The Space Pirates (TV story)

The Space Pirates was the sixth story in the sixth season of Doctor Who. It is the last serial to contain missing episodes which only exist in stills, fragments, or reconstructions.

Narratively notable for featuring the Doctor and his companions in a comparatively minor capacity for the times, Robert Holmes' second script for the programme was an attempt at creating a "science fiction western". Clear allusions were evident to western character types as were being seen at the time in Britain on American imports like. Holmes provided archetypes like "the lawman", "the deputy", "the pioneer", "the miner" and "the female businesswoman", amongst others. Indeed, the character of Milo Clancey wasn't even an allusion to a western stereotype; he was a wildcat prospector who dressed as if he'd just walked off the set of.

Behind the scenes, the show was more than just the penultimate Patrick Troughton story. It was notable for a number of different reasons.

Episode 6 was effectively the series' first double banked episode. It was the first not to use any of the regular cast in studio recording since "Mission to the Unknown". While the story was being recorded, the regulars were actually on location with The War Games. Their portion of episode 6 was in fact pre-recorded and played back into the studio as required. (DWM 242)

Moreover, episode 1 was the final episode filmed at Lime Grove Studios, a particularly difficult studio that had been the bane of the production team since An Unearthly Child. While a number of stories had been recorded at BBC Television Centre before Pirates, episode 2 was the beginning of the period where Doctor Who was more or less permanently assigned to Television Centre. More specifically, it was the first episode recorded at TC4, one of the premiere studios at Television Centre. Also, episode 2 was, unusually, a studio show recorded on 35mm film — which is why it's the only episode of the serial which survives. The BBC deemed it "historically significant" and retained it. (DWM 242)

The visual effects were somewhat unique for Doctor Who. They realistically depicted space as starless at short range, perhaps informed by the then-daily glimpses of starless space in press coverage of the Apollo 11 launch.

Famously, the story was the first one on which John Nathan-Turner was employed by the Doctor Who production office, albeit in the minor and uncredited role of floor assistant. even though he was just called John Turner.

Synopsis
The TARDIS materialises in Earth's future on a space beacon just before it is attacked by pirates. The travellers find themselves trapped in a sealed section of the beacon. It is blown apart and flown to where the pirates will plunder it of the precious mineral argonite. They witness a conflict between the pirates and the Interstellar Space Corps, led by General Hermack and Major Warne.

The ISC are convinced that the pirates' mastermind is an innocent yet eccentric space mining pioneer named Milo Clancey, while their true leader is a man named Caven. Caven has a secret base on the planet Ta. He is assisted by Madeleine Issigri, daughter of Clancey's ex-partner Dom, who - unknown to her - is now his captive.

When Madeleine discovers Caven's full treachery she helps to bring him to justice. The time travellers are given a lift back to the TARDIS by Clancey in his rickety old ship, the LIZ 79.

Episode one
In deep space, a spacecraft links up with a beacon. Three men emerge from the airlock, two dressed in spacesuits, who are carrying equipment. The man without the spacesuit presses a button on the wall, and the other two men climb out into space. They climb onto the hull of the beacon, and fit a device onto the hull. One of them turns a dial on the device...

Inside the beacon, another man enters. He calls for the other man, whose name appears to be Dervish. Dervish tells the other man that the men setting the device are nearly ready, and they're detonate buy radio beam. The other man tells Dervish to hurry. The space suited men come back in through the hatchway, and once they are inside, they all go back to their spacecraft.

The ship departs from the beacon. A strange bleeping noise begins and the beacon blows up into separate pieces.

In another part of space, a larger spaceship, labeled V-41, is flying through space. On board the control deck, a young officer asks a technician named Penn if everything is alright, and Penn responds that everything is. The officer walks up to a raised part of the control deck. He talks to an older officer. The older officer calls the younger one Ian Warne, and asks him if there is any informantion on the beacon signal, to which the response is no. The older officer tells Ian that there shouldn't be. The older officer asks what Ian thinks happened to the beacon. Ian says it could be a mechanical fault, but it is dismissed by the older officer. The older officer says the beacons are full prof, and Ian says if he has any ideas, to which the response is yes, and says he must be right. The older officer says the beacons are made of argonite, a precious mineral. The officer then sits down a flicks a switch on the console, and speaks into the loudspeaker system. His name appears to be Hermack. He tells the crew that their V-Ship is now fifty days and many billion miles from earth. He then says that in the sector they are in, earth government has been aware of a highly organized gang of criminals, has been roaming the space ways, and preying upon helpless cargo freighters, and their main target is argonite, the most valuable mineral known to man. He says they have lost contact with a government beacon, and he thinks the pirates are destroying the beacons for salvage. He then says that they are going to abandon their present mission, and are going to investigate the pirates. He then switches the loudspeaker off. Ian says that there are eighteen goverment beacons in the area, and there're chances of catching the pirates are seventeen-to-one. However, Hermack says with their speed, it should cut down the odds. Hermack says there are four beacons in the Pliny system, and that's where they will start.

