fbpx
Wikipedia

The Evil of the Daleks

The Evil of the Daleks is the mostly-missing ninth and final serial of the fourth season in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which originally aired in seven weekly parts from 20 May to 1 July 1967.

036 – The Evil of the Daleks
Doctor Who serial
Cast
Others
Production
Directed byDerek Martinus
Written byDavid Whitaker
Script editorGerry Davis (episodes 1–3)
Peter Bryant (episodes 4–7)
Produced byInnes Lloyd
Peter Bryant (associate producer, episode 1)
Executive producer(s)None
Music byDudley Simpson
Production codeLL
SeriesSeason 4
Running time7 episodes, 25 minutes each
Episode(s) missing6 episodes (1, 3–7)
First broadcast20 May 1967 (1967-05-20)
Last broadcast1 July 1967 (1967-07-01)
Chronology
← Preceded by
The Faceless Ones
Followed by →
The Tomb of the Cybermen
List of Doctor Who episodes (1963–1989)

In this serial, the Doctor (Patrick Troughton) and his travelling companion Jamie (Frazer Hines), shortly after losing the TARDIS, are transported to 1866, where the Daleks force the Doctor to help them in their latest plot to implement the human factor into Dalek brains in order to 'humanise' themselves into even deadlier living weapons. This serial marked the debut of Deborah Watling as the Doctor's new companion, Victoria Waterfield. It is also notable for introducing the Dalek Emperor. Only episode two, the episode in which Victoria first appears, is held in the BBC archives; the other six remain missing.

This story was initially intended to be the last Dalek story on Doctor Who. Writer Terry Nation, the creator of the Daleks, was trying to sell the Daleks to American television at the time and it was intended to give them a big send-off from the series. However, this was not to be the Doctor's last encounter with them. Aside from a few cameos, the Daleks did not properly return to the series until Day of the Daleks in 1972. In 1993, readers of DreamWatch Bulletin voted The Evil of the Daleks as the best ever Doctor Who story in a special poll for the series' thirtieth anniversary.

The story was released on DVD and Blu-ray in animated form on 27 September 2021, with the surviving episode two included.[1]

Plot edit

In 1966, the Second Doctor and Jamie watch helplessly as the TARDIS is loaded onto a lorry and driven away from Gatwick Airport. The trail leads them to an antique shop run by Edward Waterfield, who sells Victorian-style antiques that curiously seem as though they were still new. Waterfield is being coerced by the Daleks, who appear in a secret room of his shop through a time machine, and exterminate his mutinous employee Kennedy. Investigating the store, the Doctor and Jamie succumb to a booby trap that gasses them, and are dragged into the time machine by Waterfield.

They wake to find that they have been transported to 1866, and are in the house of Theodore Maxtible, Waterfield's partner, in Kent. The two had been trying to invent a time machine using mirrors and static electricity, when the Daleks emerged from their time cabinet. The Daleks then took Waterfield's daughter, Victoria Waterfield, hostage and forced Waterfield to travel a century forward in time to lure the Doctor into a trap by stealing the TARDIS. Waterfield is obviously fearful for his daughter's safety and his own, but Maxtible seems to be cooperating with the Daleks.

The Daleks threaten to destroy the TARDIS unless the Doctor helps them by conducting an experiment to isolate the "Human Factor", the unique qualities of human beings that have allowed them to consistently resist and defeat the Daleks. Once the Doctor has isolated the Human Factor, he will implant it into three Daleks, who will then become the precursors of a race of "super" Daleks, with the best qualities of humans and Daleks. To that end the Daleks want the Doctor to test Jamie by sending him to rescue Victoria, who is being kept in the house. The Doctor is strangely cooperative with the Daleks, manipulating Jamie into the rescue mission but not telling him of the nature of the test.

Jamie rescues Victoria, but she is taken prisoner again and transported through the time cabinet. The Doctor, observing how Jamie accomplished the rescue, distils the Human Factor, but suspects that there is more to the experiment than just this. Once the Human Factor is implanted in the three Daleks, they become completely human in personality and seem almost childlike, although the Doctor says their mentalities will mature quickly. This was the Doctor's intent all along: that the human factor would lead to "human" Daleks that would be friendly to humanity. He christens the three Alpha, Beta and Omega, but they soon return through the time cabinet to Skaro, the Daleks' home planet.

