Doctor Who
This is a list of Doctor Who television serials and episodes. As of May 10, 2008, 744 individual episodes, including one television movie of Doctor Who have been aired, encompassing a total of 197 stories. Additionally, four charity specials and one animated serial have been aired, and two short sequences, "A Fix with Sontarans" and "Attack of the Graske", were produced and involved the interaction of a viewer - the former was a segment of Jim'll Fix It, while the latter was a fully interactive adventure. The show's high episode count resulted in Doctor Who holding the world record for the highest number of episodes for a science-fiction programme.[1] For comparison, the record holder for the highest number of consecutive episodes, Stargate SG-1,[1] aired 214 episodes.
Each serial up to 1989's Survival, with the exception of one cutaway and one special, was a multi-episode story; the characters in the column after the serial titles indicate the code used by the production team to designate the serial (where applicable) and are followed by the number of episodes in the serial. Unless otherwise noted, episodes in this period are 25 minutes long.
Starting with the 2005 revival, the production team abandoned the traditional serial format for a largely self-contained episodic format with occasional multi-part story and loose story arcs, similar to the style of American dramas such as Buffy the Vampire Slayer or The X-Files. Unless otherwise noted, the new episodes are 45 minutes long.
Additionally, some other subsets of serials and episodes exist. Some are unmade: they were proposed for a variety of reasons, some reaching post-production, but not broadcast. Some episodes from the 1960s are missing due to the BBC's previous junking policy, and thus their serials are incomplete. Also, episodes aired during the first three seasons had their own individual titles. The "umbrella titles" in this list are generally those used for commercial release.
The three-digit story numbers are not official designations but are merely to serve as a guide to where the story stands in the overall context of the programme. There is some dispute about, for example, whether to count Season 23's The Trial of a Time Lord as one or four serials,[2] and whether the uncompleted Shada should be included.[3] The numbering scheme used here reflects that used in sources such as The Discontinuity Guide, Outpost Gallifrey and DVD releases.
During the early seasons of the programme most serials are linked together, one usually leading directly into the next — although there are some breaks, such as between the second season finale, The Time Meddler, and the third season premiere, Galaxy 4.
[edit] First Doctor
The first televised incarnation of The Doctor was portrayed by William Hartnell. During Hartnell's tenure, the Doctor visited a mixture of both stories set in the future and historical events that had no extraterrestrial influence, such as fifteenth century Mesoamerica. In his last story, The Tenth Planet, the First Doctor gradually grew weaker until collapsing and regenerating at the end of episode four.
[edit] Season 1 (1963-64)
Verity Lambert was producer for the first season, and retained the position until "Mission to the Unknown". David Whitaker served as script editor until The Dalek Invasion of Earth.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 001 | An Unearthly Child aka 100,000 BC aka The Tribe of Gum |
A | 4 episodes | Anthony Coburn (and C. E. Webber) | Waris Hussein | November 23–December 14, 1963 |
| 002 | The Daleks aka The Mutants aka The Dead Planet |
B | 7 episodes | Terry Nation | Richard Martin & Christopher Barry | December 21, 1963–February 1, 1964 |
| 003 | The Edge of Destruction aka Inside the Spaceship aka Beyond the Sun |
C | 2 episodes | David Whitaker | Richard Martin & Frank Cox | 8–February 15, 1964 |
| 004 | Marco Polo aka A Journey Through Cathay |
D | 7 episodes; (all missing) |
John Lucarotti | Waris Hussein | February 22–April 4, 1964 |
| 005 | The Keys of Marinus aka The Sea of Death |
E | 6 episodes | Terry Nation | John Gorrie | April 11–May 16, 1964 |
| 006 | The Aztecs | F | 4 episodes | John Lucarotti | John Crockett | May 23–June 13, 1964 |
| 007 | The Sensorites | G | 6 episodes | Peter R. Newman | Mervyn Pinfield & Frank Cox | June 20–August 1, 1964 |
| 008 | The Reign of Terror aka The French Revolution |
H | 6 episodes; (4 & 5 missing) |
Dennis Spooner | Henric Hirsch & John Gorrie | August 8–September 12, 1964 |
[edit] Season 2 (1964-65)
Dennis Spooner replaced Whitaker as script editor after The Dalek Invasion of Earth, and edited the remainder of the season apart from The Time Meddler, which was edited by Donald Tosh.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 009 | Planet of Giants | J | 3 episodes | Louis Marks | Mervyn Pinfield & Douglas Camfield | October 31–November 14, 1964 |
| 010 | The Dalek Invasion of Earth aka World's End |
K | 6 episodes | Terry Nation | Richard Martin | November 21–December 26, 1964 |
| 011 | The Rescue | L | 2 episodes | David Whitaker | Christopher Barry | 2–January 9, 1965 |
| 012 | The Romans | M | 4 episodes | Dennis Spooner | Christopher Barry | January 16–February 6, 1965 |
| 013 | The Web Planet aka The Zarbi |
N | 6 episodes | Bill Strutton | Richard Martin | 13 February –March 20, 1965 |
| 014 | The Crusade aka The Lionheart aka The Crusaders |
P | 4 episodes; (2 & 4 missing) |
David Whitaker | Douglas Camfield | March 27–April 17, 1965 |
| 015 | The Space Museum | Q | 4 episodes | Glyn Jones | Mervyn Pinfield | April 24–May 15, 1965 |
| 016 | The Chase | R | 6 episodes | Terry Nation | Richard Martin & Douglas Camfield | May 22–June 26, 1965 |
| 017 | The Time Meddler | S | 4 episodes | Dennis Spooner | Douglas Camfield | 3–July 24, 1965 |
[edit] Season 3 (1965-66)
