Season 1


 * This article is for the 1963-64 season of Doctor Who; for other initial seasons of other programmes, see Series 1.

Season 1 of Doctor Who ran between 23 November 1963 and 12 September 1964. It starred William Hartnell as the First Doctor and Carole Ann Ford as Susan Foreman, the Doctor's granddaughter.

Overview
It consisted of eight serials (listed below) and 42 episodes, and a pilot episode which never aired on television. (More accurately, the production team made several versions of the pilot episode.) The inaugural season established many of the concepts that continue to the present day, and also introduced the hugely popular Daleks. Two of the three historical stories of this season are presently considered lost, although audio recordings of all episodes remain.

Main cast

 * The Doctor - William Hartnell (Introduced in An Unearthly Child)
 * Susan Foreman - Carole Ann Ford (Introduced in An Unearthly Child)
 * Ian Chesterton - William Russell (Introduced in An Unearthly Child)
 * Barbara Wright - Jacqueline Hill (Introduced in An Unearthly Child)

Season 1 was the last season before Season 6 to retain the same core cast members for an entire series.

Guest cast

 * Za - Derek Newark
 * Temmosus - Alan Wheatley
 * Marco Polo - Mark Eden
 * Arbitan - George Coulouris
 * Autloc - Keith Pyott
 * John - Stephen Dartnell
 * Jean-Pierre - Peter Walker

Creation
The series was essentially the creation of a committee, with the following amongst the many who created the various parts that went into the series: Donald Wilson (time travel), Sydney Newman (the First Doctor and Susan), C. E. Webber (Ian and Barbara, scenario for the first episode), Anthony Coburn (Susan's name, the TARDIS looking like a police box), David Whitaker (Susan as the Doctor's granddaughter).

Production overview
Verity Lambert was chosen by Sydney Newman as Producer of the series and Mervyn Pinfield was assigned as Associate Producer, picking up on the mainly technical side of the series such as dealing with the in-camera SFX.

Initially, the series was only ordered for the first four episodes that made up 100 000 BC and came close to going no further. This was extended to thirteen episodes, but the production team had either eleven (100,000 BC and The Mutants) or eighteen (100,000 BC, The Mutants, Marco Polo). To solve this problem, David Whitaker wrote the two episode Inside the Spaceship, something that normally wouldn't have happened due to an existing rule that prohibited Script Editors writing for the series they were editing. (Otherwise they could simply have "hired" themselves and deprived other script writers of work.)

The first through to third season story titles have been a contentious issue. For more information, see Disputed story titles.

Stories considered during this season, but ultimately unmade included:


 * The Masters of Luxor (a.k.a. The Robots) by Anthony Coburn
 * The Hidden Planet (a.k.a. Beyond the Sun) by Malcolm Hulke
 * The Red Fort by Terry Nation
 * Farewell Great Macedon by Moris Farhi
 * The Miniscules by C. E. Webber (a variant on this idea appeared as Planet of Giants, aired during Season 2)

Stories set during this season

 * A segment of The Eight Doctors in which the First and Eighth Doctors meet occurs during Episode 3 An Unearthly Child.
 * The Virgin Missing Adventures book The Sorcerer's Apprentice is set after Marco Polo
 * The Past Doctor Adventures books City at World's End and The Witch Hunters are set after The Reign of Terror
 * The short stories The Last Days from Short Trips and Nothing at the End of the Lane from Short Trips and Side Steps are also set after The Reign of Terror and therefore between the ending of Season 1 and the start of Season 2.

VHS

 * An Unearthly Child (1990/2000)
 * The Daleks (in 2 parts) (1989)
 * The Daleks (Remastered) (2001)
 * The Edge of Destruction and The Pilot Episode (2000)
 * The Keys of Marinus (1999)
 * The Aztecs (1992)
 * The Sensorites (2002)
 * The Reign of Terror (2003) (With linking narration of Missing episodes, also includes The Faceless Ones, 1,3 & The Web of Fear Ep 1)
 * The Hartnell Years (1991) (Pilot Episode)

See episode articles for full detials

Loose Cannon VHSes

 * Marco Polo (2002)
 * The Reign of Terror (2000) (Episodes 4+5 Only)

DVDs

 * An Unearthly Child (2006)
 * The Daleks (2006)
 * The Edge of Destruction (2006) (With 30 minute reconstruction of Marco Polo)
 * The Keys of Marinus (2009)
 * The Aztecs (2002)
 * The Sensorites (2012)
 * The Reign of Terror (2012)

Novels

 * Doctor Who and an Unearthly Child
 * Doctor Who in an Exciting Adventure with the Daleks
 * Doctor Who – The Edge of Destruction
 * Doctor Who - Marco Polo
 * Doctor Who and the Keys of Marinus
 * Doctor Who - The Aztecs
 * Doctor Who – The Sensorites
 * Doctor Who – The Reign of Terror

Audiobooks

 * Marco Polo
 * The Reign of Terror

Theatrical Film

 * Dr. Who and the Daleks - based upon the second serial, The Daleks.