Waterfield discovers that Maxtible has betrayed them all to the Daleks, hoping that he will be able to learn the alchemical secret of transmuting base metals into gold. Maxtible travels to Skaro through the mirror cabinet and discovers just how ruthless the Daleks are and how empty their promises can be; he is tortured for his failure to bring the Doctor to them. Jamie, Waterfield and the Doctor are locked out of the time cabinet, but manage to use the Daleks' own short-range time machine to reach Skaro before a Dalek bomb destroys Maxtible's house.

The trio find their way into the Dalek city and are brought before the imposing Dalek Emperor, who reveals the true reason behind the experiments and the capture of the TARDIS: by isolating the human factor, the Doctor has succeeded in isolating the "Dalek Factor" as well. The Daleks will use the "Dalek Factor"—the qualities that make the Daleks relentless killing machines—to reconvert the "human" Daleks. The Emperor also wants the Doctor to use the TARDIS to spread the Dalek Factor throughout human history, turning all humanity into Daleks. The Doctor knows that the Emperor realises that he would die before complying with this order, and so is concerned about why the Emperor seems so confident.

Maxtible is tricked into walking through an archway that infuses him with the Dalek Factor, mentally turning him into a Dalek. He hypnotises the Doctor and lures him through the arch as well, apparently converting him. However, the Doctor is feigning his conversion and secretly plants a device on the arch while the Daleks hunt for the three "human" Daleks. As one still remains to be found, the Doctor suggests that all the Daleks be put through the conversion arch so that the "human" Dalek will once again be infused with the Dalek Factor.

As the first batch of Daleks go through the arch, the Doctor frees the others. The arch did not work on the Doctor because it was calibrated for humans, and he is not one. The Doctor has also substituted the Human Factor for the Dalek Factor on the arch, so the Daleks that go through will become "human" and rebel against the Emperor. The Emperor calls out his Black Daleks as the rebellion spreads and the City falls into chaos. Waterfield throws himself in front of a Black Dalek blast meant for the Doctor; the Doctor promises that Victoria will be taken care of, and Waterfield dies content. The Emperor is attacked by the "human" Daleks.

While the Doctor and his companions escape, Maxtible rushes back into the exploding city, screaming of the everlasting glory of the Dalek race. The Doctor tells Jamie that they will be taking the now-orphaned Victoria along on their travels. Jamie, Victoria and the Doctor watch the Dalek City in flames from the top of a hill as the civil war continues. The Doctor pronounces this the end of the Daleks – the final end. However a pulsating light is seen coming from the Emperor, indicating that the Dalek is still alive.

Production edit

Cast notes edit

Patrick Troughton only appears in pre-filmed insert scenes for the fourth episode, as he was on holiday.[2] Likewise Deborah Watling only appears in a pre-filmed scene in episode four. John Bailey, who played Edward Waterfield, had previously appeared in The Sensorites,[3] and would later appear in The Horns of Nimon.[4]

According to the short BBC Video documentary The Dalek Factor about the making of the story, released in September 2021 as part of the animated restoration of the serial, Denise Buckley was cast in the role of Victoria Waterfield by director Derek Martinus. The production team had been hoping that Pauline Collins would continue in the role of Samantha Briggs, that she had played in the previous story The Faceless Ones, but had created Victoria as a back-up should Collins decline. When Collins confirmed she did not want to join the regular cast, it was decided to introduce Victoria as the new companion and Denise Buckley was released, but paid in full, with Deborah Watling replacing her as a more suitable actress for the ongoing role.[5]

Missing episodes edit

This story was wiped from the BBC's archives in the late 1960s. Episodes 1 to 6 were wiped in August 1968, and episode 7 was wiped in September 1969. Only episode 2 remains,[6] in a telerecording found at a car boot sale then returned to the archive in May 1987.

In 2004, analysis of the repeated clip used in The Wheel in Space episode six revealed it to be from episode one rather than episode two, as had been long believed. This, however, only constitutes a few frames of recovered footage. The discovery of a behind-the-scenes film, The Last Dalek, made by the special effects team as they worked on the story's conclusion, facilitated a recreation of the climactic battle scenes. This recreation, along with the entire film, have been made available in different forms on various Troughton releases, and has often been used to fill in for the missing climax of Episode 7 in fan-made reconstructions, to give fans an idea of what it looked like when it first aired. In addition, tele-snaps and off-air audio recordings made by fans upon the original broadcasts exist for the entire story.