In a different part of space, the pirate spacecraft locks onto another space beacon. The leader, Maurice Caven, enters first, followed by Dervish and two space suited pirates. Caven tells the two suited pirates to speed it up. Dervish tells Caven he doesn't like it, which the response is "nobody asked you to". Caven tells Dervish to get the charges set. However, Dervish says if they destroy any more beacons, they will have the whole Space Corps after them. Caven tells him the Corps have got their hands full with fire wars in three different sectors, and that's it's the perfect time to get rich. The two suited pirates exit through the hatchway. Caven tells Dervish that he's a good engineer and to leave the Space Corps to him. However, Dervish is still nervous and says that attacking government beacons is bad, but Caven says he thinks of the beacons as "floating banks".

The two space suited men set the four charges on the beacon, plus booster charges.

Back on the V-Ship, Warne is talking to Penn, and tells him to keep a sharp lookout on the scanner. Hermack is talking to someone of a headset, telling the other person to fuel the minnows. Warne reports to Hermack that they are entering the Pliny system, and tells him that they've made scanner contact with the beacons. Hermack moves to a chart. He points to a planet he calls Ta, and says its the main planet of the system. He tells Warne that they'll orbit Ta for a few weeks. Warne recognizes Ta, and says its the head of the Issigri Mining Corporation, and says Ta's the most productive planet in the whole galaxy. Hermack says that Madeleine Issigri "has built quite a place their", which is one reason for basing themselves in the Pliny system. Warne ask why. Hermack says that the men will need a place for a rest. Penn reports that he's got a contact at Beacon Alpha 7. Penn says its to far for identification, but Hermack says it definitely a spaceship. The V-Ship changes course for Alpha 7. Warne reports that there's supposed to be no ships in the system for the next 17 days...

At the beacon, the pirates ship departs.

On the control deck, Penn picks up the strange bleeping noise.

Alpha 7 explodes into several separate pieces.

Penn yells that's Alpha 7's blown apart. Hermack is angry, as they have blown it up right unde their nose's. They still have three hours until they get to where Alpha 7 was. They pick up the pirates ship on their scanners. The scanner turns to static. Penn says the pirates are getting away — the beacon sections with them. Penn loose's contact. Hermack groans at their defeat, and says the pirates are well organized. He then decides that the only ways to catch the pirates is to put guards on the beacons. Warne sets course for the nearest beacon — Alpha 4.

The V-Ship docks with Alpha 4. They drop Lt. Joe Sorba and four guards off at the beacon. Warne gives him a transmitter, and shows him a button that, if in the event of trouble, to press it.

Back on the control deck of V-41, Penn sets course for Alpha 9.

In the computer bay, a strange shape appears — that of a battered TARDIS, disguised as a London police box.

Sorba is telling one of his men to settle in when another guard comes and reports that he heard a sound in the computer bay. Sorba takes his men and goes to check it out.

In the computer bay, the Second Doctor exits from his craft, followed by the young scientist Zoe Heriot and Highlander Jamie McCrimmon. The Doctor is puzzled, and admits he's not where he expected. He goes to a computer that he says is interesting, although Jamie disagrees. Jamie says they should leave in the TARDIS before they are caught. The Doctor says there's obviously no one on board, as the computer is set to operate on its own. The Doctor goes to investigate further, but suddenly Sorba and his guards enter. Sorba and the guards fire at the travelers, and the TARDIS crew flee, and the hatchway closes behind them. The Doctor decides there's only one thing they can do: run.

Sorba tells the guards to hunt the strangers down, and to shoot to kill.

The pirate craft docks with Alpha 4.

Caven enters first into Alpha 4, which he calls "another present from the home planets tax payers", followed by Dervish. Both of the, suddenly hear firing. Dervish panics, and Caven tells him to get the rest of the crew into the beacon. The engineer rushes back into the ship.

The Doctor, Jamie and Zoe enter another corridor. The Doctor put a bar across the door. However, Sorba begins to cut through the door. The Doctor says they need somewhere else to hide. They move deeper into the beacon, leaving the TARDIS further behind...

The travelers come to a dead end. The Doctor admits they are trapped.

Sorba and his men are ambushed by the pirates. The Space Corps guards are all gunned down, but Sorba activates the transmitter.

