 0:37:53which also incidentally saves her life.

0:37:53 > 0:37:56He is saving her, but it's obviously a part of him...

0:37:58 > 0:38:00..where he actually just wants to...

0:38:00 > 0:38:02you know, wants to get some lip on lip action.

0:38:02 > 0:38:04Who wouldn't? It's Billie Piper.

0:38:04 > 0:38:05Love Billie Piper.

0:38:05 > 0:38:07Tell me what's going on.

0:38:07 > 0:38:09I absorbed all the energy from the time vortex

0:38:09 > 0:38:11and no-one's meant to do that.

0:38:11 > 0:38:12Yes, in true heroic fashion,

0:38:12 > 0:38:15our fearless Time Lord swallows up the vortex

0:38:15 > 0:38:17and kicks off his regeneration.

0:38:17 > 0:38:20I'm going to regenerate now. Let's have it.

0:38:23 > 0:38:27By the time I got to the end of that series, I was well in there,

0:38:27 > 0:38:30I was hooked on Christopher Eccleston.

0:38:30 > 0:38:33He brought it back with huge success.

0:38:33 > 0:38:36It's a great legacy that he carries.

0:38:36 > 0:38:39Christopher Eccleston's Doctor was amazing.

0:38:39 > 0:38:42He's exactly what the show needed to make it work.

0:38:42 > 0:38:45He owned it. He owned it.

0:38:48 > 0:38:52So far in Doctor Who: The Ultimate Guide...

0:38:52 > 0:38:56we've seen nine of the 11 Doctors in action.

0:38:56 > 0:38:58- They've been intelligent... - It's antimatter.

0:38:58 > 0:39:00..courageous,

0:39:00 > 0:39:01sometimes a little grumpy...

0:39:01 > 0:39:02Mind your own business.

0:39:02 > 0:39:04..but always entertaining.

0:39:04 > 0:39:07Still to come, our look back at the Doctors has brought us

0:39:07 > 0:39:10- slap-bang into the modern era. - New teeth.

0:39:10 > 0:39:12And as we near the end of our journey across the Whoniverse,

0:39:12 > 0:39:15we're down to out last two Doctors.

0:39:15 > 0:39:17And things begin to get a little darker.

0:39:26 > 0:39:27My favourite Doctor...

0:39:29 > 0:39:30..it has to be Mr Tennant.

0:39:30 > 0:39:33MUSIC: "Yeah Yeah" by Willy Moon

0:39:38 > 0:39:41The tenth Doctor came crashing down to Earth with a bang

0:39:41 > 0:39:43and a whole new appearance.

0:39:43 > 0:39:44Here we are then.

0:39:44 > 0:39:46It was awesome.

0:39:46 > 0:39:47It was amazing.

0:39:47 > 0:39:49He just came in and was like so different.

0:39:49 > 0:39:51Good different or bad different?

0:39:51 > 0:39:52He's a lot more manic.

0:39:52 > 0:39:53Barcelona.

0:39:53 > 0:39:55Even in the serious moments.

0:39:55 > 0:39:56Ba-da boom!

0:39:56 > 0:39:59Someone who looks a certain way and wears soft shoes

0:39:59 > 0:40:01and a tight suit

0:40:01 > 0:40:03and larks around a bit.

0:40:03 > 0:40:04Exuberant.

0:40:04 > 0:40:06Very quirky.

0:40:06 > 0:40:08Pulled a lot of sort of faces.

0:40:08 > 0:40:10New teeth. That's weird.

0:40:10 > 0:40:11New teeth.

0:40:11 > 0:40:13He was a very joyous, very happy Doctor.

0:40:13 > 0:40:15Very energetic Doctor.

0:40:15 > 0:40:17But you're also trying to undercut that with the fact that

0:40:17 > 0:40:19he's actually 900 years old.

0:40:19 > 0:40:20There's steel in there.

0:40:20 > 0:40:22I need you to shut up!

0:40:22 > 0:40:25Oh, he hasn't changed that much, has he?

