Doctor Who in Australia
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Doctor Who in Australia refers to the history and culture surrounding the
The Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) was one of the first and longest term purchasers of the series from the BBC, initially planning its Australian debut for May 1964, only six months after the UK premiere. In 1979 the ABC organised a nationwide promotional tour by then-current Doctor Tom Baker and, in 1983, it co-funded the 20th anniversary special "The Five Doctors". In October 2022, the ABC announced it had lost the rights to new episodes of the series, ending an association with the series that had spanned almost 60 years.[1]
Australia was also a key market for the many products licensed by BBC Enterprises and the success of the series in Australia was an important factor in its worldwide penetration; English-speaking countries in the Asia-Pacific region generally bought whatever episodes the ABC had cleared for its own use, and
Broadcast history
The 1960s
Doctor Who was first broadcast in Australia by the ABC's Perth station,
The 1970s
In Sydney in 1975, the ABC screened just fourteen weekly instalments of Doctor Who – The Time Warrior, Death to the Daleks and The Monster of Peladon – between March and June. These were the first episodes to be broadcast by the ABC in colour. (Due to the BBC's accidental wiping of the master tape of Invasion of the Dinosaurs' first episode, that story was not screened at all by the ABC until November 1984, when they simply broadcast it – without any preceding explanation – as a five-part story, starting from episode 2. They never actually broadcast the full six episode story until 2004).[5]
The 1980s
The period from 1978 through to the mid-1980s saw the ABC continue to strip Doctor Who in an early-evening weekday timeslot; typically it was Monday-Thursday or Monday–Friday, at either 6:00 or 6:30 pm. During this era, the series would almost always screen throughout the year and, more often than not, it was paired with another program at 6:00pm, most notably The Goodies.[6][7] In February 1986, the ABC broadcast repeats of The Mind Robber and The Krotons, the first time that black and white Doctor Who serials had been broadcast on the network following its adoption of colour broadcasting in 1975.[8] The regular repeats of Doctor Who on the ABC contrasted with the situation in the UK where the BBC would only broadcast a select number of repeats, generally one or two serials from the most recently concluded season over the summer break.[9]
On 31 October 1988, stripped weekday transmissions of new episodes of Doctor Who recommenced, with the show now in the 5:30 pm timeslot and broadcast under the umbrella of the children's magazine-style program
After all of Sylvester McCoy's serials had been broadcast, the ABC recommenced its screenings of Tom Baker-era Doctor Who episodes until 20 October 1989 when the remainder of season 25 was transmitted, in production order rather than UK broadcast order.[13] As a result, the ABC's transmission began with The Greatest Show in the Galaxy and ended with The Happiness Patrol. These stories were repeated in 1990 prior to the broadcast of the classic era's final season, season 26, on 29 October 1990.[13]
1996: The Telemovie
The first attempt to revive Doctor Who was with a made-for-TV movie in 1996. It featured Sylvester McCoy in his final portrayal of the Seventh Doctor and introduced Paul McGann as the Eighth Doctor. The ABC premiere of the movie was on Sunday 7 July at 8.30 pm, nearly two months after its Canadian and US debut and almost six weeks after its first airing in the UK. The ABC had originally planned a 3 July airdate, but did not want to clash with The X-Files, which was already established in the 8:30 pm Wednesday timeslot and was achieving its peak success in Australia at the time.[14]
Material in the movie was cut in the US to allow for extra advertising time, but these cuts were largely restored for the ABC's Australian broadcast. A publicity screening of the cut version had been held on 5 June at Planet Hollywood in Sydney, with several fan-built Daleks operated by fan club members acting as ushers.[15]
2005: The revival of Doctor Who
When the BBC revived Doctor Who in 2005 with
Following the ABC's premiere of
On 26 October 2022 the ABC announced that Jodie Whittaker's final episode, The Power of the Doctor, would be the last first-run episode of Doctor Who to be broadcast on the ABC, with the series moving to Disney+ from 2023 onwards.[20]
Unlike the classic series, which saw innumerable instances of censorship, both societal changes as well as changes to the television ratings classification system itself have meant that networks have been more free to show material that may not have been allowed to air at all in the 1960s or 1970s. Aside from some early references to violence or horror that was toned down or removed altogether in post-production[21] the new series has generally been free from censorship.