Broadcast and reception edit

EpisodeTitleRun timeOriginal air dateUK viewers
(millions) [7]
Archive [8]
1"Episode 1"24:0720 May 1967 (1967-05-20)8.1Only stills and/or fragments exist
2"Episode 2"25:1327 May 1967 (1967-05-27)7.516mm t/r
3"Episode 3"24:273 June 1967 (1967-06-03)6.1Only stills and/or fragments exist
4"Episode 4"24:4310 June 1967 (1967-06-10)5.3Only stills and/or fragments exist
5"Episode 5"25:2317 June 1967 (1967-06-17)5.1Only stills and/or fragments exist
6"Episode 6"24:4824 June 1967 (1967-06-24)6.8Only stills and/or fragments exist
7"Episode 7"24:331 July 1967 (1967-07-01)6.1Only stills and/or fragments exist

^† Episode is missing

The story was repeated in 1968 at the end of Season 5 (8 June 1968 to 22 June 1968 and 13 July 1968 to 3 August 1968 allowing for a two-week break for coverage of the 1968 Wimbledon tennis championships[9][10]) at 5.15pm. At the end of The Wheel in Space, the Doctor used a telepathic display machine to show new companion Zoe Heriot the sort of monsters she would face if she joined the TARDIS crew, and shows a clip from the end of episode 1 of The Evil of the Daleks. Over the following weeks (bridging the gap between Seasons 5 and 6) the entire story was shown, narration over the opening scene of episode 1 reminding viewers of the reason for the repeat. This was the only time any Doctor Who episodes (other than the first episode) were reshown in the 1960s. The repeat viewing figures were 6.3, 5.0, 6.3, 5.0, 5.1, 4.5, 5.2 million viewers respectively.[11] Ironically, Zoe herself would never encounter the Daleks on television; decades later, the Big Finish Productions audio story Fear of the Daleks would tell of an encounter between Zoe and the Daleks, set immediately after the Doctor's telepathic re-run.

Paul Cornell, Martin Day, and Keith Topping gave the serial a positive review in The Discontinuity Guide (1995), describing it as "a grandiose production which papers over its scientifically implausible aspects with a confident swagger."[12] In The Television Companion (1998), David J. Howe and Stephen James Walker noted how The Evil of the Daleks paid tribute to the series' past, and praised Whitaker's writing and the production values.[13] In 2009, Patrick Mulkern of Radio Times awarded it five stars out of five and wrote that the story "boasts an intriguing mystery, well-drawn characters, atmospheric settings and thrilling set-pieces", though it did have an "overly elaborate" plot. He particularly praised Jamie, as well as the incidental music.[14]

Broadcast of recreation edit

The animated reconstruction mentioned under Home Media was shown on BBC America on Saturday, October 30, 2021, from 8 AM to 11:30 AM, the day before the release of The Halloween Apocalypse (Extended Cut), the first story of the 13th Series of New Who.

On stage edit

In 2006 the BBC and the Terry Nation estate licensed a charity stage version of the serial. It was adapted and directed by Nick Scovell, who also starred as the Doctor. Production was by Rob Thrush, who provided the Dalek voices, and the orchestral score was by Martin Johnson. The production ran at the New Theatre Royal, Portsmouth between 25 and 28 October 2006, playing to sell-out houses during its five-night run. £15,000 was raised towards the restoration of the theatre, with an additional £550 going to Children in Need. [15]

Commercial releases edit

In print edit

The Evil of the Daleks
 
AuthorJohn Peel
Cover artistAlister Pearson
SeriesDoctor Who book:
Target novelisations
Release number
155
PublisherDoctor Who Books
Publication date
19 August 1993
ISBN0-426-20389-5

Doctor Who Books, an imprint of Virgin Books, published a novelisation of this serial by John Peel in August 1993. It was the last serial of the original series to be novelised as part of Target's Doctor Who Library. Afterwards, only five serials (The Pirate Planet, City of Death, Shada, Resurrection of the Daleks and Revelation of the Daleks), due to complex licensing, remained unavailable for adaptation. All five were finally novelised by James Goss, Gareth Roberts and Eric Saward respectively, for BBC Books in the 2010s. All except Shada were subsequently re-published, in abridged form, under BBC Books' own relaunched Target branding.