0:40:25 > 0:40:26Despite his crash landing,

0:40:26 > 0:40:28the tenth Doctor took a while

0:40:28 > 0:40:31- to actually start doing the usual Doctory stuff.- Help us.

0:40:33 > 0:40:34Please, Doctor.

0:40:34 > 0:40:36Help us.

0:40:36 > 0:40:38I spent a lot of the Christmas Invasion asleep.

0:40:38 > 0:40:40We didn't even get to see what his Doctor was like

0:40:40 > 0:40:43until the critical moment came.

0:40:43 > 0:40:47But then I get to show off, I don't stop speaking for about five pages.

0:40:47 > 0:40:48Did you miss me?

0:40:48 > 0:40:51Yes, still in his PJs, he sprang into action

0:40:51 > 0:40:54and took on the evil leader of the Sycorax.

0:40:54 > 0:40:57I fight an alien on the wing of a spacecraft.

0:40:57 > 0:40:59Had my hand chopped off and save the day.

0:40:59 > 0:41:00You cut my hand off.

0:41:02 > 0:41:04It's an entrance worth waiting for.

0:41:07 > 0:41:08Witchcraft!

0:41:08 > 0:41:09Want to know the best bit?

0:41:09 > 0:41:11This new hand...

0:41:11 > 0:41:12is a fighting hand!

0:41:12 > 0:41:15The Doc then defeated his sharp-toothed opponent

0:41:15 > 0:41:17and offered him an ultimatum.

0:41:17 > 0:41:20I'll spare your life if you'll take this champion's command.

0:41:22 > 0:41:23Leave this planet.

0:41:23 > 0:41:25And never return.

0:41:25 > 0:41:27What do you say?

0:41:27 > 0:41:28Yes.

0:41:28 > 0:41:30Swear on the blood of your species!

0:41:33 > 0:41:35I swear.

0:41:36 > 0:41:37There we are then. Thanks for that.

0:41:37 > 0:41:38Cheers, big fella.

0:41:38 > 0:41:39Bravo!

0:41:39 > 0:41:43But as well know, you never turn your back on a Sycorax.

0:41:43 > 0:41:45Not bad for a man in his jim jams.

0:41:45 > 0:41:49And it became clear he wasn't going to be a Time Lord to mess with.

0:41:49 > 0:41:51No second chances.

0:41:51 > 0:41:53I'm that sort of a man.

0:41:53 > 0:41:56He may be apparently affable,

0:41:56 > 0:41:58but you shouldn't underestimate what lies beneath.

0:41:58 > 0:42:00Am I funny?

0:42:00 > 0:42:03When he wasn't being ruthless, the tenth Doctor liked a bit of a laugh.

0:42:03 > 0:42:07You are the best because you are so sick.

0:42:07 > 0:42:08Allons-y.

0:42:08 > 0:42:09Allons-y.

0:42:09 > 0:42:11Brilliant. Brilliant. Allons-y.

0:42:11 > 0:42:12Allons-y.

0:42:12 > 0:42:14It's French for let's go.

0:42:14 > 0:42:16David's a true fan.

0:42:16 > 0:42:17I'm brilliant.

0:42:17 > 0:42:19And it was genuine.

0:42:19 > 0:42:21His own personal joy just to be...

0:42:21 > 0:42:23You knew he loved being there.

0:42:23 > 0:42:25He wouldn't have wanted to be anywhere else.

0:42:25 > 0:42:26You're stone-cold brilliant.

0:42:26 > 0:42:29But the tenth Doctor's reign more than any previous Doctor

0:42:29 > 0:42:32was defined by his relationship with the ladies.

0:42:32 > 0:42:34He loves playing with Earth girls.

0:42:34 > 0:42:38This is...very unfairly levelled at the tenth Doctor,

0:42:38 > 0:42:40That he was chasing lots of women.

0:42:40 > 0:42:41He absolutely wasn't.