On the V-Ship, they receive the distress call. They reset course for Alpha 4.

Sorba is lying on the ground, unconscious. Caven nudges Sorba with his foot and tells Dervish this one's still alive. Dervish is still panicking, and says they should leave, but Caven disagrees. Caven picks up the transmitter and destroys it with his blaster. Caven tells Dervish to get the bombs set.

On the V-Ship, the distress call seizes abruptly. They still have two hours and twenty minutes until they arrive at Alpha 4.

Caven is talking to the now conscious Sorba. Sorba asks Caven how he got the "decoys" on board. Caven doesn't know what Sorba's talking about, but Caven is convinced that someone else is on board. Dervish comes down the corridor and says the charges are being set. He tells Dervish to take Sorba to the ship. Caven then turns back and fires at the control of the door. Dervish asks Caven what he's doing, to which the response is "just sealing a coffin".

Zoe thought the men were trying to burn through the door, and the Doctor thinks they've left. Zoe doesn't know why the men aren't coming in after them. The Doctor touches the door and pulls his hand away, saying its red hot. They still don' know why the guards didn't come in after them. They then stand still and hear a noise outside in space.

Unkown to the TARDIS crew, there are two pirates on the hull of the beacon setting the charges.

The travelers decide to head back to the TARDIS. Zoe touchs the door control, but the door doesn't open. Jamie throws all his weight on the door but it still does not open. They soon realize they are prisoners.

The pirates craft departs from the beacon.

On the V-Ship, Penn reports that the pirates are leaving the beacon. They still have ninety minutes to the beacon. Hermack says they are going to be to late again. The strange bleeping starts.

The beacon blows apart, throwing the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe to the ground...

Episode two
The beacon falls into discrete, sealed pieces. The Doctor, Jamie and Zoe find themselves in one. The Doctor attempts to use the compartment's magnetics to attract the next segment, but sends their segment hurtling off into space instead.

The eccentric Milo Clancey, in his aged ship the LIZ-79, is discovered by the V-41 crew. Clancey is brought onboard by General Hermack, questioned and released, although Major Warne disapproves. Hermack explains that he suspects Clancey and places his spacecraft under observation.

Ta, the nearest planet is the home of the Issigri Mining Corporation, now lead by the founders daughter, Madeleine. The firm was founded by her father Dom, and Clancey. The latter is now suspected of Dom Issigri’s murder, although nothing has been proved. Hermack visits Ta, believing that Clancey, whom he suspects of being the pirate leader, will end up there in due course.

Meanwhile, Clancey has found the segment of the beacon with the TARDIS crew and upon entering, shoots Jamie!

Episode three


Clancey has just stunned Jamie. He rescues them from the station segment, deploying copper needles which immobilise Major Warne's ship. Zoe works out where the space pirates went: the planet Ta, where Clancey wishes to hide under the nose of Madeleine Issigri. Pirate leader Caven orders his subordinate, Dervish, to route the space station segments to Lobos, where Clancey is headquartered, to throw suspicion on him. Once on Ta the Doctor, Jamie, and Zoe leave the ship but are chased by pirate guards and end up falling down a chasm.

Episode four
The TARDIS crew find the injured Lt Sorba, seized from Beacon Alpha 4. General Hermack retrieves Major Warne and they pursue a Beta Dart used by the pirates. The Doctor opens the audio lock on the door of the cell they fell into. They find Clancey and escape to Madeleine Issigri's office, where they tell her of the pirates on Ta. However, when Madeleine pulls a gun on them and tells them not to move, they realize that she's in league with the pirates. At that moment, Caven enters, flanked by two guards, and when Sorba tries to attack them, Caven shoot him dead, saying if anyone else wants to die like a hero....

Episode five
The Doctor, his friends and Clancey are flung into an old-fashioned study by Caven. They find Dom Issigri, Madeleine's father, whom Caven has been holding prisoner. Caven sabotages Clancey's ship and fits it with a remote control device. Madeleine Issigri, finding that Caven intends to kill the prisoners, calls General Hermack for help with the pirates, but Caven coerces her into keeping quiet when he reveals he has her father. The Doctor, Clancey, Dom Issigri, Jamie and Zoe escape, but the Doctor is separated from his friends and is caught in the blast as Clancey takes off.

Episode six
Jamie and Zoe escape their guards and find the Doctor. Milo Clancey and Dom Issigri are trapped on Clancey's ship, which is out of control with a diminishing oxygen supply. Caven has Dervish booby trap the Issigri base by setting demolition charges in the atomic fuel store before they leave. The Doctor reactivates the oxygen supply on Clancey's ship. He instructs Clancey in how to disconnect the remote control. At a safe distance, the pirates send the signal to detonate the explosives, but the Doctor has removed the detonator, preventing an explosion. Major Warne in a Minnow tracks the pirates' Beta Dart and destroys it. Madeleine is taken to Earth to stand trial for her part in the proceedings, while Milo Clancey offers to take the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe to Lobos to retrieve the orbiting space station fragment containing the TARDIS.