Another adaptation written by Frazer Hines was released in hardcover 26 October 2023.[16] This adaptation follows the Doctor showing Zoe the story at the end of The Wheel in Space.

Home media edit

As with all missing episodes, off-air recordings of the soundtrack exist due to contemporary fan efforts. In 1992 a set was released on audiocassette, accompanied by linking narration from the Fourth Doctor, Tom Baker. However, due to problems with background music clearance the scenes set in the Tricolour in episode one had to be deleted. Subsequently, better quality copies of the soundtrack emerged and in 2003, the remastered soundtrack was re-released with the excised scenes restored (albeit with the song "Paperback Writer" changed to "Hold Tight!") and with new narration by Frazer Hines. This CD release contains bonus tracks featuring the end of Episode 7 without narration, raw dialogue and sound effect recordings and the narrated opening to Episode 1 from the 1968 repeat.[17]

The serial was originally released on CD in the Doctor Who: Daleks collector's tin, alongside the soundtrack to The Power of the Daleks and a bonus disc featuring My Life as a Dalek, a historical documentary presented by Mark Gatiss; it was re-issued individually in 2004. Hines' narrated version was released on vinyl by Demon Music Group on 19 July 2019.[18] To promote the vinyl release, an exclusive EP of the CD's bonus tracks was bundled with the "Deluxe Edition" of Doctor Who Magazine issue 539.[19]

In 1992, the sole surviving episode was featured in the Daleks: The Early Years VHS. In November 2004, the same episode was released on DVD as part of the Lost in Time box set.

The story was released on DVD and Blu-ray on 27 September 2021, with all seven episodes animated in both colour and black-and-white, with the surviving Episode 2 also included.[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Missing adventure 'The Evil of the Daleks' to be animated in 2021". DoctorWho.tv. 1 July 2021. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  2. ^ "BBC – Doctor Who Classic Episode Guide – The Evil of the Daleks – Details". bbc.co.uk.
  3. ^ "The Sensorites ★★★".
  4. ^ "BBC - Doctor Who Classic Episode Guide - The Horns of Nimon - Details". bbc.co.uk.
  5. ^ BBC Video. ASIN: B098412KTK. Release date: 27 Sept. 2021
  6. ^ "BBC Studios announce Doctor Who: The Evil of the Daleks Animation, due for release on 27th September 2021".
  7. ^ "Ratings Guide". Doctor Who News. Retrieved 28 May 2017.
  8. ^ Shaun Lyon; et al. (31 March 2007). . Outpost Gallifrey. Archived from the original on 17 June 2008. Retrieved 30 August 2008.
  9. ^ "BBC One London – 29 June 1968 – BBC Genome". genome.ch.bbc.co.uk.
  10. ^ "BBC One London – 6 July 1968 – BBC Genome". genome.ch.bbc.co.uk.
  11. ^ doctorwhonews.net. "Doctor Who Guide: broadcasting for The Evil of the Daleks".
  12. ^ Cornell, Paul; Day, Martin; Topping, Keith (1995). "The Evil of the Daleks". The Discontinuity Guide. London: Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20442-5.
  13. ^ Howe, David J; Walker, Stephen James (1998). Doctor Who: The Television Companion (1st ed.). London: BBC Books. ISBN 978-0-563-40588-7.
  14. ^ Mulkern, Patrick (14 June 2009). "Doctor Who: The Evil of the Daleks". Radio Times. Retrieved 23 August 2013.
  15. ^ "The Evil of the Daleks – Doctor Who: On Screen, In Script, On Stage". evilofthedaleks.co.uk.
  16. ^ "The Evil of the Daleks will be novelised by actor Frazer Hines | Doctor Who".
  17. ^ McGinlay, Richard. "Doctor Who: The Evil of the Daleks - Audio Drama review". sci-fi-online.com. Retrieved 6 June 2019.
  18. ^ "Patrick Troughton Doctor Who adventure The Evil of the Daleks coming to vinyl in July". Entertainment Focus. 18 May 2019. Retrieved 6 June 2019.
  19. ^ "New deluxe edition of Doctor Who Magazine to feature The Evil of the Daleks vinyl EP". Entertainment Focus. 29 May 2019. Retrieved 6 June 2019.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • The Evil of the Daleks at BBC Online
  • Photonovel of The Evil of the Daleks on the BBC website
  • Doctor Who Locations – The Evil of the Daleks

