Forum:Love Life of the Doctor?

Not trying to sound crude here, just curious, but does the Doctor have sex? Everyone else around him seems to be doing it, and his ninth incarnation seemed interested on more than one occasion, for example with Jabe in "the End if the World," and possibly responding to Jack's flirting on occasion. -Littlblueyes ...and I suppose if that is the case, he wouldn't really want little half-TimeLords running around the universe. Littlblueyes 06:44, 23 November 2008 (UTC)
 * Seeing as how he apparently has a spouse and child, I would think that at one time, he did. Unless Time Lords reproduce in different ways...  Trak Nar  Ramble on 05:59, 21 November 2008 (UTC)


 * I would say yes, but presumably it has different cultural significance to earth. I guess he saves it for those who really...deserve it (deseve's not the word). But considering he had kids and I think the tv series has abandoned the loom theory, then yes. I think he just has a lot of control over himself, possibly due to the number of relationships he has had with companions (plutonic). Taccer 07 18:09, 19 April 2009 (UTC)
 * Platonic. -- Noneofyourbusiness 18:55, 19 April 2009 (UTC)
 * The 9th Doctor made it clear that he does "dance," just not as promiscuously as Jack. Known examples:
 * * The 1st Doctor had a wife and child. Either that, or Susan is The Other's granddaughter but knows that The Doctor is The Other resurrected through the Looms, and it was a later Doctor who had a wife and child.
 * * The 4th Doctor and 2nd Romana certainly acted like a couple who had recently started sleeping together. This can be explained out-of-universe by the fact that Tom Baker and Lalla Ward had recently started sleeping together, but that doesn't matter in-universe.
 * * The 8th Doctor slept with Benny Summerfield at the end of The Dying Days.
 * * The 10th Doctor married Queen Elizabeth I, and she is no longer the Virgin Queen.
 * * Some future Doctor will probably sleep with River Song. --99.170.146.147 09:57, December 28, 2009 (UTC)

What about, whatserface? Madame De Pompadour... Whenever Steven Moffat writes something, dance indirectly tends to mean had sex. I believe there was a situation where Madame De Pompadour asked the Doctor to dance with her, and then it went off-screen from them. Later, he was a s high as a kite, and he said he believed he had "invented" the banana something (forgot banana what exactly) a couple of centuries early after "dancing" with her. Basically, he was saying he invented a form of sexual action a couple of centuries early. Well, you know what I mean! There was obvious strong romance between them, and she went right on and snogged him. No doubt that the Doctor and Madame De Pompadour "danced". Especially after it went off-screen from them after a dance reference and he came back a while later.

Then there was also River Song. He asked her why she had handcuffs, and she looked at him, grinned slightly, and said in a flirterous tone, "Spoilers!" Both episodes were written by Moffat, so we can all safely say that it a sexual reference.

So the truth is, yeah, the Doctor does have sex. We all should realise that by now. Heck, on a show where various Doctor Who actors were there, David Tennant was asked whether he thinks the Doctor and some of the companions have ever "done it" while traveling. He didn't really know hwo to reply, but you can tell he agreed. Delton Menace 13:44, December 28, 2009 (UTC)


 * Yeah, I already mentioned River Song, but I forgot about Madame de Pompadour.


 * Anyway, the old show may have had a strict restriction against "hanky panky in the TARDIS" involving even just humans (but honestly, even if you believe Barbara made Ian wait until he put a ring on her finger, do you think Ben and Polly never fooled around?), and the novels did away with Time Lord sex even for reproduction, but the new show has clearly thrown all that away. The Doctor is anatomically correct, and takes advantage of that fact. --99.170.146.147 00:41, December 29, 2009 (UTC)

The old show never really went into it, the novels did away with Time Lord Sex, and then the revived series following on from the old series clearly says they do have sex (well, not directly, but it does). That really questions the canoninity of the novels. I honestly always go by what the TV series says. Because the old show didn't go there and never said anything about what we hear in the novels, and the revived series has them "doing it", there goes their continuity. Don't they also contadict each other by what happens to Time Lords in their young age, too? Families?

Anyway, as we were saying, I think the revived series will further the sex thing with Moffat taking over. He likes them little references and the one-off occasional romance (okay, a little more than romance in this subject). I would honestly call someone an idiot if they denied the Doctor had sex. The show just isn't aloud to say it straightforward, but it does love its references. :) Delton Menace 12:43, December 29, 2009 (UTC)


 * Well, in the novels, even if the Time Lords don't have sex with each other, they regularly have sex with humans. The Doctor had sex with Benny. And Andred with Leela (who had a child, the first one conceived by "traditional" means since the Curse of Pythia). And Susan with David (who tried and failed to conceive).


 * In the old show, I don't think they ever wanted us to believe that the Time Lords don't have sex, so much as they wanted to create a family show where we don't talk about such things. Very late in the series, they did allow a couple of teenage girls to imply that they weren't virgins, but even then, the line about an actual companion, Ace, not being one either thanks to Sabalom Glitz was struck out.


 * At any rate, they did strongly imply that Susan and David, and Andred to Leela, got married--and I think we can probably assume that Susan and Andred... fulfilled their conjugal duties... even if they never came out and said so.


 * So, with or without the novels, Time Lords have sex, with humans. --99.157.75.211 23:41, December 31, 2009 (UTC)