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First Doctor comic stories

First Doctor comic stories refers to the comic strips devoted to the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who, using the likeness of the First Doctor William Hartnell. The strip was launched in Polystyle's TV Comic on 14 November 1964, less than a year after the television series began broadcasting and was the first original spin-off media from the show.[1] This strip began what has become known as the 'Polystyle era': running from 1964 to 1979.[2] The First Doctor starred in this strip running parallel with his appearance on the television show, ending in December 1966, after which TV Comic began creating strips for the Second Doctor. The franchise to print a regular comic strip passed to Doctor Who Magazine (then Doctor Who Weekly) in 1979, and was opened up to multiple franchises in the mid-2000s. During this time, the First Doctor has made various guest appearances as well as starring in some one-off comic strips.

Polystyle comic strips (1964–1966) edit

History edit

TV Comic, according to Doctor Who historian Jeremy Bentham, had grown up in the wake of commercial television. Just as publications like Radio Fun had blossomed during the golden years of the wireless so TV Comic began catering for young readerships who watched and liked children's programmes on ITV.[3] TV Comic - despite only having previously featured spin-offs of ITV programmes, decided to pitch for Doctor Who with the BBC, and despite initial reticence from the channel, eventually struck a deal.[4] The strip launched in issue 674 with a cover date of 14 November 1964; hitting the shelves - according to Doctor Who comics historian Paul Scoones - on 8 November 1964.[1] This means that the Doctor Who comic strip in TV Comic was officially the first spin-off media from the show - the first novelization Doctor Who in an exciting adventure with the Daleks not being released until later the same week on 12 November.[1] One immediate difference from the TV show was that the Doctor would be referred to in-strip as 'Doctor Who'.

There were other differences too. The rights to use Doctor Who applied 'then, as now' only applied to the likeness of the actor playing the Doctor and the TARDIS, and the portrayal of any other characters - be they companions or adversaries - would have been a separate negotiation and an increased cost, even prohibitive for companions who would appear in every instalment.[4] Accordingly, the Doctor was given new companions in the first strip, "The Klepton Parasites", two grandchildren Gillian and John. Regarding Doctor Who foes, the situation was very similar. During the First Doctor period of the TV Comic strip, only the inhabitants of Vortis from "The Web Planet" (1965) - the Zarbi and Menoptra - made it into a story. The Doctor's greatest adversaries - the Daleks - could not appear for another reason. This was that creator (Terry Nation) had 'a separate copyright' for the creatures, and had negotiated a deal with TV Century 21 (aka TV21) comics around the same time for their own strip; and copyright could 'only be held by one company at any one time' for the same format.[5] "The Daleks" strip appeared in issue 1 of TV21 (23 January 1965), and ran for one hundred and four instalments, each a page long, ending in issue 104 (14 January 1967).

Writers and artists edit

Artists: There were three artists during the TV Comic First Doctor period. Neville Main was the first to draw the First Doctor (and thus to draw any incarnation of the Doctor).[6] Main drew the first 9 stories (46 episodes) of the TVC strip, plus one single episode strip for the 1965 TVC Holiday Special and two single episode strips for the 1965 TVC Annual 1966. Bill Mevin took over for the middle of the run, producing 7 stories (28 episodes) for TVC between October 1965 and April 1966.[7] He also produced one of the two single episode strips for that year's TVC Annual 1967 released some months after his tenure came to an end due to illness.[8] These strips were produced much earlier in the year (April) ready for the more complex print procedure, hence the appearance in the table below which makes it look as if Mevin returned to the script some time later. After Mevin's relatively short tenure, the TVC strip was taken on by John Canning who produced 8 stories (36 episodes) plus two single episode strips for the 1966 TVC Holiday Special and one of the two single episode strips for the 1966 TVC Annual 1967.[9] Canning was thus the last of the three artists to draw the First Doctor for TVC, and, furthermore, would go on to kick off the Second Doctor run which began late December 1966.[10]