0:42:41 > 0:42:43We make quite a couple.

0:42:43 > 0:42:46Any kisses that he may have had in the series,

0:42:46 > 0:42:48none of them are romantic.

0:42:48 > 0:42:50Oh, yeah?

0:42:50 > 0:42:53Women may have fallen for him, but it didn't work the other way around.

0:42:53 > 0:42:54He was scrupulous.

0:42:54 > 0:42:55Hold on a minute.

0:42:55 > 0:42:59There was Lady Christina, Madame de Pompadour and uh...

0:42:59 > 0:43:00You must be Malcolm.

0:43:00 > 0:43:02Even Malcolm.

0:43:02 > 0:43:03Oh, I love you.

0:43:03 > 0:43:05He deserves a bit of love in his life.

0:43:05 > 0:43:06I love you.

0:43:06 > 0:43:08But most importantly there was Rose.

0:43:08 > 0:43:10The Doctor and Rose was a love story really

0:43:10 > 0:43:12without any sexual element.

0:43:12 > 0:43:16Because that would be wrong, they were...

0:43:16 > 0:43:18clearly devoted to each other.

0:43:18 > 0:43:21I always think the Doctors and their companions end up closer

0:43:21 > 0:43:23when they've seen him regenerate.

0:43:23 > 0:43:27It's almost like they know him in an intimate way.

0:43:27 > 0:43:33And Rose just got to him and they had a very unconventional love story

0:43:33 > 0:43:35certainly, but I think that's what it was.

0:43:37 > 0:43:41The whole story of David Tennant's Doctor with Rose was just

0:43:41 > 0:43:45so moving and wasn't it like suddenly the Doctor just came out

0:43:45 > 0:43:49of nowhere, fell in love with his companion and they started snogging.

0:43:49 > 0:43:51It was really beautifully done.

0:43:51 > 0:43:54Like all good love stories, it ends in desperate tragedy.

0:43:54 > 0:43:57When Rose was thrust into a different universe,

0:43:57 > 0:43:59the Doctor makes the journey over,

0:43:59 > 0:44:02allowing Rose to say the words she'd longed to say.

0:44:02 > 0:44:05They get to say the goodbye they were robbed of...

0:44:07 > 0:44:08..when they parted.

0:44:08 > 0:44:11So in the end there was a tearful farewell

0:44:11 > 0:44:13and the chance to express their feelings.

0:44:17 > 0:44:18I love you.

0:44:21 > 0:44:23Quite right too.

0:44:23 > 0:44:25Rose tells him that she loves him.

0:44:25 > 0:44:28But the Doctor doesn't quite manage to say it back.

0:44:28 > 0:44:30And I suppose...

0:44:32 > 0:44:33..it's my last chance to say it.

0:44:39 > 0:44:40Rose Tyler...

0:44:51 > 0:44:55During his time-travels, he fought old foes, the Cybermen.

0:44:55 > 0:44:56Davros and the Daleks.

0:44:56 > 0:44:58Tangled with Professor Lazarus.

0:44:58 > 0:45:00Battled some mouth-watering Martians.

0:45:00 > 0:45:02And there was an encounter with

0:45:02 > 0:45:06the Weeping Angels you simply couldn't take your eyes off.

0:45:06 > 0:45:09In one episode he even joined forces with legendary former companion

0:45:09 > 0:45:12Sarah Jane Smith and K-9.

0:45:12 > 0:45:15But in the history of Doctor's downfalls,

0:45:15 > 0:45:18the story of the demise of the tenth is a hard one to beat.

0:45:24 > 0:45:26The heartbeat of a Time Lord.

0:45:26 > 0:45:30The Time Lords retrospectively placed this beat in the Master's head

0:45:30 > 0:45:34and they used that as a beacon to pull themselves out of the Time War.

0:45:34 > 0:45:36You sticking with this?

0:45:36 > 0:45:41Never ever stops, the drumming, Doctor, the constant drumming...