John Wiles replaced Lambert to produce The Myth Makers, who was himself replaced after The Ark by Innes Lloyd. Donald Tosh served as script editor until The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve, during which he was replaced by Gerry Davis. Lloyd and Davis retained their roles until the end of the fourth season.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 018 | Galaxy 4 | T | 4 episodes; (all missing) |
William Emms | Derek Martinus & Mervyn Pinfield | September 11–October 2, 1965 |
| 019 | "Mission to the Unknown" aka "Dalek Cutaway" |
T/A or DC | 1 episode; (missing) |
Terry Nation | Derek Martinus | October 9, 1965 |
| 020 | The Myth Makers | U | 4 episodes; (all missing) |
Donald Cotton | Michael Leeston-Smith | October 16–November 6, 1965 |
| 021 | The Daleks' Master Plan | V | 12 episodes; (all missing except 2, 5, & 10) |
Terry Nation and Dennis Spooner | Douglas Camfield | November 13, 1965–January 29, 1966 |
| 022 | The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve aka The Massacre |
W | 4 episodes; (all missing) |
John Lucarotti and Donald Tosh | Paddy Russell | February 5–February 26, 1966 |
| 023 | The Ark | X | 4 episodes | Paul Erickson and Lesley Scott | Michael Imison | March 5–March 26, 1966 |
| 024 | The Celestial Toymaker | Y | 4 episodes; (1-3 missing) |
Brian Hayles (and Donald Tosh) | Bill Sellars | April 2–April 23, 1966 |
| 025 | The Gunfighters | Z | 4 episodes | Donald Cotton | Rex Tucker | April 30–May 21, 1966 |
| 026 | The Savages | AA | 4 episodes; (all missing) |
Ian Stuart Black | Christopher Barry | May 28–June 18, 1966 |
| 027 | The War Machines | BB | 4 episodes | Ian Stuart Black (and Kit Pedler) | Michael Ferguson | June 25–July 16, 1966 |
[edit] Season 4 (1966-67)
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 028 | The Smugglers | CC | 4 episodes; (all missing) |
Brian Hayles | Julia Smith | September 10–October 1, 1966 |
| 029 | The Tenth Planet | DD | 4 episodes; (4th missing) |
Kit Pedler and Gerry Davis | Derek Martinus | 8–October 29, 1966 |
[edit] Second Doctor
The Second Doctor was portrayed by Patrick Troughton, whose serials were more action-oriented. He retained the role until the last episode of The War Games, when members of the Doctor's race, the Time Lords, put the Doctor on trial for breaking the laws of time.
[edit] Season 4 (1966-67) — continued
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 030 | The Power of the Daleks | EE | 6 episodes; (all missing) |
David Whitaker (and Dennis Spooner) | Christopher Barry | November 5–December 10, 1966 |
| 031 | The Highlanders | FF | 4 episodes; (all missing) |
Elwyn Jones and Gerry Davis | Hugh David | December 17, 1966–January 7, 1967 |
| 032 | The Underwater Menace | GG | 4 episodes; (1, 2 & 4 missing) |
Geoffrey Orme | Julia Smith | January 14–February 4, 1967 |
| 033 | The Moonbase | HH | 4 episodes; (1 & 3 missing) |
Kit Pedler | Morris Barry | February 11–March 3, 1967 |
| 034 | The Macra Terror | JJ | 4 episodes; (all missing) |
Ian Stuart Black | John Howard Davies | March 11–April 1, 1967 |
| 035 | The Faceless Ones | KK | 6 episodes; (2, 4-6 missing) |
David Ellis and Malcolm Hulke | Gerry Mill | April 8–May 13, 1967 |
| 036 | The Evil of the Daleks | LL | 7 episodes; (1, 3-7 missing) |
David Whitaker | Derek Martinus | May 20–July 1, 1967 |
[edit] Season 5 (1967-68)
Peter Bryant replaced Lloyd as producer after The Enemy of the World and would produce every serial until The War Games. Victor Pemberton edited The Tomb of the Cybermen. Peter Bryant also edited the scripts between The Abominable Snowmen and The Enemy of the World, after which Derrick Sherwin replaced him.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 037 | The Tomb of the Cybermen | MM | 4 episodes | Kit Pedler and Gerry Davis | Morris Barry | 2–September 23, 1967 |
| 038 | The Abominable Snowmen | NN | 6 episodes; (1, 3-6 missing) |
Mervyn Haisman and Henry Lincoln | Gerald Blake | September 30–November 4, 1967 |
| 039 | The Ice Warriors | OO | 6 episodes (2 & 3 missing) |
Brian Hayles | Derek Martinus | November 11–December 16, 1967 |
| 040 | The Enemy of the World | PP | 6 episodes; (1, 2, 4-6 missing) |
David Whitaker | Barry Letts | December 23, 1967–January 27, 1968 |
| 041 | The Web of Fear | 6 episodes; (2-6 missing) |
Mervyn Haisman and Henry Lincoln | Douglas Camfield | February 3–March 9, 1968 | |
| 042 | Fury from the Deep | RR | 6 episodes; (all missing) |
Victor Pemberton | Hugh David | March 16–April 20, 1968 |
| 043 | The Wheel in Space | SS | 6 episodes (1, 2, 4 & 5 missing) |
David Whitaker and Kit Pedler | Tristan de Vere Cole | April 27–June 1, 1968 |
[edit] Season 6 (1968-69)
Bryant and Sherwin retained their roles as producer and script editor respectively during the season, with the exception of The War Games, which was produced by Sherwin and edited by Terrance Dicks, who had also edited The Invasion earlier in the season.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 044 | The Dominators | TT | 5 episodes | Norman Ashby (a.k.a. Mervyn Haisman and Henry Lincoln) | Morris Barry | August 10–September 7, 1968 |
| 045 | The Mind Robber | UU | 5 episodes | Peter Ling (and Derrick Sherwin) | David Maloney | September 14–October 12, 1968 |
| 046 | The Invasion | VV | 8 episodes; (1 & 4 missing) |
Derrick Sherwin and Kit Pedler | Douglas Camfield | November 2–December 21, 1968 |
| 047 | The Krotons | WW | 4 episodes | Robert Holmes | David Maloney | December 28, 1968–January 18, 1969 |
| 048 | The Seeds of Death | XX | 6 episodes | Brian Hayles (and Terrance Dicks) | Michael Ferguson | January 25–1 March 1969 |
| 049 | The Space Pirates | YY | 6 episodes; (1, 3-6 missing) |
Robert Holmes | Michael Hart | March 8–April 12, 1969 |
| 050 | The War Games | ZZ | 10 episodes | Malcolm Hulke and Terrance Dicks | David Maloney | April 19–June 21, 1969 |
[edit] Third Doctor
The Third Doctor was portrayed by Jon Pertwee. Sentenced to exile on Earth and forcibly regenerated at the end of The War Games, the Doctor spends his time working for UNIT. After The Three Doctors, The Time Lords repeal his exile, however the Doctor still worked closely with UNIT from time to time.