Target novelisation edit

evil, daleks, mostly, missing, ninth, final, serial, fourth, season, british, science, fiction, television, series, doctor, which, originally, aired, seven, weekly, parts, from, july, 1967, doctor, serialcastdoctor, patrick, troughton, second, doctorcompanions. The Evil of the Daleks is the mostly missing ninth and final serial of the fourth season in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who which originally aired in seven weekly parts from 20 May to 1 July 1967 036 The Evil of the DaleksDoctor Who serialCastDoctor Patrick Troughton Second DoctorCompanions Frazer Hines Jamie McCrimmon Deborah Watling Victoria WaterfieldOthersJohn Bailey Edward Waterfield Marius Goring Theodore Maxtible Brigit Forsyth Ruth Maxtible Geoffrey Colville Perry Griffith Davies Kennedy Alec Ross Bob Hall Windsor Davies Toby Sonny Caldinez Kemel Gary Watson Arthur Terrall Jo Rowbottom Mollie Dawson Peter Hawkins Roy Skelton Dalek Voices Robert Jewell Gerald Taylor John Scott Martin Murphy Grumbar Ken Tyllsen DaleksProductionDirected byDerek MartinusWritten byDavid WhitakerScript editorGerry Davis episodes 1 3 Peter Bryant episodes 4 7 Produced byInnes LloydPeter Bryant associate producer episode 1 Executive producer s NoneMusic byDudley SimpsonProduction codeLLSeriesSeason 4Running time7 episodes 25 minutes eachEpisode s missing6 episodes 1 3 7 First broadcast20 May 1967 1967 05 20 Last broadcast1 July 1967 1967 07 01 Chronology Preceded byThe Faceless Ones Followed by The Tomb of the CybermenList of Doctor Who episodes 1963 1989 In this serial the Doctor Patrick Troughton and his travelling companion Jamie Frazer Hines shortly after losing the TARDIS are transported to 1866 where the Daleks force the Doctor to help them in their latest plot to implement the human factor into Dalek brains in order to humanise themselves into even deadlier living weapons This serial marked the debut of Deborah Watling as the Doctor s new companion Victoria Waterfield It is also notable for introducing the Dalek Emperor Only episode two the episode in which Victoria first appears is held in the BBC archives the other six remain missing This story was initially intended to be the last Dalek story on Doctor Who Writer Terry Nation the creator of the Daleks was trying to sell the Daleks to American television at the time and it was intended to give them a big send off from the series However this was not to be the Doctor s last encounter with them Aside from a few cameos the Daleks did not properly return to the series until Day of the Daleks in 1972 In 1993 readers of DreamWatch Bulletin voted The Evil of the Daleks as the best ever Doctor Who story in a special poll for the series thirtieth anniversary The story was released on DVD and Blu ray in animated form on 27 September 2021 with the surviving episode two included 1 Contents 1 Plot 2 Production 2 1 Cast notes 2 2 Missing episodes 3 Broadcast and reception 3 1 Broadcast of recreation 4 On stage 5 Commercial releases 5 1 In print 5 2 Home media 6 References 6 1 Bibliography 7 External links 7 1 Target novelisationPlot editThis episodes s plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise June 2017 Learn how and when to remove this message In 1966 the Second Doctor and Jamie watch helplessly as the TARDIS is loaded onto a lorry and driven away from Gatwick Airport The trail leads them to an antique shop run by Edward Waterfield who sells Victorian style antiques that curiously seem as though they were still new Waterfield is being coerced by the Daleks who appear in a secret room of his shop through a time machine and exterminate his mutinous employee Kennedy Investigating the store the Doctor and Jamie succumb to a booby trap that gasses them and are dragged into the time machine by Waterfield They wake to find that they have been transported to 1866 and are in the house of Theodore Maxtible Waterfield s partner in Kent The two had been trying to invent a time machine using mirrors and static electricity when the Daleks emerged from their time cabinet The Daleks then took Waterfield s daughter Victoria Waterfield hostage and forced Waterfield to travel a century forward in time to lure the Doctor into a trap by stealing the TARDIS Waterfield is obviously fearful for his daughter s safety and his own but Maxtible seems to be cooperating with the Daleks The Daleks threaten to destroy the TARDIS unless the Doctor helps them by conducting an experiment to isolate the Human Factor the unique qualities of human beings that have allowed them to consistently resist and defeat the Daleks Once the Doctor has isolated the Human Factor he will implant it into three Daleks who will then become the precursors of a race of super Daleks with the