0:45:43 > 0:45:46And after a ferocious battle with the Time Lords and the Master,

0:45:46 > 0:45:49the Doctor was the last man standing.

0:45:49 > 0:45:50I'm still alive.

0:45:50 > 0:45:53Turns out that the four knocks are Wilf

0:45:53 > 0:45:56asking to be let out of a radiation box.

0:45:59 > 0:46:02Something much more mundane but of course for the Doctor,

0:46:02 > 0:46:04much more tragic.

0:46:04 > 0:46:06I can do so much more.

0:46:08 > 0:46:10So much more!

0:46:11 > 0:46:14David Tennant's exit was a classic Doctor Who exit,

0:46:14 > 0:46:15he sacrificed himself.

0:46:15 > 0:46:18But then who wouldn't sacrifice themselves to save Bernard Cribbins?

0:46:18 > 0:46:20It's my honour...

0:46:20 > 0:46:23I think that is the epitome of the Doctor to do that.

0:46:23 > 0:46:24Better be quick.

0:46:24 > 0:46:27Three, two, one.

0:46:30 > 0:46:33And so the tenth Doctor's time was up.

0:46:33 > 0:46:38David, I think, it was the first time you saw his two hearts.

0:46:38 > 0:46:40It's the battle between the good side and bad side,

0:46:40 > 0:46:44but I think that's the internal battle of the Doctor.

0:46:44 > 0:46:50He quite outrageously sort of made this sexy, cool, cheeky Doctor,

0:46:50 > 0:46:53almost the ladies' man and he was properly cool.

0:46:53 > 0:46:55Female population of the world...

0:46:55 > 0:46:57"Oh, Doctor Who."

0:46:57 > 0:47:01It shone and what's more it inspired everybody else.

0:47:01 > 0:47:04And that was such a radical departure for the old Time Lord.

0:47:18 > 0:47:20Ten regenerations, countless villains,

0:47:20 > 0:47:22adventures and companions later,

0:47:22 > 0:47:25yes, it's time to meet the present owner of the TARDIS.

0:47:27 > 0:47:29It's the 11th Doctor.

0:47:29 > 0:47:31Hello.

0:47:31 > 0:47:33My favourite Doctor is Matt Smith.

0:47:33 > 0:47:34When I heard that they were going to get a 12-year-old

0:47:34 > 0:47:36to play Doctor Who,

0:47:36 > 0:47:39I was like, "No, you can't go for young!"

0:47:39 > 0:47:42But then when Matt came along...he was terrific.

0:47:42 > 0:47:44Things. Hello. What kind of things?

0:47:44 > 0:47:46Interesting things. I love things. Ask anyone.

0:47:46 > 0:47:49I love that energy. It's youthful, of course.

0:47:49 > 0:47:53He's like a boffin and an action hero at the same time.

0:47:53 > 0:47:55I think he captures the character perfectly.

0:47:55 > 0:47:57You only live once.

0:47:57 > 0:47:59I think he was just born to play that role.

0:47:59 > 0:48:02So what's the 11th Doctor actually like then?

0:48:02 > 0:48:03Spontaneous, I would say.

0:48:07 > 0:48:10I'd say he's one of the sillier versions of the character.

0:48:10 > 0:48:12Christmas Eve on a rooftop, saw a chimney,

0:48:12 > 0:48:15my whole brain just went, "What the hell?"

0:48:15 > 0:48:18I love the sheer brilliance of his physical comedy.

0:48:19 > 0:48:23Reminds me of a silent screen comedian.

0:48:25 > 0:48:26I love how he does this...

0:48:27 > 0:48:29He definitely played up the alien aspect.

0:48:29 > 0:48:32Time isn't a straight line, it's all bumpy-wumpy.

0:48:32 > 0:48:35There's loads of boring stuff like Sundays and Tuesdays

0:48:35 > 0:48:37and Thursday afternoons.

0:48:37 > 0:48:40He's just so...not of Earth.