Writers: The situation with the scripts is more complex. Writing in 1982, Jeremy Bentham, the first researcher of Doctor Who comic strips, believed these strips to have been written by the artists who drew them. Thus in 'those days the notion of a strip having a separate writer was strictly the prerogative of American comic books'.[4] However, this view was later revised. John Ainsworth, another comic strip historian, said in an interview: 'There's quite a mystery surrounding around who actually wrote the scripts for the early Hartnell Doctor Who strips, or indeed, all the Hartnell Doctor Who strips. It was thought that the artists wrote them, but, after talking to [...] one of the artists, Bill Mevin [...] he doesn't know who wrote them but he knows he did actually work from scripts someone else provided'[11] In the same documentary, Mevin confirmed this saying, TVC strips were 'a production line [...] a conveyor belt. I'd get a script and I'd draw it'.[12] Later research by Paul Scoones in The Comic Strip Companion: 1964-1979 (2012) clarified some aspects of script production. In an overview, Scoones notes: 'Writers and artists were seldom named on the strips, which presents a challenge when trying to credit stories', and while all the artists have been identified, some of the writers 'unfortunately remain unknown'.[13] The first writer Scoones identifies is David Motton with the fifth story of the Neville Main tenure, and a couple more Main strips soon thereafter.[14] This information comes from Motton himself, as indicated in a footnote from Scoones regarding correspondence with the writer between March and May 2012.[15] Motton would go on to script another couple of stories the following year for the TVC Annual 1967 (released September 1966). As these strips were produced earlier in the year, during the change over between the second and third artists Mevin and Canning, Motton ended up writing for all three of the First Doctor artists.[16] Scoones goes on to possibly identify a second writer, Tom Tully from a third writer, Roger Noel Cook.[17] During correspondence with Scoones between February and March 2010, Cook writes he took over the strip from 'a freelance scriptwriter called Tom - I can't for the life of me remember his last name'. Scoones goes on to suggest from further information given by Cook that this was 'Tully, a prolific comic strip writer', adding he later confirmed this with Motton.[17] However, it remains unknown which stories Tully may have written, and indeed if there were other writers involved in the Main and Mevin periods. In an online errata, Scoones subsequently withdrew and corrected this claiming, writing:

"It was Thomas Woodman, not Tully, who worked on the strip. Tully was writing for Valiant in 1965 and worked on strips for Battle and 2000AD until the late 1980s. David Motton appears to have got Woodman and Tully mixed up in his recollection. Roger Noel Cook has subsequently confirmed that the ‘Tom’ whose surname he initially couldn’t recall was Woodman. There is no evidence that Tully worked on the Doctor Who strip."[18]

With respect to Cook, he took over the scripting at the same time that Canning took over the artwork, this 'marking the beginning of a four year collaboration' for TVC on a number of strips.[17] And once again, just like Canning, Cook would go on to work on the Second Doctor run, beginning late December 1966.[10]

Style: Bentham describes Main's output thus: very simplistic in style, consisting of basic line illustrations drawn in a very cartoonish way. During his 45 week stint on the strip he never quite captured the likeness of Hartnell [...] He was, however, quite an inventive storywriter.[4] Of course, given the information above, we now know the stories were not by Main at all.

List of comic strips edit

The list below is of all the First Doctor comic strips that appeared in TV Comic (TVC) as well the yearly TV Comic Holiday Special (TVCHS) and TV Comic Annual (TVCA). The order is that designated by the publication date, as integrated by Paul Scoones.[19]