best qualities of humans and Daleks To that end the Daleks want the Doctor to test Jamie by sending him to rescue Victoria who is being kept in the house The Doctor is strangely cooperative with the Daleks manipulating Jamie into the rescue mission but not telling him of the nature of the test Jamie rescues Victoria but she is taken prisoner again and transported through the time cabinet The Doctor observing how Jamie accomplished the rescue distils the Human Factor but suspects that there is more to the experiment than just this Once the Human Factor is implanted in the three Daleks they become completely human in personality and seem almost childlike although the Doctor says their mentalities will mature quickly This was the Doctor s intent all along that the human factor would lead to human Daleks that would be friendly to humanity He christens the three Alpha Beta and Omega but they soon return through the time cabinet to Skaro the Daleks home planet Waterfield discovers that Maxtible has betrayed them all to the Daleks hoping that he will be able to learn the alchemical secret of transmuting base metals into gold Maxtible travels to Skaro through the mirror cabinet and discovers just how ruthless the Daleks are and how empty their promises can be he is tortured for his failure to bring the Doctor to them Jamie Waterfield and the Doctor are locked out of the time cabinet but manage to use the Daleks own short range time machine to reach Skaro before a Dalek bomb destroys Maxtible s house The trio find their way into the Dalek city and are brought before the imposing Dalek Emperor who reveals the true reason behind the experiments and the capture of the TARDIS by isolating the human factor the Doctor has succeeded in isolating the Dalek Factor as well The Daleks will use the Dalek Factor the qualities that make the Daleks relentless killing machines to reconvert the human Daleks The Emperor also wants the Doctor to use the TARDIS to spread the Dalek Factor throughout human history turning all humanity into Daleks The Doctor knows that the Emperor realises that he would die before complying with this order and so is concerned about why the Emperor seems so confident Maxtible is tricked into walking through an archway that infuses him with the Dalek Factor mentally turning him into a Dalek He hypnotises the Doctor and lures him through the arch as well apparently converting him However the Doctor is feigning his conversion and secretly plants a device on the arch while the Daleks hunt for the three human Daleks As one still remains to be found the Doctor suggests that all the Daleks be put through the conversion arch so that the human Dalek will once again be infused with the Dalek Factor As the first batch of Daleks go through the arch the Doctor frees the others The arch did not work on the Doctor because it was calibrated for humans and he is not one The Doctor has also substituted the Human Factor for the Dalek Factor on the arch so the Daleks that go through will become human and rebel against the Emperor The Emperor calls out his Black Daleks as the rebellion spreads and the City falls into chaos Waterfield throws himself in front of a Black Dalek blast meant for the Doctor the Doctor promises that Victoria will be taken care of and Waterfield dies content The Emperor is attacked by the human Daleks While the Doctor and his companions escape Maxtible rushes back into the exploding city screaming of the everlasting glory of the Dalek race The Doctor tells Jamie that they will be taking the now orphaned Victoria along on their travels Jamie Victoria and the Doctor watch the Dalek City in flames from the top of a hill as the civil war continues The Doctor pronounces this the end of the Daleks the final end However a pulsating light is seen coming from the Emperor indicating that the Dalek is still alive Production editCast notes edit Patrick Troughton only appears in pre filmed insert scenes for the fourth episode as he was on holiday 2 Likewise Deborah Watling only appears in a pre filmed scene in episode four John Bailey who played Edward Waterfield had previously appeared in The Sensorites 3 and would later appear in The Horns of Nimon 4 According to the short BBC Video documentary The Dalek Factor about the making of the story released in September 2021 as part of the animated restoration of the serial Denise Buckley was cast in the role of Victoria Waterfield by director Derek Martinus The production team had been hoping that Pauline Collins would continue in the role of Samantha Briggs that she had played in the previous story The Faceless Ones but had created Victoria as a back up should Collins decline When Collins confirmed she did not want to join the regular cast it was