0:48:42 > 0:48:45The 11th Doctor has faced a fraught time in the TARDIS,

0:48:45 > 0:48:51and has been taken to darker places than any previous Doctor before him.

0:48:51 > 0:48:53Argh!

0:48:53 > 0:48:56But with his time in the TARDIS shortly to come to an end,

0:48:56 > 0:48:58where did it all start?

0:48:58 > 0:49:00Amy was a kick-ass companion.

0:49:00 > 0:49:02I mean, I hope - is it bad to say that myself?

0:49:02 > 0:49:07She certainly was. She had to fiercely do battle with vampires...

0:49:07 > 0:49:09Weeping Angels...

0:49:09 > 0:49:11and, of course, the Daleks.

0:49:11 > 0:49:14My friend reckons you're dangerous. Is it true?

0:49:14 > 0:49:16I wouldn't say she was totally fearless,

0:49:16 > 0:49:19but she certainly dealt with her fears really well.

0:49:19 > 0:49:21Yes, this was one fiery redhead

0:49:21 > 0:49:23who certainly knew the meaning of swashbuckling.

0:49:23 > 0:49:25Amy, what are you doing?

0:49:25 > 0:49:27Saving your life. OK with that, are you?

0:49:27 > 0:49:29Put down the sword, a sword could kill us all, girl.

0:49:29 > 0:49:33Yeah, thanks, that's actually why I'm pointing it at you.

0:49:33 > 0:49:37But through Amy's adventures we discover an ugly side to the Doctor,

0:49:37 > 0:49:42when he leaves an older version of Amy behind to save her younger self.

0:49:42 > 0:49:45So, he's very silly and funny, but at the same time,

0:49:45 > 0:49:47there's a sort of dark side.

0:49:47 > 0:49:48I trusted you!

0:49:50 > 0:49:54We learn more about the character, and learn more about the dark side.

0:49:54 > 0:49:57I want people to call you Colonel Runaway.

0:49:57 > 0:49:59I want children laughing outside your door,

0:49:59 > 0:50:01cos they've found the house of Colonel Runaway.

0:50:01 > 0:50:04And when people come to you and ask if trying to get to me

0:50:04 > 0:50:07through the people I love...

0:50:07 > 0:50:10He's a man of immense power if he chooses to use it.

0:50:10 > 0:50:12Look, I'm angry, that's new.

0:50:13 > 0:50:16I'm really not sure what's going to happen, now.

0:50:16 > 0:50:18And there are times when his great rage

0:50:18 > 0:50:21and his impatience can overtake him.

0:50:21 > 0:50:23Take it!

0:50:23 > 0:50:25Take it all, baby!

0:50:25 > 0:50:27Have it!

0:50:27 > 0:50:29You have it all!

0:50:29 > 0:50:32Realising that there were a lot of people out to get him,

0:50:32 > 0:50:34he conjured up a plan...

0:50:34 > 0:50:36to fake his own death.

0:50:36 > 0:50:37Amy! Stay back!

0:50:37 > 0:50:39A master of escapology he may have been,

0:50:39 > 0:50:43but one of the things he wasn't so good at was being on his own,

0:50:43 > 0:50:47as we found out when his companions' journey came to an end.

0:50:47 > 0:50:51Amy and Rory had the saddest farewell from the Doctor.

0:50:51 > 0:50:55The Doctor, Amy and Rory have a huge battle with the Weeping Angels

0:50:55 > 0:50:58in New York, and then when they think that it's all done,

0:50:58 > 0:51:02at the last moment, a Weeping Angel gets Rory.

0:51:02 > 0:51:05# I hear the angels talking talking, talking... #

0:51:06 > 0:51:08Doctor?!

0:51:08 > 0:51:13Amy is left with a choice, she can essentially commit suicide

0:51:13 > 0:51:17or have herself zapped back in time to be with her husband.

0:51:17 > 0:51:21Just come back into the TARDIS.

0:51:21 > 0:51:24Or she could stay with the Doctor, and she chooses Rory, her husband,

0:51:24 > 0:51:26and sacrifices herself to a Weeping Angel.

