Thu. Oct 3rd, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

It’s 1981 and I’m a four-year-old Doctor Who fan crossing the red dirt of the Nullarbor with my family.

We are a long, long way from the nearest TV. And yet, who is waiting for us after an eight-hour drive to the next roadhouse? Doctor Who himself.

Tom Baker — the fourth Doctor — is beaming toothily from a large poster across the roadhouse counter, urging visitors to Keep Australia Beautiful. He would continue the celebrity message in a series of specialised mini-episodes tied to the local environmental push.

That oddball campaign is but one connection between Australia and a very British TV legend — one that this month celebrates 60 years on the box.

Doctor Who’s original theme tune was created by Australian composer Ron Granier; the writer of the very first episode, An Unearthly Child, was Melburnian Anthony Coburn; and, for a while in the 80s, the good Doctor even travelled with an Australian companion, Tegan Jovanka, played by Janet Fielding.

This bond between Doctor Who and Down Under goes both ways, of course.

We Aussies didn’t just help make the show, we remain one of its most enthusiastic audiences. It helps that, for most of its 60 years, the show was almost always screening on the ABC.

Man and woman cuddle in dark room
Doctor Who will return with three special episodes in November to celebrate 60 years of the show, with David Tennant and Catherine Tate reprising their roles for the occasion.(Disney/BBC)

The omnipresent Doctor

Author and fan Kate Orman says Who’s omnipresence in the 1970s and 80s — with episodes squeezed into an evening slot between kids and adult programming — made it easy for Australians of all ages to connect with it.

“It was like a cross-generational touchstone,” Kate says.

“I have vivid memories of the teachers at school knowing what had happened on Doctor Who the night before, so they could talk and joke about it with us.

“All the kids watched it, everyone’s parents watched it. It just seemed to be part of the culture.”

Man in top hat and tails dancing in the street.

Neil Patrick Harris is appearing in the 60th special as the Toymaker, an all-powerful enemy last seen on the series back in 1966.(Disney/BBC)

Weirdly, this omnipresence is pretty much unique to Australia.

Laws around repeat fees in the UK meant Australian viewers got a far more regular serve of Who than our cousins in Britain, where it was shown once a week, now and then.

For writer and director Pete McTighe, moving to Australia as a child in the 1980s was like moving to the centre of the Whoniverse.

“I was stunned,” Pete says.

“No sooner had I stepped off the plane from the UK, I had an entire run of Jon Pertwee and Tom Baker repeats to watch on ABC TV — all these classics I’d never seen. It was a gift to a thirsty Doctor Who fan like me!”

Two woman stand in a backyard with their backs turned, staring at a small white creature a bit like a furby

The first 60th anniversary special is called The Star Beast, and it looks like it will be living up to the show’s oddball reputation.(Disney+/BBC)

While mass appeal might have won over some Aussie fans, for others, it was the show’s oddness that struck a chord.

Writer, presenter and podcaster Paul Verhoeven discovered Doctor Who at a point where the show had edged out of the mainstream into cult territory. Part of the appeal for him was finding something that wasn’t like anything else on Australian telly.

“Everything about it felt right, from the weird almost Wurlitzer organ score, to the strange cinematography choices, to the bad costumes,” Paul says.

“When you’re a little kid and everyone else is into James Bond or Star Wars or whatever, this was the thinking child’s science fiction.”

The Whovians among us

For Australians like Paul, the show’s oddball quality was the gateway to a rich — if occasionally nerdy — subculture.

Doctor Who fandom has a long history on these shores, beginning as university clubs in the 1970s and continuing today across a wide variety of Aussie podcasts, including Splendid Chaps and Paul’s own The Doctor Is In.

Technology aside, one thing that has changed about Aussie fandom is that it’s no longer a boys-only club.

“There’s a lot more women around now. There used to be me and perhaps one or two other women showing up to meetings,” Kate says.

“Women have come to have a very large role in fandom in a way that, you know, maybe wasn’t the case during the 1980s.”

It’s unsurprising, given the powerful connection that many Australians have felt to Doctor Who, that some have felt compelled to give back.

Millie Gibson and Ncuti Gatwa stand together in 70s style outfits in front of a brick wall

We will see Millie Gibson as Ruby Sunday and Ncuti Gatwa as Doctor Who when the new series premieres on Christmas Day.(Disney/BBC)

Kate was the fourth woman to ever write for Who, publishing a number of acclaimed novels after the show was cancelled in 1989.

As well as his podcast, Paul has written professional audio adventures featuring stars from the show’s classic run.

Pete McTighe wrote two episodes for the Jodie Whittaker era on TV, a novelisation of one of those episodes, and continues to write and direct short Doctor Who films for the BBC.

“I joke that my entire career has been an elaborate plan to get to write Doctor Who but, actually, that’s the truth,” Pete says.

“Obviously I worked hard and wrote hundreds of scripts and had my own shows, but I had Doctor Who in my sights from the moment I became a screenwriter.”

From Deadloch to the Doctor

The latest Aussie to take control of the TARDIS is Melbourne-based director Ben Chessell, best known for his work on Deadloch and The Great.

Ben has directed two episodes of the 2024 series, which will star Ncuti Gatwa and, for the first time, screen on Disney+, not the ABC.

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