#[a] Title[b] Companions Plot Pub. Issues Ep# Date Format Writer[c] Artist[c]
01 "The Klepton Parasites" Gillian/John TVC 674 - 683 10 14 Nov 1964 - 16 Jan 1965 B&W ? Neville Main
02 "The Therovian Quest" Gillian/John TVC 684 - 689 6 23 Jan - 27 Feb 1965 B&W ? Neville Main
03 "The Hijackers of Thrax" Gillian/John TVC 690 - 692 3 6 - 20 Mar 1965 B&W ? Neville Main
04 "On the Web Planet" Gillian/John TVC 693 - 698 6 27 Mar - 1 May 1965 B&W ? Neville Main
05 "The Gyros" Gillian/John TVC 699 - 704 6 8 May - 12 Jun 1965 B&W David Motton Neville Main
06 "Prisoners of Gritog" Gillian/John TVCHS HS 1965 1 May 1965 Duo ? Neville Main
07 "Challenge Of The Piper" Gillian/John TVC 705 - 709 5 19 Jun - 17 Jul 1965 B&W David Motton Neville Main
08 "Moon Landing" Gillian/John TVC 710 - 712 3 24 Jul - 7 Aug 1965 B&W ? Neville Main
09 "Time In Reverse" Gillian/John TVC 713 - 715 3 14 - 28 Aug 1965 B&W David Motton Neville Main
10 "Lizardworld" Gillian/John TVC 716 - 719 4 4 - 25 Sep 1965 B&W ? Neville Main
11 "Prisoners of the Kleptons" Gillian/John TVCA A 1966 #1 1 Sep 1965 Colour ? Neville Main
12 "The Caterpillar Men" Gillian/John TVCA A 1966 #2 1 Sep 1965 Colour ? Neville Main
13 "The Ordeals of Demeter" Gillian/John TVC 720 - 723 4 2 - 23 Oct 1965 Colour ? Bill Mevin
14 "Enter: The Go-Ray" Gillian/John TVC 724 - 727 4 30 Oct - 20 Nov 1965 Colour ? Bill Mevin
15 "Shark Bait" Gillian/John TVC 728 - 731 4 27 Nov - 18 Dec 1965 Colour ? Bill Mevin
16 "A Christmas Story" Gillian/John TVC 732 - 735 4 25 Dec 1965 - 15 Jan 1966 Colour ? Bill Mevin
17 "The Didus Expidition" Gillian/John TVC 736 - 739 4 22 Jan - 12 Feb 1966 Colour ? Bill Mevin
18 "Space Station Z-7" Gillian/John TVC 740 - 743 4 19 Feb - 12 Mar 1966 Colour ? Bill Mevin
19 "Plague of the Black Scorpi" Gillian/John TVC 744 - 747 4 19 Mar - 9 Apr 1966 Colour ? Bill Mevin
20 "The Trodos Tyranny" Gillian/John TVC 748 - 752 5 16 Apr - 14 May 1966 Colour Roger Noel Cook John Canning
21 "The Secret of Gemino" Gillian/John TVC 753 - 757 5 21 May - 18 Jun 1966 Colour Roger Noel Cook John Canning
22 "Guests of King Neptune" Gillian/John TVCHS HS 1966 #1 1 May 1966 Duo ? John Canning
23 "The Gaze of the Gorgon" Gillian/John TVCHS HS 1966 #2 1 May 1966 Duo ? John Canning
24 "The Haunted Planet" Gillian/John TVC 758 - 762 5 25 Jun - 23 Jul 1966 Colour Roger Noel Cook John Canning
25 "The Hunters of Zerox" Gillian/John TVC 763 - 767 5 30 Jul - 27 Aug 1966 B&W [Roger Noel Cook] John Canning
26 "The Underwater Robot" Gillian/John TVC 768 - 771 4 3 - 24 Sep 1966 B&W Roger Noel Cook John Canning
27 "Deadly Vessel" Gillian/John TVCA A 1967 #1 1 Sep 1966 Colour David Motton John Canning
28 "Kingdom Of The Animals" Gillian/John TVCA A 1967 #2 1 Sep 1966 Colour David Motton Bill Mevin (add note)
29 "Return of the Trods" Gillian/John TVC 772 - 775 4 1 - 22 Oct 1966 B&W Roger Noel Cook John Canning
30 "The Galaxy Games" Gillian/John TVC 776 - 779 4 29 Oct - 19 Nov 1966 B&W [Roger Noel Cook] John Canning
31 "The Experimenters" Gillian/John TVC 780 - 783 4 26 Nov - 17 Dec 1966 B&W [Roger Noel Cook] John Canning
Notes
  • a ^ The order here is taken from Scoones.[19] This order follows publication date. However, it is worth noting that the strips for the TVC Holiday Specials and TVC Annuals would have been produced long before publication, with the annuals, some time before. For instance, the stories "Deadly Cargo" and "The Pets" for the TVC Annual 1967 (released September 1966) were most likely drawn in the April of that year when artist Bill Mevin was handing over to John Canning.[20] ADD NOTE WITH MORE INFO BELOW
  • b ^ The naming here is taken from Scoones.[19]
  • c ^ ^ The names of the writers and artists are taken from Scoones, who writes: 'Writers and artists were seldom named on the strips, which presents a challenge when trying to credit stories. The creators responsible for most of the stories have been identified but others unfortunately remain unknown'.[13] The columns for 'Writer' and 'Artist' follow Scoones in placing possible/doubtful attributions in parentheses; however, where Scoones cannot identify a creator he leaves this information blank, a question mark is used here to ensure it does not appear that the information is missing.