0:51:28 > 0:51:29Goodbye.

0:51:33 > 0:51:36In a moment, in a heartbeat, they're dead and gone,

0:51:36 > 0:51:39then it's just utterly wretched for him again.

0:51:39 > 0:51:42He knows, because he's such a long-lived time-traveller,

0:51:42 > 0:51:45that all friendship is deferred bereavement,

0:51:45 > 0:51:49as far as he's concerned. It's going to happen, he's going to lose them.

0:51:49 > 0:51:53He moves and moves and moves, cos if he stopped, it would...

0:51:53 > 0:51:57He would be very, very upset about all the things that he's...

0:51:57 > 0:52:01All the people he's lost along the way.

0:52:01 > 0:52:02The Doctor shouldn't be alone.

0:52:02 > 0:52:04The Doctor can't be alone.

0:52:04 > 0:52:05And he wasn't alone for long

0:52:05 > 0:52:08before he had a new travelling companion.

0:52:08 > 0:52:09Clara.

0:52:09 > 0:52:10Doctor Who?

0:52:12 > 0:52:16The Doctor first met Clara after she'd been turned into a Dalek,

0:52:16 > 0:52:17but she died.

0:52:17 > 0:52:20Then, as a Victorian nanny, again, she died.

0:52:20 > 0:52:23She died, both times. The same woman!

0:52:23 > 0:52:24So, by the third time,

0:52:24 > 0:52:27the Doctor was desperate not to make it a hat-trick.

0:52:27 > 0:52:30When he meets her again and gets a third chance to save her,

0:52:30 > 0:52:32he knows there's a mystery to solve here.

0:52:32 > 0:52:35How can he have met the same person three times?

0:52:35 > 0:52:36And it was with Clara

0:52:36 > 0:52:40that the Doctor found himself facing his ultimate fate.

0:52:40 > 0:52:44His friends are lost for evermore unless he goes to Trenzalore.

0:52:46 > 0:52:47It's his grave,

0:52:47 > 0:52:51the one place he must never go in the universe is his own grave.

0:52:51 > 0:52:53Welcome to the tomb of the Doctor.

0:52:57 > 0:52:59Genuinely freaked and frightened by it.

0:52:59 > 0:53:02This a man who travels into the past and the future all the time,

0:53:02 > 0:53:03but on this occasion,

0:53:03 > 0:53:06he's travelling into the furthest recess of his own future.

0:53:06 > 0:53:09It turns out that that clever-clogs, the Great Intelligence,

0:53:09 > 0:53:12was planning to wipe the Doctor from history,

0:53:12 > 0:53:14by jumping into his timeline.

0:53:14 > 0:53:16But Clara had other ideas.

0:53:16 > 0:53:19When she sees the Doctor's timeline and realises the only way

0:53:19 > 0:53:23to save the Doctor is to go into the timeline and repair it...

0:53:23 > 0:53:24Clara...

0:53:26 > 0:53:27I don't know where I am.

0:53:27 > 0:53:28Clara!

0:53:28 > 0:53:29I just know I'm running.

0:53:29 > 0:53:33I love the bit where Clara jumped into the timeline,

0:53:33 > 0:53:37because she's another feisty, brave young character, you know?

0:53:37 > 0:53:38I love her, she's brilliant.

0:53:38 > 0:53:42And it's here we start to realise just how important Clara is.

0:53:42 > 0:53:45This is the point at which she will shatter into many different

0:53:45 > 0:53:48versions of herself and become the girl that keeps saving him

0:53:48 > 0:53:50throughout his life, helping him choose the TARDIS,

0:53:50 > 0:53:52helping him survive at every point.

0:53:52 > 0:53:57Always I'm running to save the Doctor, again and again and again.

0:53:57 > 0:53:58And, hidden in his timeline,

0:53:58 > 0:54:02Clara finds the Doctor's deepest, darkest secret.