[edit] Season 7 (1970)
Derrick Sherwin served as producer for Spearhead from Space, and was then succeeded by Barry Letts, who would produce all of the remaining Third Doctor serials. Terrance Dicks also continued as script editor, and also edited all Third Doctor serials. From Spearhead from Space, the programme was produced in colour, although some episodes now exist only in black and white.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 051 | Spearhead from Space | AAA | 4 episodes | Robert Holmes | Derek Martinus | 3–January 24, 1970 |
| 052 | Doctor Who and the Silurians aka The Silurians |
BBB | 7 episodes | Malcolm Hulke | Timothy Combe | January 31–March 14, 1970 |
| 053 | The Ambassadors of Death | CCC | 7 episodes (Parts exist in black and white only) |
David Whitaker, (and Trevor Ray and Malcolm Hulke) | Michael Ferguson | March 21–May 2, 1970 |
| 054 | Inferno | DDD | 7 episodes | Don Houghton | Douglas Camfield & Barry Letts | May 9–June 20, 1970 |
[edit] Season 8 (1971)
This season forms a loose arc with the introduction of the Master.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 055 | Terror of the Autons | EEE | 4 episodes | Robert Holmes | Barry Letts | 2–January 23, 1971 |
| 056 | The Mind of Evil | FFF | 6 episodes (Exists in black and white) |
Don Houghton | Timothy Combe | January 30–March 6, 1971 |
| 057 | The Claws of Axos | GGG | 4 episodes | Bob Baker & Dave Martin | Michael Ferguson | March 13–April 3, 1971 |
| 058 | Colony in Space | HHH | 6 episodes | Malcolm Hulke | Michael E. Briant | April 10–May 15, 1971 |
| 059 | The Dæmons | JJJ | 5 episodes | Guy Leopold (a.k.a. Robert Sloman and Barry Letts) | Christopher Barry | May 22–June 19, 1971 |
[edit] Season 9 (1972)
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 060 | Day of the Daleks | KKK | 4 episodes | Louis Marks | Paul Bernard | 1–January 22, 1972 |
| 061 | The Curse of Peladon | MMM | 4 episodes | Brian Hayles | Lennie Mayne | January 29–February 19, 1972 |
| 062 | The Sea Devils | LLL | 6 episodes | Malcolm Hulke | Michael Briant | February 26–April 1, 1972 |
| 063 | The Mutants | NNN | 6 episodes | Bob Baker and Dave Martin | Christopher Barry | April 8–May 13, 1972 |
| 064 | The Time Monster | OOO | 6 episodes | Robert Sloman (and Barry Letts) | Paul Bernard | May 20–June 24, 1972 |
[edit] Season 10 (1972-73)
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 065 | The Three Doctors | RRR | 4 episodes | Bob Baker and Dave Martin | Lennie Mayne | December 30, 1972–January 20, 1973 |
| 066 | Carnival of Monsters | PPP | 4 episodes | Robert Holmes | Barry Letts | January 27–February 17, 1973 |
| 067 | Frontier in Space | QQQ | 6 episodes | Malcolm Hulke | Paul Bernard | February 24–March 31, 1973 |
| 068 | Planet of the Daleks | SSS | 6 episodes (Episode 3 exists only in black and white) |
Terry Nation | David Maloney | April 7–May 12, 1973 |
| 069 | The Green Death | TTT | 6 episodes | Robert Sloman (and Barry Letts) | Michael Briant | May 19–June 23, 1973 |
[edit] Season 11 (1973-74)
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 070 | The Time Warrior | UUU | 4 episodes | Robert Holmes | Alan Bromly | December 15, 1973-January 5, 1974 |
| 071 | Invasion of the Dinosaurs | WWW | 6 episodes (Episode 1 exists only in black and white) |
Malcolm Hulke | Paddy Russell | January 12–February 16, 1974 |
| 072 | Death to the Daleks | XXX | 4 episodes | Terry Nation | Michael Briant | February 23–March 16, 1974 |
| 073 | The Monster of Peladon | YYY | 6 episodes | Brian Hayles | Lennie Mayne | March 23–April 27, 1974 |
| 074 | Planet of the Spiders | ZZZ | 6 episodes | Robert Sloman (and Barry Letts) | Barry Letts | May 4–June 8, 1974 |
[edit] Fourth Doctor
The Fourth Doctor was portrayed by Tom Baker, and is to date the longest-serving Doctor[4], having held the role seven seasons.