World Distributors comic strips edit

World Distributors issued Doctor Who annuals from 1966 (as well as one special). Most of their content was short stories. However, they did also have some comic strips, increasingly so as the years progressed. During the period of the First Doctor, however, there was only one strip, in the annual for 1967.

# Title Companions Featuring Annual Year Date Format Writer Artist
01 "Mission for Duh" None TBA 1967 September/October 1966 TBA TBA TBA

Doctor Who Magazine comic strips edit

Doctor Who Magazine edit

# Title Featuring Writer Release Date
1"Food for Thought"Ben and PollyNicholas Briggs29 September - 24 November 1994
2"Operation Proteus"SusanGareth Roberts28 September - 23 November 1995
3"Are You Listening?"Steven and VickiScott GrayJuly 1994

Doctor Who Yearbook edit

# Title Featuring Writer Release Date
1"A Religious Experience"TBATBA1994

Non-parodic edit

# Title Featuring Writer Release Date
1"Timeslip"TBATBATBA
2"Funhouse"TBATBATBA
3"Time and Time Again"Jamie and ZoeTBA1967

Both (non-parodic and parodic) edit

# Title Featuring Writer Release Date
1"Happy Deathday"TBATBATBA
2"Death to the Doctor!"TBATBATBA

See also edit

References edit

General

  • Ainsworth, John, "Behind the Frame" [I: Polystyle strips (1960s)] in Doctor Who Classic Comics [Issue 1], 9 December 1992, pp. 20–21
  • Ainsworth, John, "Frame Count" [I: First Doctor Polystyle strips] in Doctor Who Classic Comics [Issue 1], 9 December 1992, p. 19
  • Bentham, Jeremy, "Doctor Who Comics"/"Comics Checklist" [Polystyle First Doctor] in Doctor Who Monthly (Issue 62), March 1982, pp. 15–18; 23
  • Hearn, Marcus (director), Stripped for Action - The First Doctor documentary feature with John Ainsworth (Comics Historian); Alan Barnes (Former Doctor Who Magazine Editor); Jeremy Bentham (Comics Historian); Gary Russell (Former Doctor Who Magazine Editor); Bill Mevin (Comics Artist), on Doctor Who: The Time Meddler (DVD), 16 mins., 2008
  • Scoones, Paul, The Comic Strip Companion: The Unofficial and Unauthorised Guide to Doctor Who in Comics: 1964-1979, Prestatyn: Telos, 2012

Specific

  1. ^ a b c "Scoones (2012), p. 16
  2. ^ "Scoones (2012), p. 11
  3. ^ "Bentham, "Doctor Who Comics" (March 1982), p. 15
  4. ^ a b c d "Bentham, "Doctor Who Comics" (March 1982), p. 16
  5. ^ "Bentham, "Doctor Who Comics" (March 1982), p. 17
  6. ^ "Scoones (2012), pp. 23-61
  7. ^ "Scoones (2012), pp. 62-75
  8. ^ "Scoones (2012), p. 91
  9. ^ "Scoones (2012), pp. 77-96
  10. ^ a b "Scoones (2012), p. 100
  11. ^ Stripped for Action (2008), 00:07:01-00:07:24
  12. ^ Stripped for Action (2008), 00:07:24-00:08:27
  13. ^ a b "Scoones (2012), p. 14
  14. ^ "Scoones (2012), p. 43
  15. ^ "Scoones (2012), p. 44
  16. ^ "Scoones (2012), pp. 90-91
  17. ^ a b c "Scoones (2012), pp. 78-79
  18. ^ "Errata (1964-1979)". March 2016.
  19. ^ a b c Scoones (2012), p. 7
  20. ^ "Scoones (2012), p. 90

