| 025 –The Gunfighters | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Doctor Who serial | |||
| The Doctor, Steven and Dodo meet Wyatt Earp | |||
| Cast | |||
Others
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| Production | |||
| Directed by | Rex Tucker | ||
| Written by | Donald Cotton | ||
| Script editor | Gerry Davis | ||
| Produced by | Innes Lloyd | ||
| Executive producer | None | ||
| Music by | Tristram Cary | ||
| Production code | Z | ||
| Series | Season 3 | ||
| Running time | 4 episodes, 25 minutes each | ||
| First broadcast | 30 April 1966 | ||
| Last broadcast | 21 May 1966 | ||
| Chronology | |||
| |||
The Gunfighters is the eighth serial of the third season in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who , which was first broadcast in four weekly parts from 30 April to 21 May 1966.
The serial is set in and around the town of Tombstone, Arizona, in the Wild West. In the serial, the time traveller the First Doctor (William Hartnell) and his travelling companions Steven Taylor (Peter Purves) and Dodo Chaplet (Jackie Lane) get themselves involved with the events leading up to the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral.
In Tombstone, Arizona, the Clanton brothers, Ike, Phineas and Billy, are in search of Doc Holliday to avenge the death of their brother Reuben. They meet their hired hand Seth Harper at the Last Chance Saloon. This is overheard by bar singer Kate, who warns Holliday.
The TARDIS arrives in a stable, with the First Doctor in agony from a toothache. He and his companions, Steven and Dodo, encounter local marshal Wyatt Earp, who offers them his protection. The Doctor finds the dentist, Holliday, while Dodo and Steven head to a hotel. There they are mocked by the Clantons, who suspect the Doctor is Holliday. Seth is sent to the dentist and invites the Doctor to the hotel. Holliday is initially happy to let him be shot in his place, but Kate intervenes to save the Doctor. Holliday hides upstairs of the hotel, firing his gun to con the Clantons into thinking the Doctor is indeed Holliday. Soon afterward Wyatt and Sheriff Bat Masterson arrive and take the Doctor into custody for his own protection. Steven is then confronted by a rabble, who are intent on lynching him as an associate of Holliday. Wyatt and Masterson defuse the situation and take Phineas into custody. The Doctor and Steven are freed and told to leave town.
Dodo falls in with Kate and Holliday, who both plan to leave town and take her with them. When Seth stumbles across their escape plans, Holliday kills him, and the trio depart. Seth is soon replaced by a new arrival, Johnny Ringo. The Doctor and Steven return to the saloon in search of Dodo and encounter Ringo. Wyatt's brothers Warren and Virgil arrive at Tombstone to help him enforce the law. The other Clanton brothers visit the jail to free Phineas and kill Warren.
Steven and Kate are taken by Ringo to the Clanton ranch, where the Clantons tell their father that they killed Warren. Wyatt swears vengeance and starts to build a posse of lawmen. Holliday returns to Tombstone with Dodo, and offers his services to Wyatt too. The Doctor is unable to prevent a gunfight at the O.K. Corral. Ringo and the three Clantons are shot dead. Shortly after, the Doctor, Steven and Dodo slip away in the TARDIS.
They arrive on a strange planet, and decide to explore. As they leave, a man is seen approaching the TARDIS on the scanner.
The working title for this story was The Gunslingers. [1] This was the last serial of the classic series to have individual episode titles. From The Savages onward, each serial had an overall title divided into numbered parts or episodes. The caption at the end of "The OK Corral" reads "Next Episode: Dr. Who and the Savages". [2]
Filming took place in March 1966 at the BBC's Ealing Studios, in April at BBC Television Centre Studio 4, and in April and May at Riverside Studios. [3]
Dalek voice actor David Graham played Charlie the barman. [4] He later played Kerensky in City of Death (1979). [5] Doc Holliday was played by Anthony Jacobs, whose son Matthew visited the set during production of the serial. Thirty years later, Matthew Jacobs wrote the script for the 1996 Doctor Who television movie.
Laurence Payne later played Morix in The Leisure Hive (1980) [6] and Dastari in The Two Doctors (1985). Lynda Baron would later appear in the serial Enlightenment (1983), in the role of Captain Wrack, and as Val in the 2011 episode "Closing Time".
Richard Beale, who played Bat Masterson, had previously provided the voice of a disembodied Refusian in The Ark (1966). [7]
The role of Johnny Ringo was offered to and turned down by Patrick Troughton, who would later play the Second Doctor from 1966 to 1969. [8]
This story is the first Doctor Who episode to contain musical narration, in the form of the "Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon". It was sung by Lynda Baron and written by Tristram Cary. [4] The ballad is included as an extra on the CD soundtrack release. The idea of commissioning original songs for Doctor Who would resume when the series was revived in 2005, beginning with "Song for Ten" in "The Christmas Invasion".