0:54:02 > 0:54:04He has to keep something back.

0:54:04 > 0:54:07We've always thought we've seen every moment of his life,

0:54:07 > 0:54:09seen every face that he's had.

0:54:09 > 0:54:13There's a place that...even his closest companions can't go there.

0:54:13 > 0:54:15But at the end of The Name Of The Doctor,

0:54:15 > 0:54:18we realise there's one more Doctor he simply doesn't talk about,

0:54:18 > 0:54:21who somehow doesn't even count as the Doctor,

0:54:21 > 0:54:25and that version of himself is played by John Hurt.

0:54:32 > 0:54:35So, we've come to the end of our journey across 50 years

0:54:35 > 0:54:37of Doctor Who.

0:54:37 > 0:54:40And we've seen the many faces of our time-travelling hero.

0:54:40 > 0:54:43From the action man to the joker.

0:54:43 > 0:54:45Am I funny?

0:54:45 > 0:54:47From the boffin to the dandy.

0:54:47 > 0:54:48From the lothario to the tough guy.

0:54:48 > 0:54:50I am a Time Lord.

0:54:50 > 0:54:51We've got to know this complex

0:54:51 > 0:54:53and unique hero of science fiction a little better.

0:54:58 > 0:55:00Would you care for a jelly baby?

0:55:03 > 0:55:05Don't I know you?

0:55:05 > 0:55:07Come on then!

0:55:09 > 0:55:11Absolutely fantastic.

0:55:13 > 0:55:15That's absolutely splendid.

0:55:15 > 0:55:16Wait a minute...

0:55:19 > 0:55:21You did this!

0:55:24 > 0:55:25Gotcha.

0:55:25 > 0:55:28And whatever the future holds for our beloved Doctor,

0:55:28 > 0:55:31we can only hope it's going to be as mesmerising

0:55:31 > 0:55:35and full of wonderment as the last 50 years.

0:55:35 > 0:55:36I'll just be off, then.

0:55:44 > 0:55:45I remember now.

0:55:47 > 0:55:49I remember everything.

0:55:51 > 0:55:53It's like seeing it all for the first time.

0:55:53 > 0:55:54Seeing me, me...

0:55:57 > 0:55:58The Doctor.

0:55:58 > 0:56:0211 faces, hundreds, thousands of years of space and time.

0:56:03 > 0:56:06And now it's all back in there again.

0:56:06 > 0:56:09Ready for our proper holiday?

0:56:09 > 0:56:10I don't know if I deserve a holiday -

0:56:10 > 0:56:13you know, I don't know if I deserve anything.

0:56:13 > 0:56:15Not knowing was good.

0:56:15 > 0:56:16It was a relief.

0:56:17 > 0:56:19So much death, so many...

0:56:21 > 0:56:22..friends I've lost.

0:56:23 > 0:56:25I mean, how do I carry on?

0:56:26 > 0:56:28Because...

0:56:28 > 0:56:30Because you've saved billions of lives,

0:56:30 > 0:56:33and every time you go to a place and there's something wrong,

0:56:33 > 0:56:36you could turn and run, but you don't.

0:56:36 > 0:56:37You never do.

0:56:37 > 0:56:39You stay. You help.

0:56:40 > 0:56:42Wouldn't ANYONE stay and help?

0:56:42 > 0:56:44No! And because you don't know that,

0:56:44 > 0:56:47and because you'll never understand it,

0:56:47 > 0:56:50- that, my friend, is what makes you the Doctor.- Ooh.

0:56:50 > 0:56:51And that's why you'll never stop.

0:56:53 > 0:56:55- You've made me feel better. - You make everything better.

0:56:55 > 0:56:57Now, listen. Don't get soppy,

0:56:57 > 0:56:59I will not have soppiness in the TARDIS, young lady.

0:56:59 > 0:57:01Right! OK...

0:57:01 > 0:57:04Let's go on holiday, shall we?

0:57:04 > 0:57:05- Hold tight.- Woo!