first, doctor, comic, stories, refers, comic, strips, devoted, long, running, british, science, fiction, television, series, doctor, using, likeness, first, doctor, william, hartnell, strip, launched, polystyle, comic, november, 1964, less, than, year, after, . First Doctor comic stories refers to the comic strips devoted to the long running British science fiction television series Doctor Who using the likeness of the First Doctor William Hartnell The strip was launched in Polystyle s TV Comic on 14 November 1964 less than a year after the television series began broadcasting and was the first original spin off media from the show 1 This strip began what has become known as the Polystyle era running from 1964 to 1979 2 The First Doctor starred in this strip running parallel with his appearance on the television show ending in December 1966 after which TV Comic began creating strips for the Second Doctor The franchise to print a regular comic strip passed to Doctor Who Magazine then Doctor Who Weekly in 1979 and was opened up to multiple franchises in the mid 2000s During this time the First Doctor has made various guest appearances as well as starring in some one off comic strips Contents 1 Polystyle comic strips 1964 1966 1 1 History 1 2 Writers and artists 1 3 List of comic strips 2 World Distributors comic strips 3 Doctor Who Magazine comic strips 3 1 Doctor Who Magazine 3 2 Doctor Who Yearbook 3 3 Non parodic 3 4 Both non parodic and parodic 4 See also 5 ReferencesPolystyle comic strips 1964 1966 editHistory edit TV Comic according to Doctor Who historian Jeremy Bentham had grown up in the wake of commercial television Just as publications like Radio Fun had blossomed during the golden years of the wireless so TV Comic began catering for young readerships who watched and liked children s programmes on ITV 3 TV Comic despite only having previously featured spin offs of ITV programmes decided to pitch for Doctor Who with the BBC and despite initial reticence from the channel eventually struck a deal 4 The strip launched in issue 674 with a cover date of 14 November 1964 hitting the shelves according to Doctor Who comics historian Paul Scoones on 8 November 1964 1 This means that the Doctor Who comic strip in TV Comic was officially the first spin off media from the show the first novelization Doctor Who in an exciting adventure with the Daleks not being released until later the same week on 12 November 1 One immediate difference from the TV show was that the Doctor would be referred to in strip as Doctor Who There were other differences too The rights to use Doctor Who applied then as now only applied to the likeness of the actor playing the Doctor and the TARDIS and the portrayal of any other characters be they companions or adversaries would have been a separate negotiation and an increased cost even prohibitive for companions who would appear in every instalment 4 Accordingly the Doctor was given new companions in the first strip The Klepton Parasites two grandchildren Gillian and John Regarding Doctor Who foes the situation was very similar During the First Doctor period of the TV Comic strip only the inhabitants of Vortis from The Web Planet 1965 the Zarbi and Menoptra made it into a story The Doctor s greatest adversaries the Daleks could not appear for another reason This was that creator Terry Nation had a separate copyright for the creatures and had negotiated a deal with TV Century 21 aka TV21 comics around the same time for their own strip and copyright could only be held by one company at any one time for the same format 5 The Daleks strip appeared in issue 1 of TV21 23 January 1965 and ran for one hundred and four instalments each a page long ending in issue 104 14 January 1967 Writers and artists edit Artists There were three artists during the TV Comic First Doctor period Neville Main was the first to draw the First Doctor and thus to draw any incarnation of the Doctor 6 Main drew the first 9 stories 46 episodes of the TVC strip plus one