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| Episode | Title | Run time | Original release date | UK viewers (millions) [9] | Archive [10] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "A Holiday for the Doctor" | 23:48 | 30 April 1966 | 6.5 | 16mm t/r |
| 2 | "Don't Shoot the Pianist" | 23:47 | 7 May 1966 | 6.6 | 16mm t/r |
| 3 | "Johnny Ringo" | 24:42 | 14 May 1966 | 6.2 | 16mm t/r |
| 4 | "The O.K. Corral" | 23:53 | 21 May 1966 | 5.7 | 16mm t/r |
A common myth is that this story has the lowest ratings of any Doctor Who story. [4] This myth likely stems from a misunderstanding of the difference between audience share and Audience Appreciation scores. The former indicates the size of the viewing audience, and the latter is based on a survey gauging the viewers' opinions of the programme. In fact the audience size for the serial ranged from 6.5 million viewers for the first episode, to 5.7 million for the last. However, the Audience Appreciation scores for the last three episodes equalled or went below the lowest scores for Doctor Who, with the very last episode, "The O.K. Corral", having a score of 30%, the lowest ever to date. [11]
That said, the story did post ratings that were disappointing by a number of different measures. The Gunfighters represented a significant decrease over the previous serial, The Celestial Toymaker , which had ranged from 7.8 to 9.4 million viewers. Each episode of The Gunfighters was also significantly lower than for the first 18 weeks of Season 3, wherein the lowest-rated week—at 7.9 million viewers—belonged to the episode "The Feast of Steven" from The Daleks' Master Plan . Each episode of the serial was also beaten by the serials which were respectively broadcast in similar April–May slots in 1965 ( The Space Museum ) and in 1964 ( The Keys of Marinus ).
While not the lowest-rated Doctor Who story of all time, or even the lowest-rated Hartnell story, The Gunfighters did open a sustained period of significantly lower ratings for the programme that lasted almost the entirety of the remainder of the First Doctor's era. Beginning with "The O.K. Corral" — the very same episode that received the lowest Audience Appreciation figures of any Doctor Who episode — no Hartnell episode topped 6 million viewers until Episode 2 of his final story, The Tenth Planet .
Contemporary viewers were unimpressed by the story; the BBC's Audience Research Report on the final episode noted several negative reactions, including: "has deteriorated from pure science-fiction into third-rate story telling", "The story was hackneyed, ridiculous and dull", "A weak and puerile plot", and "The script, even for a children's programme, was absolute rubbish". [4]
Reviewing the serial in 2009, Mark Braxton of Radio Times gave The Gunfighters a mixed review, explaining that it could divide opinion. While he praised the set design, he criticised "The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon", Steven's and Dodo's costumes, and the "American" accents. Overall, he felt that the narrative could use something else, like a science fiction element or a philosophical discussion from the Doctor. [3] DVD Talk's John Sinnott gave the serial two-and-a-half out of five stars, describing it as "decent" with "a lot going for it" but marred by Purves's overacting, the accents, and especially "The Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon". [12] More positively, IGN reviewer Arnold T Blumburg rated the serial 7 out of 10, praising Hartnell and the production values, as well as the high energy and enthusiasm. While he also derided the ballad, he wrote that "the accents really aren't all that bad". [13] Neela Debnath of The Independent stated that younger viewers would enjoy it as an adventure, while older audiences would appreciate the satire. [14] Paul Cornell, Martin Day and Keith Topping described the serial as "a comic masterpiece, winning one over with its sheer charm". [4]
| |
| Author | Donald Cotton |
|---|---|
| Cover artist | Andrew Skilleter |
| Series | Doctor Who book: Target novelisations |
Release number | 101 |
| Publisher | Target Books |
Publication date | 9 January 1986 |
| ISBN | 0-426-20195-7 |
A novelisation of this serial, written by Donald Cotton, was published by Target Books in July 1985. It is narrated in the first person by Doc Holliday (a framing scene introduces him on his deathbed) and expands on Johnny Ringo's depiction as a student of the classics by adding his motivation in a contract killing of the Earps is to afford a copy of The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the Classics. An unabridged reading of the novelisation, spoken by Shane Rimmer, was released in February 2013.
The Gunfighters was released on VHS in a box-set containing the final three complete Hartnell-era serials to be released in this format (the others being The Sensorites and The Time Meddler ) in November 2002. The serial was released on CD in 2007, including linking narration, the entire "Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon", and a bonus interview with Peter Purves. [15] It was released on DVD on 20 June 2011, along with The Awakening , in a box-set titled Earth Story. [16]