Censorship
In 1996, about 25 minutes worth of some very short censored black and white 16mm film clips were recovered from the National Archive vaults, snipped by the censor from a variety of 1960s episodes, these cut portions of 16mm film had not been in the hands of the ABC, and had been impounded by the Australian censors. The classification for the series Doctor Who is PG-13.[22][23]
Merchandise
Other stray items have been "Show Bags" full of ephemeral bits and pieces, usually of a fairly poor quality for children, and sold at major "shows" (usually related to rural production with fun fairs and other activities) such as the "
Fandom
Pre-history
There may have been some isolated Australian branches of Keith Miller's British Doctor Who club,
But why this led to a dedicated Doctor Who club at Sydney University and not elsewhere must remain a mystery. Perhaps their Daleks were just student pranks, and not signs of dedicated fan obsession. The change at Sydney into a Doctor Who fanclub with fanzine (Zerinza) requires an outline of some of the broadcasting context as it related to fans (in more detail above). By the mid-1970s the series was not rating well and the ABC used less and less new material every year, slowly getting well over a year behind the BBC's screenings in Britain, and missing several stories. Fed up with such sporadic sequencing during 1974–77, a Sydney fan, Antony Howe, began to agitate to have the series shown in full, and soon after the premieres in Britain rather than being screened years later. Other demands were to stop the censorship of whole stories (many had been rated "A" by the censor, limited to screening after 7.30 pm which the ABC refused to do), and to have more repeats. Such criticisms were made public in the special "Dalek Soit" science fiction edition of the famous student newspaper Honi Soit which featured news and photographs of the club Dalek's conquest of the campus, and an appreciative quasi-academic article on the Doctor Who TV series, by local science fiction author Terry Dowling.[28] Also flagged was the launch of a Doctor Who fanzine (see Zerinza) and addresses were given for overseas Doctor Who fan clubs, so a local club was not yet envisaged.
The 1976 Save Doctor Who campaign
During the vacation Antony Howe learned the ABC had actually decided to cease purchasing any new episodes of the series, and the planned "Dalek Demo" now had a more urgent goal – to "Save Doctor Who". Organised by Howe, SUSFA members and others, the "Dalek Demo" of 24 August 1976 helped create a small core of people who formed fandom in Sydney, then the rest of Australia, but only about 20 turned up at the peak, with a dozen people or so were present at other times. Even ABC Programme Dept. staff said they knew nothing about the top level decision. Management's decision was also widely revealed in the student newspaper and fans urged to begin a letter writing campaign, and to join the new Australasian Dr Who Fan Club, and attend a screening of the film Doctor Who and the Daleks where further details were announced.[29] Thus was a longer term campaign to "Save Doctor Who" had been launched: complete with posters and leaflets; networking with existing Science Fiction enthusiasts around the country; a radio interview; and letter writing campaigns to the rest of the media, not just the ABC. The "Demo" and other efforts are widely thought by fans and others to have encouraged the broadcaster to change its mind.[30] Howe, however, has doubts that such a small "Demo", and club, had much effect on a huge bureaucracy like the ABC. Eventually the ABC did buy the new series (season 2 and 3 of Tom Baker), Howe believes this was probably due to the high ratings in Britain, rather than to his own efforts.
The campaign did however, lead to a fan magazine and club. Reporting on the "Demo" and associated activities, Howe formed a club, linked up with the UK club (DWAS), and launched his fanzine "Zerinza: the Australasian Doctor Who Fanzine" in August 1976 at a Sydney University screening of "Dr. Who and the Daleks" he had organised for SUSFA (on 21 Sept. 1976).[31]
Other clubs and groups
The Supreme Council of Time Lords introduced the first Australian and New Zealand fan award system, the Double Gammas,[32] open to all Australia and New Zealand Doctor Who fanzines, fan writers, fan artists, with fans members of any Australian or New Zealand Doctor Who club or readers of any Australian or New Zealand Doctor Who fanzine or newsletter, able to nominate and vote. These awards were first presented in 1984 at "Who Do 84", during the Time Lord Ball.
Australia also has a number of regional state-based clubs.[33]
The Queensland Doctor Who Fan Club was formed in about 1978. It closed in late 1980,[34] but other successor clubs almost immediately sprang up, usually affiliated to the national club, such as the Brisbane Doctor Who Fan Club (closed 2000).[35]
References
- ^ https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-10-26/doctor-who-bbc-disney-deal/101580524
- ^ Martin Dunne 'A Separate Adventure' in Chameleon Factor # 78, (SFSA/SADWFC, 2003)
- ^ ISBN 0426204301.