single episode strip for the 1965 TVC Holiday Special and two single episode strips for the 1965 TVC Annual 1966 Bill Mevin took over for the middle of the run producing 7 stories 28 episodes for TVC between October 1965 and April 1966 7 He also produced one of the two single episode strips for that year s TVC Annual 1967 released some months after his tenure came to an end due to illness 8 These strips were produced much earlier in the year April ready for the more complex print procedure hence the appearance in the table below which makes it look as if Mevin returned to the script some time later After Mevin s relatively short tenure the TVC strip was taken on by John Canning who produced 8 stories 36 episodes plus two single episode strips for the 1966 TVC Holiday Special and one of the two single episode strips for the 1966 TVC Annual 1967 9 Canning was thus the last of the three artists to draw the First Doctor for TVC and furthermore would go on to kick off the Second Doctor run which began late December 1966 10 Writers The situation with the scripts is more complex Writing in 1982 Jeremy Bentham the first researcher of Doctor Who comic strips believed these strips to have been written by the artists who drew them Thus in those days the notion of a strip having a separate writer was strictly the prerogative of American comic books 4 However this view was later revised John Ainsworth another comic strip historian said in an interview There s quite a mystery surrounding around who actually wrote the scripts for the early Hartnell Doctor Who strips or indeed all the Hartnell Doctor Who strips It was thought that the artists wrote them but after talking to one of the artists Bill Mevin he doesn t know who wrote them but he knows he did actually work from scripts someone else provided 11 In the same documentary Mevin confirmed this saying TVC strips were a production line a conveyor belt I d get a script and I d draw it 12 Later research by Paul Scoones in The Comic Strip Companion 1964 1979 2012 clarified some aspects of script production In an overview Scoones notes Writers and artists were seldom named on the strips which presents a challenge when trying to credit stories and while all the artists have been identified some of the writers unfortunately remain unknown 13 The first writer Scoones identifies is David Motton with the fifth story of the Neville Main tenure and a couple more Main strips soon thereafter 14 This information comes from Motton himself as indicated in a footnote from Scoones regarding correspondence with the writer between March and May 2012 15 Motton would go on to script another couple of stories the following year for the TVC Annual 1967 released September 1966 As these strips were produced earlier in the year during the change over between the second and third artists Mevin and Canning Motton ended up writing for all three of the First Doctor artists 16 Scoones goes on to possibly identify a second writer Tom Tully from a third writer Roger Noel Cook 17 During correspondence with Scoones between February and March 2010 Cook writes he took over the strip from a freelance scriptwriter called Tom I can t for the life of me remember his last name Scoones goes on to suggest from further information given by Cook that this was Tully a prolific comic strip writer adding he later confirmed this with Motton 17 However it remains unknown which stories Tully may have written and indeed if there were other writers involved in the Main and Mevin periods In an online errata Scoones subsequently withdrew and corrected this claiming writing It was Thomas Woodman not Tully who worked on the strip Tully was writing for Valiant in 1965 and worked on strips for Battle and 2000AD until the late 1980s David Motton appears to have got Woodman and Tully mixed up in his recollection Roger Noel Cook has subsequently confirmed that the Tom whose surname he initially couldn t recall was Woodman There is no evidence that Tully worked on the Doctor Who strip 18 