[edit] Season 12 (1974-75)
Barry Letts served as producer for Robot, after which he was succeeded by Philip Hinchcliffe. Robert Holmes served as script editor. Both Hinchcliffe and Holmes would retain these roles until the start of season 15. All serials in this season continue directly one after the other, tracing one single problematic voyage of the TARDIS crew. Despite the continuity, each serial is considered its own standalone story.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 075 | Robot | 4A | 4 episodes | Terrance Dicks | Christopher Barry | December 28, 1974–January 18, 1975 |
| 076 | The Ark in Space | 4C | 4 episodes | Robert Holmes (and John Lucarotti) | Rodney Bennett | January 25–February 15, 1975 |
| 077 | The Sontaran Experiment | 4B | 2 episodes | Bob Baker & Dave Martin | Rodney Bennett | February 22–March 1, 1975 |
| 078 | Genesis of the Daleks | 4E | 6 episodes | Terry Nation | David Maloney | March 8–April 12, 1975 |
| 079 | Revenge of the Cybermen | 4D | 4 episodes | Gerry Davis | Michael Briant | April 19–May 10, 1975 |
[edit] Season 13 (1975-76)
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 080 | Terror of the Zygons | 4F | 4 episodes | Robert Banks Stewart | Douglas Camfield | August 30–September 20, 1975 |
| 081 | Planet of Evil | 4H | 4 episodes | Louis Marks | David Maloney | September 27–October 18, 1975 |
| 082 | Pyramids of Mars | 4G | 4 episodes | Stephen Harris (a.k.a. Robert Holmes and Lewis Greifer) | Paddy Russell | October 25–November 15, 1975 |
| 083 | The Android Invasion | 4J | 4 episodes | Terry Nation | Barry Letts | November 22–December 13, 1975 |
| 084 | The Brain of Morbius | 4K | 4 episodes | Robin Bland (a.k.a. Terrance Dicks and Robert Holmes) | Christopher Barry | 3–January 24, 1976 |
| 085 | The Seeds of Doom | 4L | 6 episodes | Robert Banks Stewart | Douglas Camfield | January 31–March 6, 1976 |
[edit] Season 14 (1976-77)
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 086 | The Masque of Mandragora | 4M | 4 episodes | Louis Marks | Rodney Bennett | 4–September 25, 1976 |
| 087 | The Hand of Fear | 4N | 4 episodes | Bob Baker & Dave Martin | Lennie Mayne | 2–October 23, 1976 |
| 088 | The Deadly Assassin | 4P | 4 episodes | Robert Holmes | David Maloney | October 30–November 20, 1976 |
| 089 | The Face of Evil | 4Q | 4 episodes | Chris Boucher | Pennant Roberts | 1–January 22, 1977 |
| 090 | The Robots of Death | 4R | 4 episodes | Chris Boucher | Michael Briant | January 29 – February 19, 1977 |
| 091 | The Talons of Weng-Chiang | 4S | 6 episodes | Robert Holmes (and Robert Banks Stewart) | David Maloney | February 26 – April 2, 1977 |
[edit] Season 15 (1977-78)
Graham Williams served as producer, a role he retained until Shada, at the end of season 17. Robert Holmes served as script editor until The Sun Makers, during which he was replaced with Anthony Read.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 092 | Horror of Fang Rock | 4V | 4 episodes | Terrance Dicks | Paddy Russell | 3–September 24, 1977 |
| 093 | The Invisible Enemy | 4T | 4 episodes | Bob Baker & Dave Martin | Derrick Goodwin | 1–October 22, 1977 |
| 094 | Image of the Fendahl | 4X | 4 episodes | Chris Boucher | George Spenton-Foster | October 29–November 19, 1977 |
| 095 | The Sun Makers | 4W | 4 episodes | Robert Holmes | Pennant Roberts | November 26–December 17, 1977 |
| 096 | Underworld | 4Y | 4 episodes | Bob Baker & Dave Martin | Norman Stewart | 7–January 28, 1978 |
| 097 | The Invasion of Time | 4Z | 6 episodes | David Agnew (a.k.a. Graham Williams and Anthony Read) | Gerald Blake | February 4 – March 11, 1978 |
[edit] Season 16 (1978-79)
Anthony Read acted as script editor for his final season, except for The Armageddon Factor, when that job was taken by Douglas Adams. Season 16 consists of one long story arc encompassing six separate, linked stories. This season is referred to by the umbrella title The Key to Time and has been released on DVD under this title.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 098 | The Ribos Operation | 5A | 4 episodes | Robert Holmes | George Spenton-Foster | 2–September 23, 1978 |
| 099 | The Pirate Planet | 5B | 4 episodes | Douglas Adams | Pennant Roberts | September 30–October 21, 1978 |
| 100 | The Stones of Blood | 5C | 4 episodes | David Fisher | Darrol Blake | October 28–November 18, 1978 |
| 101 | The Androids of Tara | 5D | 4 episodes | David Fisher | Michael Hayes | November 25–December 16, 1978 |
| 102 | The Power of Kroll | 5E | 4 episodes | Robert Holmes | Norman Stewart | December 23, 1978–January 13, 1979 |
| 103 | The Armageddon Factor | 5F | 6 episodes | Bob Baker and Dave Martin | Michael Hayes | January 20 – February 24, 1979 |
[edit] Season 17 (1979-80)
Graham Williams served as producer. Douglas Adams was script editor.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 104 | Destiny of the Daleks | 5J | 4 episodes | Terry Nation | Ken Grieve | 1–September 22, 1979 |