- ISBN 0426205162.
- ^ Molesworth, Richard (2010); Wiped!: Doctor Who's Missing Episodes; Telos Publishing, p. 61
- Sydney Morning Herald, 19 August 2012
- Sydney Morning Herald, 28 February 2010
- ISBN 0426205162.
- ISBN 0426203690.
- ISBN 0426205278.
- ISBN 0426205278.
- ^ I Was A Teenage Time Lord (Celebrating Doctor Who's 25th anniversary on the ABCs 'Afternoon Show'), 18 March 2023
- ^ ISBN 0426205278.
- ^ "Gillian Anderson's Australian Visit". www.mjq.net.
- ^ "Data Extract" 121, July/August 1996, pp. 1, 4, 6–9, and other parts of the (unpaginated) issue contains news and reviews of this "film" from Australians and from around the world.
- ^ New Doctor Who ABC Tasmania story dated 30 September 2003
- ^ "Long wait over for Australian 'Whovians'". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 21 May 2005. Retrieved 14 August 2012.
- ^ "Doctor Who wins". Media Spy. Daily Telegraph. news.com.au. 23 May 2005. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 13 July 2014.
- ^ Martin (8 May 2007). "ABC Schedules Who for 2007". SFSA. Archived from the original on 20 June 2023.
- ^ "ABC statement on Doctor Who". About the ABC. 26 October 2022. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
- ^ "Dr Who 'toned down'". Media Spy. news.com.au. Press Association. 19 May 2005. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 13 July 2014.
- ^ Judd, Bridget (22 August 2020). "Doctor Who fans are on the hunt for missing episodes — and Australia could hold the clues". ABC News. Retrieved 21 November 2023.
- ^ For a fuller account of the issue of censorship, see Zerinza 38, edited by Damian Shanahan, with input from Antony Howe, giving information and detailed notes of the cuts and reasons for them.
- ^ A little information is in David J. Howe, Mark Stammers, and Stephen James Walker, Doctor Who: The Seventies, in sidebar: "Australian Merchandise" (Virgin 1994, p. 172).
- ^ See David J. Howe, Mark Stammers, Stephen James Walker, "Fandom Grows Up", in Doctor Who: The Seventies, Virgin Books, 1994, pp. 173–4, Australia is only mentioned vaguely, p. 174."
- ^ In reality issue 2 of Jon Noble's South of Harad, East of Rhun, Oct. 1975.
- ^ Reported on in several issues of the Student newspaper, Honi Soit, No. 9, 27 April 1976, "Dalek Victory" on the Sports' Page, p. 15; No. 12, 15 June 1976 cover and interior articles; 12 A (no date), p. 3; No. 23, 28 Sept. 1976, p. 3.
- ^ Dowling, "Space Opera Plus: The Achievement of Dr. Who", Honi Soit, no. 12, 15 June 1976, p. 4, and Howe, "Science Fiction Action", p. 5.
- ^ Howe, "Dr Who to End, A.B.C. Decides!", Honi Soit, No. 23, 28 Sept. 1976, p. 3.
- ^ So credited by journalist Jan Balodis, "Dr Who's Monstrous success", in Look and Listen (a short-lived publication by the ABC, Jan. 1985, p. 44.
- ^ Announced in Honi Soit, no. 23, 28 Sept. 1976, p. 3.
- ^ Ortlieb, Marc (29 October 1999). "Double Gamma Awards". The Australian Science Fiction Bullsheet (129). Retrieved 24 September 2010.
- ^ Dr Who interview on George Negus Tonight broadcast 15 September 2003
- ^ See Zerinza #17, 1980.
- ^ Martin Dunne 'Death of a Club' in SFSA # 18, (SFSA/SADWFC, 2005)
External links
- South Australian Doctor Who Fan Club, Inc. (branded as Science Fiction South Australia)
- Doctor Who Club of Australia
- Doctor Who Club of Victoria
- The West Lodge Inside The Blue Box Inc, Western Australian Doctor Who Club
- Torchwood Fan Club of Australia
- Daleks Down-Under
- ABC Whovians- for Humanoids who watch Doctor Who on their ABC
- Official Doctor Who 50th Anniversary Store Australia