Cast

 * Dr. Who - Patrick Troughton
 * Jamie McCrimmon - Frazer Hines
 * Zoe Heriot - Wendy Padbury
 * Dervish - Brian Peck
 * Caven - Dudley Foster
 * General Hermack - Jack May
 * Major Ian Warne - Donald Gee
 * Technician Penn - George Layton
 * Lt. Sorba - Nik Zaran
 * Space Guard - Anthony Donovan
 * Milo Clancey - Gordon Gostelow
 * Madeleine Issigri - Lisa Daniely
 * Pirate Guard - Steve Peters
 * Dom Issigri - Esmond Knight

Crew

 * Assistant Floor Manager - Liam Foster, John Turner (both uncredited)
 * Costumes - Nicholas Bullen
 * Designer - Ian Watson
 * Film Cameraman - Peter Hall
 * Film Editor - Martyn Day
 * Incidental Music - Dudley Simpson
 * Make-Up - Sylvia James, Sallie Evans
 * Producer - Peter Bryant
 * Production Assistant - Snowy Lidiard-White
 * Script Editor - Derrick Sherwin
 * Special Sounds - Brian Hodgson
 * Studio Lighting - Peter Winn
 * Studio Sound - David Hughes
 * Theme Arrangement - Delia Derbyshire
 * Title Music - Ron Grainer
 * Visual Effects - John Wood

Uncredited, Mary Thomas provided the vocals that accompanied Dudley Simpson's music in this serial.

The Doctor

 * The Second Doctor carries drawing-pins on him.

Metals

 * Argonite, a metal, is the most valuable mineral known to man. It is practically indestructible.

Planets

 * Argonite is found only on a few planets of the fourth sector of Earth's galaxy, including Ta in the Pliny system.
 * A black market exists for Argonite on Ruta Magnum.
 * Clancey's Space Mining Company was based on Lobos.

Story notes

 * A rumoured working title for this story is The Pirates, but this does not appear on any contemporary BBC paperwork.
 * Only episode two of this six-part story exists in the BBC Archives as a 35mm black & white film telerecording.
 * This is the most recent story from which episodes are still missing in their entirety. A number of later Pertwee episodes are missing in that their original 2" quad tapes were wiped, but copies exist. Episode six is the last episode of Doctor Who to be completely missing.
 * The story title, episode number and writer's caption credits for each episode are shown in black against a white background following (except in episode one's case) the reprise from the previous episode.
 * The serial features a brief, diegetic rendition of "Over the Rainbow" in episode two when Milo Clancey prepares a boiled egg for his breakfast aboard the LIZ 79. This was an unscripted ad-lib by Gordon Gostelow.

Ratings

 * Episode one - 5.8 million viewers
 * Episode two - 6.8 million viewers
 * Episode three - 6.4 million viewers
 * Episode four - 5.8 million viewers
 * Episode five - 5.5 million viewers
 * Episode six - 5.3 million viewers

Myths

 * The serial was shown between 8 March and 12 May, 1969.
 * This "latter day" myth was wholly created by poor copy editing by Loose Cannon Productions. Unfortunately, the popularity of their reconstruction means that many fans will have encountered it. 12 May 1969 was a Monday, so Doctor Who couldn't possibly have been broadcast on that date. Moreover, the 12 May was some ten weeks after the 8 March start date of the six-part story.  The truth is that the story was broadcast from 8 March to 12th April.

Filming locations

 * Lime Grove Studios, Studio D, Shepherd's Bush, Hammersmith and Fulham
 * BBC Television Centre, Studio 4, Shepherd's Bush, Hammersmith and Fulham
 * Ealing Studios, Stage 2, Ealing Green, Ealing

Production errors

 * In the cliffhanger to episode three, the screams of the Doctor and the others can be heard for ages, whereas in the next episode they are shown to have only fallen a few feet.
 * In episode one the wire holding one of the pirates is clearly visible.

Continuity
to be added

Home video and audio releases

 * The surviving episode (episode two) was released on the Troughton Years video.
 * Episode two was reissued in digitally re-mastered form on the Lost in Time DVD, together with surviving film footage from episode one.
 * Editing of the surviving episode's DVD release was completed by the Doctor Who Restoration Team.The_Space_Piratesaudio.jpg


 * This story's soundtrack has been released on audio CD.