With respect to Cook he took over the scripting at the same time that Canning took over the artwork this marking the beginning of a four year collaboration for TVC on a number of strips 17 And once again just like Canning Cook would go on to work on the Second Doctor run beginning late December 1966 10 Style Bentham describes Main s output thus very simplistic in style consisting of basic line illustrations drawn in a very cartoonish way During his 45 week stint on the strip he never quite captured the likeness of Hartnell He was however quite an inventive storywriter 4 Of course given the information above we now know the stories were not by Main at all List of comic strips edit The list below is of all the First Doctor comic strips that appeared in TV Comic TVC as well the yearly TV Comic Holiday Special TVCHS and TV Comic Annual TVCA The order is that designated by the publication date as integrated by Paul Scoones 19 a Title b Companions Plot Pub Issues Ep Date Format Writer c Artist c 01 The Klepton Parasites Gillian John TVC 674 683 10 14 Nov 1964 16 Jan 1965 B amp W Neville Main 02 The Therovian Quest Gillian John TVC 684 689 6 23 Jan 27 Feb 1965 B amp W Neville Main 03 The Hijackers of Thrax Gillian John TVC 690 692 3 6 20 Mar 1965 B amp W Neville Main 04 On the Web Planet Gillian John TVC 693 698 6 27 Mar 1 May 1965 B amp W Neville Main 05 The Gyros Gillian John TVC 699 704 6 8 May 12 Jun 1965 B amp W David Motton Neville Main 06 Prisoners of Gritog Gillian John TVCHS HS 1965 1 May 1965 Duo Neville Main 07 Challenge Of The Piper Gillian John TVC 705 709 5 19 Jun 17 Jul 1965 B amp W David Motton Neville Main 08 Moon Landing Gillian John TVC 710 712 3 24 Jul 7 Aug 1965 B amp W Neville Main 09 Time In Reverse Gillian John TVC 713 715 3 14 28 Aug 1965 B amp W David Motton Neville Main 10 Lizardworld Gillian John TVC 716 719 4 4 25 Sep 1965 B amp W Neville Main 11 Prisoners of the Kleptons Gillian John TVCA A 1966 1 1 Sep 1965 Colour Neville Main 12 The Caterpillar Men Gillian John TVCA A 1966 2 1 Sep 1965 Colour Neville Main 13 The Ordeals of Demeter Gillian John TVC 720 723 4 2 23 Oct 1965 Colour Bill Mevin 14 Enter The Go Ray Gillian John TVC 724 727 4 30 Oct 20 Nov 1965 Colour Bill Mevin 15 Shark Bait Gillian John TVC 728 731 4 27 Nov 18 Dec 1965 Colour Bill Mevin 16 A Christmas Story Gillian John TVC 732 735 4 25 Dec 1965 15 Jan 1966 Colour Bill Mevin 17 The Didus Expidition Gillian John TVC 736 739 4 22 Jan 12 Feb 1966 Colour Bill Mevin 18 Space Station Z 7 Gillian John TVC 740 743 4 19 Feb 12 Mar 1966 Colour Bill Mevin 19 Plague of the Black Scorpi Gillian John TVC 744 747 4 19 Mar 9 Apr 1966 Colour Bill Mevin 20 The Trodos Tyranny Gillian John TVC 748 752 5 16 Apr 14 May 1966 Colour Roger Noel Cook John Canning 21 The Secret of Gemino Gillian John TVC 753 757 5 21 May 18 Jun 1966 Colour Roger Noel Cook John Canning 22 Guests of King Neptune Gillian John TVCHS HS 1966 1 1 May 1966 Duo John Canning 23 The Gaze of the Gorgon Gillian John TVCHS HS 1966 2 1 May 1966 Duo John Canning 24 The Haunted Planet Gillian John TVC 758 762 5 25 Jun 23 Jul 1966 Colour Roger Noel Cook John Canning 25 The Hunters of Zerox Gillian John TVC 763 767 5 30 Jul 27 Aug 1966 B amp W Roger Noel Cook John Canning 26 The Underwater Robot Gillian John TVC 768 771 4 3 24 Sep 1966 B amp W Roger Noel Cook John Canning 27 Deadly Vessel Gillian John TVCA A 1967 1 1 Sep 1966 Colour David Motton John Canning 28 Kingdom Of The Animals Gillian John TVCA A 1967 2 1 Sep 1966 Colour David Motton Bill Mevin add note 29 Return of the Trods Gillian John TVC 772 775 4 1 22 Oct 1966 B amp W Roger Noel Cook John Canning 30 The Galaxy Games Gillian John TVC 776 779 4 29 Oct 19 Nov 1966 B amp W Roger Noel Cook John Canning 31 The Experimenters Gillian John TVC 780 783 4 26 Nov 17 Dec 1966 B amp W Roger Noel Cook John Canning Notes a The order here is taken from Scoones 19 This order follows publication date However it is worth noting that the strips for the TVC Holiday Specials and TVC Annuals