| 105 | City of Death | 5H | 4 episodes | David Agnew (a.k.a. Douglas Adams, Graham Williams, and David Fisher) | Michael Hayes | September 29–October 20, 1979 |
| 106 | The Creature from the Pit | 5G | 4 episodes | David Fisher | Christopher Barry | October 27–November 17, 1979 |
| 107 | Nightmare of Eden | 5K | 4 episodes | Bob Baker | Alan Bromly | November 24–December 15, 1979 |
| 108 | The Horns of Nimon | 5L | 4 episodes | Anthony Read | Kenny McBain | December 22, 1979–January 12, 1980 |
| 109 | Shada | 5M | 6 episodes | Douglas Adams | Pennant Roberts | Unaired |
[edit] Season 18 (1980-81)
This was the first season produced by John Nathan-Turner; Christopher H. Bidmead served as script editor. In a return to the format of early seasons, virtually all serials from Seasons 18 through 20 are linked together, often running directly into each other. Season 18 forms a loose story arc dealing with the theme of entropy. Full Circle, State of Decay, and Warriors' Gate trace the Doctor's adventures in E-Space; they were released as a VHS set with the umbrella title The E-Space Trilogy.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 110 | The Leisure Hive | 5N | 4 episodes | David Fisher | Lovett Bickford | August 30–September 20, 1980 |
| 111 | Meglos | 5Q | 4 episodes | John Flanagan and Andrew McCulloch | Terence Dudley | September 27–October 18, 1980 |
| 112 | Full Circle | 5R | 4 episodes | Andrew Smith | Peter Grimwade | October 25–November 15, 1980 |
| 113 | State of Decay | 5P | 4 episodes | Terrance Dicks | Peter Moffatt | November 22–December 13, 1980 |
| 114 | Warriors' Gate | 5S | 4 episodes | Stephen Gallagher | Paul Joyce & Graeme Harper | 3–January 24, 1981 |
| 115 | The Keeper of Traken | 5T | 4 episodes | Johnny Byrne | John Black | January 31–February 21, 1981 |
| 116 | Logopolis | 5V | 4 episodes | Christopher H. Bidmead | Peter Grimwade | February 28–March 21, 1981 |
[edit] Fifth Doctor
The Fifth Doctor was portrayed by Peter Davison.
[edit] Season 19 (1982)
John Nathan-Turner continued as producer throughout Davison's entire tenure. Antony Root was script editor until The Visitation, after which he was replaced by Eric Saward, who edited the scripts until Mindwarp, four years later. The show moved from its traditional once-weekly Saturday broadcast to being broadcast twice weekly on Monday and Tuesday. Castrovalva, together with the previous two serials, The Keeper of Traken and Logopolis, form a loose trilogy involving the return of the Master. They were released on DVD under the banner title New Beginnings.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 117 | Castrovalva | 5Z | 4 episodes | Christopher H. Bidmead | Fiona Cumming | 4–January 12, 1982 |
| 118 | Four to Doomsday | 5W | 4 episodes | Terence Dudley | John Black | 18–January 26, 1982 |
| 119 | Kinda | 5Y | 4 episodes | Christopher Bailey | Peter Grimwade | 1–February 9, 1982 |
| 120 | The Visitation | 5X | 4 episodes | Eric Saward | Peter Moffatt | 15–February 23, 1982 |
| 121 | Black Orchid | 6A | 2 episodes | Terence Dudley | Ron Jones | 1–March 2, 1982 |
| 122 | Earthshock | 6B | 4 episodes | Eric Saward | Peter Grimwade | 8–March 16, 1982 |
| 123 | Time-Flight | 6C | 4 episodes | Peter Grimwade | Ron Jones | 22–March 30, 1982 |
[edit] Season 20 (1983)
Mawdryn Undead, Terminus and Enlightenment involve the Black Guardian's plot to kill the Doctor; they were released individually on VHS as parts of The Black Guardian Trilogy.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 124 | Arc of Infinity | 6E | 4 episodes | Johnny Byrne | Ron Jones | 3-January 12, 1983 |
| 125 | Snakedance | 6D | 4 episodes | Christopher Bailey | Fiona Cumming | 18-January 26, 1983 |
| 126 | Mawdryn Undead | 6F | 4 episodes | Peter Grimwade | Peter Moffatt | 1-February 9, 1983 |
| 127 | Terminus | 6G | 4 episodes | Stephen Gallagher | Mary Ridge | 15-February 23, 1983 |
| 128 | Enlightenment | 6H | 4 episodes | Barbara Clegg | Fiona Cumming | 1-March 9, 1983 |
| 129 | The King's Demons | 6J | 2 episodes | Terence Dudley | Tony Virgo | 15-March 16, 1983 |
| 130 | The Five Doctors | 6K | 20th anniversary 90-minute special |
Terrance Dicks | Peter Moffatt | November 23, 1983 |
[edit] Season 21 (1984)
For the first time since Season 18, not all of the serials were directly linked.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 131 | Warriors of the Deep | 6L | 4 episodes | Johnny Byrne | Pennant Roberts | 5–January 13, 1984 |
| 132 | The Awakening | 6M | 2 episodes | Eric Pringle | Michael Owen Morris | 19–January 20, 1984 |
| 133 | Frontios | 6N | 4 episodes | Christopher H. Bidmead | Ron Jones | January 26–February 3, 1984 |
| 134 | Resurrection of the Daleks | 6P | 2 episodes (45 minutes each) |
Eric Saward | Matthew Robinson | 8–February 15, 1984 |
| 135 | Planet of Fire | 6Q | 4 episodes | Peter Grimwade | Fiona Cumming | February 23–March 2, 1984 |
| 136 | The Caves of Androzani | 6R | 4 episodes | Robert Holmes | Graeme Harper | 8–March 16, 1984 |
[edit] Sixth Doctor
The Sixth Doctor was portrayed by Colin Baker.