decided to introduce Victoria as the new companion and Denise Buckley was released but paid in full with Deborah Watling replacing her as a more suitable actress for the ongoing role 5 Missing episodes edit This story was wiped from the BBC s archives in the late 1960s Episodes 1 to 6 were wiped in August 1968 and episode 7 was wiped in September 1969 Only episode 2 remains 6 in a telerecording found at a car boot sale then returned to the archive in May 1987 In 2004 analysis of the repeated clip used in The Wheel in Space episode six revealed it to be from episode one rather than episode two as had been long believed This however only constitutes a few frames of recovered footage The discovery of a behind the scenes film The Last Dalek made by the special effects team as they worked on the story s conclusion facilitated a recreation of the climactic battle scenes This recreation along with the entire film have been made available in different forms on various Troughton releases and has often been used to fill in for the missing climax of Episode 7 in fan made reconstructions to give fans an idea of what it looked like when it first aired In addition tele snaps and off air audio recordings made by fans upon the original broadcasts exist for the entire story Broadcast and reception editEpisodeTitleRun timeOriginal air dateUK viewers millions 7 Archive 8 1 Episode 1 24 0720 May 1967 1967 05 20 8 1Only stills and or fragments exist 2 Episode 2 25 1327 May 1967 1967 05 27 7 516mm t r 3 Episode 3 24 273 June 1967 1967 06 03 6 1Only stills and or fragments exist 4 Episode 4 24 4310 June 1967 1967 06 10 5 3Only stills and or fragments exist 5 Episode 5 25 2317 June 1967 1967 06 17 5 1Only stills and or fragments exist 6 Episode 6 24 4824 June 1967 1967 06 24 6 8Only stills and or fragments exist 7 Episode 7 24 331 July 1967 1967 07 01 6 1Only stills and or fragments exist Episode is missingThe story was repeated in 1968 at the end of Season 5 8 June 1968 to 22 June 1968 and 13 July 1968 to 3 August 1968 allowing for a two week break for coverage of the 1968 Wimbledon tennis championships 9 10 at 5 15pm At the end of The Wheel in Space the Doctor used a telepathic display machine to show new companion Zoe Heriot the sort of monsters she would face if she joined the TARDIS crew and shows a clip from the end of episode 1 of The Evil of the Daleks Over the following weeks bridging the gap between Seasons 5 and 6 the entire story was shown narration over the opening scene of episode 1 reminding viewers of the reason for the repeat This was the only time any Doctor Who episodes other than the first episode were reshown in the 1960s The repeat viewing figures were 6 3 5 0 6 3 5 0 5 1 4 5 5 2 million viewers respectively 11 Ironically Zoe herself would never encounter the Daleks on television decades later the Big Finish Productions audio story Fear of the Daleks would tell of an encounter between Zoe and the Daleks set immediately after the Doctor s telepathic re run Paul Cornell Martin Day and Keith Topping gave the serial a positive review in The Discontinuity Guide 1995 describing it as a grandiose production which papers over its scientifically implausible aspects with a confident swagger 12 In The Television Companion 1998 David J Howe and Stephen James Walker noted how The Evil of the Daleks paid tribute to the series past and praised Whitaker s writing and the production values 13 In 2009 Patrick Mulkern of Radio Times awarded it five stars out of five and wrote that the story boasts an intriguing mystery well drawn characters atmospheric settings and thrilling set pieces though it did have an overly elaborate plot He particularly praised Jamie as well as the incidental music 14 Broadcast of recreation edit The animated reconstruction mentioned under Home Media was shown on BBC America on Saturday October 30 2021 from 8 AM to 11 30 AM the day before the release of The Halloween Apocalypse Extended Cut the first story of the 13th Series of New Who On stage editIn 2006 the BBC and the Terry Nation estate licensed a charity stage version of the serial It was adapted and directed by Nick Scovell who also starred as the Doctor Production was by Rob Thrush who provided the Dalek voices and the orchestral score was by Martin Johnson The production ran at the New Theatre Royal Portsmouth between 25 and 28 October 2006 playing to sell out houses during its five night run 15 000 was raised towards the restoration of the theatre with an additional 550 going to Children in Need 15 Commercial releases editIn print edit The Evil of the Daleks nbsp AuthorJohn PeelCover artistAlister PearsonSeriesDoctor Who book Target novelisationsRelease number155PublisherDoctor Who BooksPublication date19 August 1993ISBN0 