would have been produced long before publication with the annuals some time before For instance the stories Deadly Cargo and The Pets for the TVC Annual 1967 released September 1966 were most likely drawn in the April of that year when artist Bill Mevin was handing over to John Canning 20 ADD NOTE WITH MORE INFO BELOW b The naming here is taken from Scoones 19 c The names of the writers and artists are taken from Scoones who writes Writers and artists were seldom named on the strips which presents a challenge when trying to credit stories The creators responsible for most of the stories have been identified but others unfortunately remain unknown 13 The columns for Writer and Artist follow Scoones in placing possible doubtful attributions in parentheses however where Scoones cannot identify a creator he leaves this information blank a question mark is used here to ensure it does not appear that the information is missing World Distributors comic strips editWorld Distributors issued Doctor Who annuals from 1966 as well as one special Most of their content was short stories However they did also have some comic strips increasingly so as the years progressed During the period of the First Doctor however there was only one strip in the annual for 1967 Title Companions Featuring Annual Year Date Format Writer Artist 01 Mission for Duh None TBA 1967 September October 1966 TBA TBA TBADoctor Who Magazine comic strips editDoctor Who Magazine edit Title Featuring Writer Release Date1 Food for Thought Ben and PollyNicholas Briggs29 September 24 November 1994 2 Operation Proteus SusanGareth Roberts28 September 23 November 1995 3 Are You Listening Steven and VickiScott GrayJuly 1994 Doctor Who Yearbook edit Title Featuring Writer Release Date1 A Religious Experience TBATBA1994 Non parodic edit Title Featuring Writer Release Date1 Timeslip TBATBATBA 2 Funhouse TBATBATBA 3 Time and Time Again Jamie and ZoeTBA1967 Both non parodic and parodic edit Title Featuring Writer Release Date1 Happy Deathday TBATBATBA 2 Death to the Doctor TBATBATBASee also editList of Doctor Who comic stories Second Doctor comic stories Third Doctor comic stories Fourth Doctor comic strips Fifth Doctor comic stories Sixth Doctor comic stories Seventh Doctor comic stories Eighth Doctor comic stories War Doctor comic stories Ninth Doctor comic stories Tenth Doctor comic stories Eleventh Doctor comic stories Twelfth Doctor comic storiesReferences editGeneral Ainsworth John Behind the Frame I Polystyle strips 1960s in Doctor Who Classic Comics Issue 1 9 December 1992 pp 20 21 Ainsworth John Frame Count I First Doctor Polystyle strips in Doctor Who Classic Comics Issue 1 9 December 1992 p 19 Bentham Jeremy Doctor Who Comics Comics Checklist Polystyle First Doctor in Doctor Who Monthly Issue 62 March 1982 pp 15 18 23 Hearn Marcus director Stripped for Action The First Doctor documentary feature with John Ainsworth Comics Historian Alan Barnes Former Doctor Who Magazine Editor Jeremy Bentham Comics Historian Gary Russell Former Doctor Who Magazine Editor Bill Mevin Comics Artist on Doctor Who The Time Meddler DVD 16 mins 2008 Scoones Paul The Comic Strip Companion The Unofficial and Unauthorised Guide to Doctor Who in Comics 1964 1979 Prestatyn Telos 2012 Specific a b c Scoones 2012 p 16 Scoones 2012 p 11 Bentham Doctor Who Comics March 1982 p 15 a b c d Bentham Doctor Who Comics March 1982 p 16 Bentham Doctor Who Comics March 1982 p 17 Scoones 2012 pp 23 61 Scoones 2012 pp 62 75 Scoones 2012 p 91 Scoones 2012 pp 77 96 a b Scoones 2012 p 100 Stripped for Action 2008 00 07 01 00 07 24 Stripped for Action 2008 00 07 24 00 08 27 a b Scoones 2012 p 14 Scoones 2012 p 43 Scoones 2012 p 44 Scoones 2012 pp 90 91 a b c Scoones 2012 pp 78 79 Errata 1964 1979 March 2016 a b c Scoones 2012 p 7 Scoones 2012 p 90 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title First Doctor comic stories amp oldid 1219542546, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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