User:WaltK/EastEnders (series)

EastEnders is a British television soap opera produced by the BBC.

Crossovers
to be added

References in the DWU
The 1994 novel, First Frontier, made a nod to the aforementioned Dimensions in Time through a claim by the Seventh Doctor that he once had a dream in which all his old enemies chased him around the EastEnders set.

The 2001 novel, Instruments of Darkness, revealed that the Sixth Doctor's 2000-hailing companion, Evelyn Smythe, had been using her foreknowledge of 1990s EastEnders storylines to get some extra cash by betting on the correct outcomes.

In the 2005 novel, The Monsters Inside, following her year away from modern day Earth, Rose Tyler caught with the episodes of the show that she missed during that time. The Ninth Doctor, who was forced to watch along with her, later used a piece of his general knowledge of the show to his advantage, when Rose is tested by Lazlee Flowers on tangential warp offset, he subtly gave Rose the answer (45), by telling her to think of the address of Pauline, Martin, and Sonia Fowler, which was 45 Albert Square at the time.

In the 2006 episode, The Impossible Planet, the Tenth Doctor expresses his belief that one of the most unluckiest phrases that one could utter was, "This is going to be the best Christmas Walford has ever had", a reference to the show's typically, notoriously depressing Christmas specials.

In the 2008 The Sarah Jane Adventures serial, The Mark of the Berserker, whilst under the influence of the Berserker pendant, Haresh Chandra obeys his daughter's command to [pretend to be] "Bianca off EastEnders", in which he screams the names of Ricky Butcher, Whitney Dean, and Pat Butcher in her trademark style.

In the 2018 audio story, The Siege of Big Ben, saw Jackie Tyler learn that the show did not exist on Pete's World, to her disappointment.

References to the DWU on EastEnders
to be added

Crew
Doctor Who's connections to EastEnders are so great that they stretch right back to the two minds who created the soap, Julia Smith and Tony Holland; Smith directed the 1960s television serials, The Smugglers, and The Underwater Menace, being the second ever female director of a Who serial for the former.

Holland, meanwhile, acted on screen in The Savages, playing the Third Assistant.

1980s and 1990s
Among the EastEnders actors to appear as their characters in Dimensions in Time, Letitia Dean, Gillian Taylforth, and Steve McFadden are the only three who still appear in the show today, as Sharon Watts, Kathy Beale, and Phil Mitchell, respectively.

2000s
The Masood family were introduced in 2008, with three of their four initial members consisting of Nina Wadia as, Zahra Ahmadi as , and Himesh Patel as Tamwar. Wadia and Ahmadi would both go on to appear on televised Doctor Who as, respectively, Dr Ramsden in The Eleventh Hour, and Missy in Nightmare in Silver, while Patel would voice three characters for Big Finish audios; Dendry in Day of the Vashta Nerada, and Ayrton Valencia and the Engineer in The Lifeboat and the Deathboat.

In 2009, Meryl Fernandes, who played a female student in The Poison Sky, joined the show as.

2010s
In 2010, just two years after doing his best Bianca Jackson impersonation as Haresh Chandra in The Sarah Jane Adventures serial, The Mark of the Berserker, Ace Bhatti joined the EastEnders cast as the villainous, father the aforementioned Afia, and the abusive, eventual second husband of Zainab Masood.

Davood Ghadami, who played Jim, one of the crew aboard the Teselecta in Let's Kill Hitler, played from 2014.

Twelve years after previously appearing as her Doctor Who character, Melanie Bush, in Dimensions in Time, Bonnie Langford joined the EastEnders cast in 2015 as, mother to the afoemtioned Kush.

The Kazemi family was expanded once again in 2016 with the addition of Carmel's other son, and Kush's brother,, played by Shaheen Jafargholi, who previously appeared in the Torchwood episode, Greeks Bearing Gifts, as Danny.

Festive specials
EastEnders traditionally broadcasts extended episodes on Christmas Day and New Year's Day, in time slots that are typically adjacent to Doctor Who's own festive specials, resulting in the two shows competing against each other in the ratings.

For Christmas Day schedules, EastEnders have typically ended up with higher overnight ratings than Doctor Who, with only The Time of the Doctor and The Husbands of River Song managing to score higher in their respective years, with New Year's Day ratings historically having worked in Doctor Who's favour, with only Part 2 of The End of Time failing to outdo EastEnders in 2010.