[edit] Season 21 (1984) — continued
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 137 | The Twin Dilemma | 6S | 4 episodes | Anthony Steven | Peter Moffatt | 22–March 30, 1984 |
[edit] Season 22 (1985)
John Nathan-Turner and Eric Saward retained their roles as producer and script editor respectively. The series moved back to Saturday broadcasts. All episodes were 45 minutes long, though all of the episodes also exist in 25-minute versions.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 138 | Attack of the Cybermen | 6T | 2 episodes | Paula Moore | Matthew Robinson | 5–January 12, 1985 |
| 139 | Vengeance on Varos | 6V | 2 episodes | Philip Martin | Ron Jones | 19–January 26, 1985 |
| 140 | The Mark of the Rani | 6X | 2 episodes | Pip and Jane Baker | Sarah Hellings | 2–February 9, 1985 |
| 141 | The Two Doctors | 6W | 3 episodes | Robert Holmes | Peter Moffatt | February 16–March 2, 1985 |
| 142 | Timelash | 6Y | 2 episodes | Glen McCoy | Pennant Roberts | 9–March 16, 1985 |
| 143 | Revelation of the Daleks | 6Z | 2 episodes | Eric Saward | Graeme Harper | 23–March 30, 1985 |
[edit] Season 23 (1986)
Eric Saward was script editor up to part eight, when Nathan-Turner unofficially took over script editing the remainder of the season because of Saward's departure. The whole season is titled as The Trial of a Time Lord, and is split into four segments. Episode length returns to 25 minutes.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 144 | The Mysterious Planet | 7A | 4 episodes | Robert Holmes | Nicholas Mallett | 6–September 27, 1986 |
| 145 | Mindwarp | 7B | 4 episodes | Philip Martin | Ron Jones | 4–October 25, 1986 |
| 146 | Terror of the Vervoids aka The Vervoids |
7C | 4 episodes | Pip and Jane Baker | Chris Clough | 1–November 22, 1986 |
| 147 | The Ultimate Foe aka Time Incorporated |
7C | 2 episodes (Episode 2 is 30 minutes) |
Robert Holmes and Pip and Jane Baker | Chris Clough | November 29–December 6, 1986 |
[edit] Seventh Doctor
The Seventh Doctor was portrayed by Sylvester McCoy.
[edit] Season 24 (1987)
John Nathan-Turner continued as producer. Andrew Cartmel was script editor. Both would serve these roles until the show was put on hiatus in 1989.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 148 | Time and the Rani | 7D | 4 episodes | Pip and Jane Baker | Andrew Morgan | 7–September 28, 1987 |
| 149 | Paradise Towers | 7E | 4 episodes | Stephen Wyatt | Nicholas Mallett | 5–October 26, 1987 |
| 150 | Delta and the Bannermen | 7F | 3 episodes | Malcolm Kohll | Chris Clough | 2–November 16, 1987 |
| 151 | Dragonfire | 7G | 3 episodes | Ian Briggs | Chris Clough | November 23–December 7, 1987 |
[edit] Season 25 (1988-89)
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 152 | Remembrance of the Daleks | 7H | 4 episodes | Ben Aaronovitch | Andrew Morgan | 5–October 26, 1988 |
| 153 | The Happiness Patrol | 7L | 3 episodes | Graeme Curry | Chris Clough | 2–November 16, 1988 |
| 154 | Silver Nemesis | 7K | 3 episodes | Kevin Clarke | Chris Clough | November 23–December 7, 1988 |
| 155 | The Greatest Show in the Galaxy | 7J | 4 episodes | Stephen Wyatt | Alan Wareing | December 14, 1988–January 4, 1989 |
[edit] Season 26 (1989)
The final season continued to push the series towards a darker approach, focusing this time more on Ace's personal life as well as The Doctor's past and manipulations. This season sets the tone for the Virgin New Adventures novels that follow, paving the way for future episodes based on the novels such as "Human Nature" and "The Family of Blood".
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 156 | Battlefield | 7N | 4 episodes | Ben Aaronovitch | Michael Kerrigan | 6–September 27, 1989 |
| 157 | Ghost Light | 7Q | 3 episodes | Marc Platt | Alan Wareing | 4–October 18, 1989 |
| 158 | The Curse of Fenric | 7M | 4 episodes | Ian Briggs | Nicholas Mallett | October 25–November 15, 1989 |
| 159 | Survival | 7P | 3 episodes | Rona Munro | Alan Wareing | November 22–December 6, 1989 |
[edit] Eighth Doctor
The Eighth Doctor was portrayed by Paul McGann. The movie is the first and only television appearance of this Doctor. The only production title held by this story was Doctor Who. However, producer Philip Segal later suggested Enemy Within as an alternative title. Lacking any other specific name, many fans have adopted this to refer to the movie. Fan groups have also used other informal titles. The DVD release is titled Doctor Who: The Movie.
[edit] Television movie (1996)
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 160 | Doctor Who | TVM | 89-minute television movie | Matthew Jacobs | Geoffrey Sax | May 12, 1996 |
[edit] Ninth Doctor
In 2005, the BBC relaunched Doctor Who after a 16-year absence from episodic television, with Russell T. Davies, Julie Gardner and Mal Young as executive producers, Phil Collinson as producer, and Christopher Eccleston taking the lead role of the Ninth Doctor.
Although the production team chose to restart the series numbering from scratch, some fans of the programme prefer to refer to the 2005 series as Season 27, the 2006 series as Season 28, and so on. Despite the new numbering, the revival adheres to the original continuity. The new series is formatted to a 16:9 widescreen display ratio, and a standard episode length of 45 minutes. For the first time since the 1965–'66 season, each episode has an individual title even though some stories span several episodes.