426 20389 5 Doctor Who Books an imprint of Virgin Books published a novelisation of this serial by John Peel in August 1993 It was the last serial of the original series to be novelised as part of Target s Doctor Who Library Afterwards only five serials The Pirate Planet City of Death Shada Resurrection of the Daleks and Revelation of the Daleks due to complex licensing remained unavailable for adaptation All five were finally novelised by James Goss Gareth Roberts and Eric Saward respectively for BBC Books in the 2010s All except Shada were subsequently re published in abridged form under BBC Books own relaunched Target branding Another adaptation written by Frazer Hines was released in hardcover 26 October 2023 16 This adaptation follows the Doctor showing Zoe the story at the end of The Wheel in Space Home media edit Further information List of Doctor Who audio releases As with all missing episodes off air recordings of the soundtrack exist due to contemporary fan efforts In 1992 a set was released on audiocassette accompanied by linking narration from the Fourth Doctor Tom Baker However due to problems with background music clearance the scenes set in the Tricolour in episode one had to be deleted Subsequently better quality copies of the soundtrack emerged and in 2003 the remastered soundtrack was re released with the excised scenes restored albeit with the song Paperback Writer changed to Hold Tight and with new narration by Frazer Hines This CD release contains bonus tracks featuring the end of Episode 7 without narration raw dialogue and sound effect recordings and the narrated opening to Episode 1 from the 1968 repeat 17 The serial was originally released on CD in the Doctor Who Daleks collector s tin alongside the soundtrack to The Power of the Daleks and a bonus disc featuring My Life as a Dalek a historical documentary presented by Mark Gatiss it was re issued individually in 2004 Hines narrated version was released on vinyl by Demon Music Group on 19 July 2019 18 To promote the vinyl release an exclusive EP of the CD s bonus tracks was bundled with the Deluxe Edition of Doctor Who Magazine issue 539 19 In 1992 the sole surviving episode was featured in the Daleks The Early Years VHS In November 2004 the same episode was released on DVD as part of the Lost in Time box set The story was released on DVD and Blu ray on 27 September 2021 with all seven episodes animated in both colour and black and white with the surviving Episode 2 also included 1 References edit a b Missing adventure The Evil of the Daleks to be animated in 2021 DoctorWho tv 1 July 2021 Retrieved 1 July 2021 BBC Doctor Who Classic Episode Guide The Evil of the Daleks Details bbc co uk The Sensorites BBC Doctor Who Classic Episode Guide The Horns of Nimon Details bbc co uk BBC Video ASIN B098412KTK Release date 27 Sept 2021 BBC Studios announce Doctor Who The Evil of the Daleks Animation due for release on 27th September 2021 Ratings Guide Doctor Who News Retrieved 28 May 2017 Shaun Lyon et al 31 March 2007 The Evil of the Daleks Outpost Gallifrey Archived from the original on 17 June 2008 Retrieved 30 August 2008 BBC One London 29 June 1968 BBC Genome genome ch bbc co uk BBC One London 6 July 1968 BBC Genome genome ch bbc co uk doctorwhonews net Doctor Who Guide broadcasting for The Evil of the Daleks Cornell Paul Day Martin Topping Keith 1995 The Evil of the Daleks The Discontinuity Guide London Virgin Books ISBN 0 426 20442 5 Howe David J Walker Stephen James 1998 Doctor Who The Television Companion 1st ed London BBC Books ISBN 978 0 563 40588 7 Mulkern Patrick 14 June 2009 Doctor Who The Evil of the Daleks Radio Times Retrieved 23 August 2013 The Evil of the Daleks Doctor Who On Screen In Script On Stage evilofthedaleks co uk The Evil of the Daleks will be novelised by actor Frazer Hines Doctor Who McGinlay Richard Doctor Who The Evil of the Daleks Audio Drama review sci fi online com Retrieved 6 June 2019 Patrick Troughton Doctor Who adventure The Evil of the Daleks coming to vinyl in July Entertainment Focus 18 May 2019 Retrieved 6 June 2019 New deluxe edition of Doctor Who Magazine to feature The Evil of the Daleks vinyl EP Entertainment Focus 29 May 2019 Retrieved 6 June 2019 Bibliography edit Howe David J Walker Stephen James 1998 Doctor Who The Television Companion London BBC Worldwide ISBN 0 563 40588 0 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Second Doctor The Evil of the Daleks at BBC Online Photonovel of The Evil of the Daleks on the BBC website Doctor Who Locations The Evil of the Daleks Target novelisation edit The Evil of the Daleks title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Evil of the Daleks amp oldid 1210188142, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.