[edit] Series 1 (2005)
The 2005 series constitutes a loose story arc, dealing with the consequences of the Time War and the mysterious Bad Wolf.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 161 | "Rose" | 1.1 | 1 episode | Russell T. Davies | Keith Boak | March 26, 2005 |
| 162 | "The End of the World" | 1.2 | 1 episode | Russell T. Davies | Euros Lyn | April 2, 2005 |
| 163 | "The Unquiet Dead" | 1.3 | 1 episode | Mark Gatiss | Euros Lyn | April 9, 2005 |
| 164 | "Aliens of London" "World War Three" |
1.4 1.5 |
2 episodes | Russell T. Davies | Keith Boak | April 16, 2005 April 23, 2005 |
| 165 | "Dalek" | 1.6 | 1 episode | Robert Shearman | Joe Ahearne | April 30, 2005 |
| 166 | "The Long Game" | 1.7 | 1 episode | Russell T. Davies | Brian Grant | May 7, 2005 |
| 167 | "Father's Day" | 1.8 | 1 episode | Paul Cornell | Joe Ahearne | May 14, 2005 |
| 168 | "The Empty Child" "The Doctor Dances" |
1.9 1.10 |
2 episodes | Steven Moffat | James Hawes | May 21, 2005 May 28, 2005 |
| 169 | "Boom Town" | 1.11 | 1 episode | Russell T. Davies | Joe Ahearne | June 4, 2005 |
| 170 | "Bad Wolf" "The Parting of the Ways" |
1.12 1.13 |
2 episodes | Russell T. Davies | Joe Ahearne | June 11, 2005 June 18, 2005 |
[edit] Tenth Doctor
The incumbent Tenth Doctor is portrayed by David Tennant, who was cast before the first season aired after Eccleston announced his intention to leave the show.[5]
[edit] Specials (2005)
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Children in Need special (2005) | ||||||
| — | "Doctor Who: Children in Need" | — | 7-minute special | Russell T. Davies | Euros Lyn | November 17, 2005 |
| Christmas special (2005) | ||||||
| 171 | "The Christmas Invasion" | 2.X | 60-minute special | Russell T. Davies | James Hawes | December 25, 2005 |
| Interactive episode (2005) | ||||||
| — | "Attack of the Graske" | — | 14-minute interactive episode | Gareth Roberts | Ashley Way | December 25, 2005 |
[edit] Series 2 (2006)
The back-story for the spin-off series Torchwood is "seeded" in various episodes in the 2006 series. Each episode also has an accompanying online TARDISODE.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 172 | "New Earth" | 2.1 | 1 episode | Russell T. Davies | James Hawes | April 15, 2006 |
| 173 | "Tooth and Claw" | 2.2 | 1 episode | Russell T. Davies | Euros Lyn | April 22, 2006 |
| 174 | "School Reunion" | 2.3 | 1 episode | Toby Whithouse | James Hawes | April 29, 2006 |
| 175 | "The Girl in the Fireplace" | 2.4 | 1 episode | Steven Moffat | Euros Lyn | May 6, 2006 |
| 176 | "Rise of the Cybermen" "The Age of Steel" |
2.5 2.6 |
2 episodes | Tom MacRae | Graeme Harper | May 13, 2006 May 20, 2006 |
| 177 | "The Idiot's Lantern" | 2.7 | 1 episode | Mark Gatiss | Euros Lyn | May 27, 2006 |
| 178 | "The Impossible Planet" "The Satan Pit" |
2.8 2.9 |
2 episodes | Matt Jones | James Strong | June 3, 2006 June 10, 2006 |
| 179 | "Love & Monsters" | 2.10 | 1 episode | Russell T. Davies | Dan Zeff | June 17, 2006 |
| 180 | "Fear Her" | 2.11 | 1 episode | Matthew Graham | Euros Lyn | June 24, 2006 |
| 181 | "Army of Ghosts" "Doomsday" |
2.12 2.13 |
2 episodes | Russell T. Davies | Graeme Harper | July 1, 2006 July 8, 2006 |
[edit] Specials (2006)
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Christmas special (2006) | ||||||
| 182 | "The Runaway Bride" | 3.X | 60-minute special | Russell T. Davies | Euros Lyn | December 25, 2006 |
[edit] Series 3 (2007)
This series deals with the Face of Boe's final message, the mysterious Mr Saxon, and the Doctor dealing with the loss of Rose Tyler.
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 183 | "Smith and Jones" | 3.1 | 1 episode | Russell T. Davies | Charles Palmer | March 31, 2007 |
| 184 | "The Shakespeare Code" | 3.2 | 1 episode | Gareth Roberts | Charles Palmer | April 7, 2007 |
| 185 | "Gridlock" | 3.3 | 1 episode | Russell T. Davies | Richard Clark | April 14, 2007 |
| 186 | "Daleks in Manhattan" "Evolution of the Daleks" |
3.4 3.5 |
2 episodes | Helen Raynor | James Strong | April 21, 2007 April 28, 2007 |
| 187 | "The Lazarus Experiment" | 3.6 | 1 episode | Stephen Greenhorn | Richard Clark | May 5, 2007 |
| 188 | "42" | 3.7 | 1 episode | Chris Chibnall | Graeme Harper | May 19, 2007 |
| 189 | "Human Nature" "The Family of Blood" |
3.8 3.9 |
2 episodes | Paul Cornell | Charles Palmer | May 26, 2007 June 2, 2007 |
| 190 | "Blink" | 3.10 | 1 episode | Steven Moffat | Hettie MacDonald | June 9, 2007 |
| 191 | "Utopia" "The Sound of Drums" "Last of the Time Lords" |
3.11 3.12 3.13 |
3 episodes (3.13 is 52 minutes) |
Russell T. Davies | Graeme Harper Colin Teague (2 episodes) |
June 16, 2007 June 23, 2007 June 30, 2007 |
[edit] Specials (2007)
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Totally Doctor Who special (2007) | ||||||
| — | The Infinite Quest | — | Animated serial (13 x 3:30 or 45 mins) |
Alan Barnes | Gary Russell | April 2–June 30, 2007 |
| Children in Need special (2007) | ||||||
| — | "Time Crash" | — | 8-minute special | Steven Moffat | Graeme Harper | November 16, 2007 |
| Christmas special (2007) | ||||||
| 192 | "Voyage of the Damned" | 4.X | 72-minute special | Russell T. Davies | James Strong | December 25, 2007 |
[edit] Series 4 (2008)
| This section is a list of upcoming television episodes of an already-running TV series. It may contain non-definitive information based on advertisements, a website or interviews. The information may change if some episodes are postponed or moved up. |
| No | Title | Code | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 193 | "Partners in Crime" | 4.1 | 1 episode | Russell T. Davies | James Strong | April 5, 2008 |
| 194 | "The Fires of Pompeii" | 4.2 | 1 episode | James Moran | Colin Teague | April 12, 2008 |
| 195 | "Planet of the Ood" | 4.3 | 1 episode | Keith Temple | Graeme Harper | April 19, 2008 |
| 196 | "The Sontaran Stratagem" "The Poison Sky" |
4.4 4.5 |
2 episodes | Helen Raynor | Douglas Mackinnon | April 26, 2008 May 3, 2008 |
| 197 | "The Doctor's Daughter" | 4.6 | 1 episode | Stephen Greenhorn | Alice Troughton | May 10, 2008 |
| 198 | "The Unicorn and the Wasp"[6] | 4.7 | 1 episode | Gareth Roberts | Graeme Harper | May 17, 2008[7] |
| 199 | "Silence in the Library"[6] "Forest of the Dead"[8] |
4.8 4.9 |
2 episodes | Steven Moffat | Euros Lyn[9] | May 24, 2008 May 31, 2008[10] |
| 200 | "Midnight"[6] | 4.10 | 1 episode | Russell T. Davies | Alice Troughton | 2008 |
| 201 | "Turn Left"[6] | 4.11 | 1 episode | Russell T. Davies | Graeme Harper | 2008 |
| 202 | TBA "Journey's End"[6] |
4.12 4.13 |
2 episodes | Russell T. Davies | Graeme Harper[11] | 2008 |
[edit] 2009 and beyond
David Tennant is confirmed to star through to 2009. However, during the second half of 2008, Tennant is committed to a Royal Shakespeare Company production of Hamlet. Following the conclusion of filming for the fourth series, the 2008 Christmas special (featuring Tennant) is currently filming.[12] After the Christmas Special, three Bank Holiday specials (also confirmed to be featuring Tennant[13]) have been commissioned to air throughout 2009, [14][15] The programme will then return in 2010 with a fifth full series. Russell T Davies has suggested that the programme is expected to follow this pattern, of full series interspersed with occasional year-long breaks, for some time into the future.[16]
[edit] Other stories
[edit] TV broadcasts
There have also been several special Doctor Who episodes and serials that are produced by the BBC, but are not generally considered part of the series continuity. They usually consist of spoofs and crossovers with other TV shows, and stories produced for special occasions.
| Title | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| "A Fix with Sontarans" | 1 episode, 9 minutes | Eric Saward | Marcus Mortimer | February 23, 1985 |
| A segment of Jim'll Fix It during Colin Baker's tenure as the Sixth Doctor and Janet Fielding as Tegan Jovanka. | ||||
| Dimensions in Time | 2 episodes, 13 minutes total | John Nathan-Turner and David Roden | Stuart MacDonald | 26-27 November 1993 |
| A Children in Need thirtieth anniversary programme for Doctor Who. The special was also a crossover with EastEnders. It featured Jon Pertwee, Tom Baker, Peter Davison, Colin Baker and Sylvester McCoy as the Doctor plus many of the companions. | ||||
| Doctor Who and the Curse of Fatal Death | 4 parts, 23 minutes in total | Steven Moffat | John Henderson | March 12, 1999 |
| A Comic Relief spoof, starring Rowan Atkinson, Richard E. Grant, Jim Broadbent, Hugh Grant, and Joanna Lumley as the Doctor. | ||||
[edit] Webcasts
| Title | Episodes | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Death Comes to Time | 13 parts, 140 minutes in total |
Colin Meek | Dan Freedman | July 13, 2001 (pilot) February 14-May 3, 2002 (regular) |
| An illustrated audio webcast for BBCi featuring the Seventh Doctor. | ||||
| Real Time | 6 parts, 12 minutes each | Gary Russell | Gary Russell | August 2-September 6, 2002 |
| An illustrated audio webcast for BBCi featuring the Sixth Doctor. | ||||
| Shada | 6 parts, 25 minutes each | Douglas Adams | Nicholas Pegg | May 2-June 6, 2003 |
| An illustrated audio webcast for BBCi featuring the Eighth Doctor in a remake of the unfinished Fourth Doctor serial. | ||||
| Scream of the Shalka | 6 parts, 15 minutes each | Paul Cornell | Wilson Milam | November 13-December 18, 2003 |
| Animated webcast for BBCi featuring an alternative version of the Ninth Doctor known as the Shalka Doctor, played by Richard E. Grant. | ||||
Death Comes to Time was later released on CD by the BBC, while Real Time and Shada were later released on CD by Big Finish. Scream of the Shalka was released in novel form in the Past Doctor Adventures series.
Copyright © 2010
Henry H. and Catherine C. Hartley
All Rights Reserved

