Fourth wall

The fourth wall is a theatre term referring to the audience. This originates in the idea that there are three walls on a stage: one on the back, one to the left, and one to the right, as well as an imaginary fourth wall in front that contains the players within their play. To "break the fourth wall" means to show awareness of the audience or other things outside of it.

The fourth wall was famously broken in the seventh episode of The Daleks' Master Plan, "The Feast of Steven", in which the First Doctor wishes the viewers a happy Christmas: "Oh, and incidentally, a happy Christmas to all of you at home." This is the only case in the series proper in which a character explicitly displays knowledge of being on TV; all other cases of fourth wall breaking involve the characters seeming to talk to or perform for the camera, but nothing that cannot be explained by another character or a mirror being in the position the camera is occupying or a character talking to themselves, and nothing which displays knowledge of being a TV character.

At the end of the first episode of The Aztecs, "The Temple of Evil", and the reprise at the start of the second episode, "The Warriors of Death", Tlotoxl looks directly into the camera as he announces Barbara to be a "false goddess" and vows to destroy her.

In The Web Planet, the First Doctor struggles to answer a question asked by Ian Chesterton (in reality, William Hartnell failed to remember a line). After the Doctor finishes his less than coherent reply, Ian gives a bewildered expression to the camera.

In part one of The Face of Evil, on emerging from the TARDIS, the Fourth Doctor talks to the camera, saying that he doesn't think he is in Hyde Park, putting his landing down to a "nexial discontinuity" and reminding himself to "overhaul those tracers" before walking off into the jungle.

In part four of Image of the Fendahl, the Fourth Doctor says "Time's running out!" directly to the camera.

In part three of Underworld, having managed to successfully expel all the fumigation gas from the tunnels, the now recovered Fourth Doctor says to the camera "I wonder where it all went?"

In part two of The Invasion of Time, the Fourth Doctor breaks the fourth wall by looking at the camera and quipping, "Even the sonic screwdriver's not going to get me out of this one!" At the end of the same serial, he grins mischievously to the camera.

In the last scene of part three of Enlightenment, Wrack looked at the camera while laughing about how she will destroy the Fifth Doctor.

In the final scene of The Caves of Androzani, the Sixth Doctor looks directly at the camera and says "Change my dear; and it seems not a moment too soon".

A running joke throughout most televised stories with Peri Brown during the Sixth Doctor's era would be for Peri to at some point note confusion in her location because of the similar looking passage ways ("All these corridors look the same to me" being the most common, but this could change in different scenarios.) This was a reference to the numerous complains that the BBC production crew would build few sets for corridors and tunnels and could simply change small things about the sets and camera angels to attempt to give the illustration of a larger construct. The added gag was suggested by Nicola Bryant, and has since become a piece of fan lore — notably used in both The Curse of Fatal Death and The Gunpowder Plot.

At the end of The Trial of a Time Lord's last story, The Ultimate Foe, the Valeyard breaks the fourth wall by looking directly into the camera and laughing.

In Remembrance of the Daleks part two, as Ace walks out of the B&B, the television announces, "A new sci-fi series, called Do..." before cutting to the next scene. In the cliffhanger of part three, after the Dalek ship lands outside Coal Hill School, despite the Doctor's prediction, the Doctor turns to camera and says "I think I might have miscalculated" to the viewer. Unlike other cliffhangers of the classic series, the line is not repeated in the reprise at the start of part three.

On page 229 of the 280 page book The Infinity Doctors, the Doctor tells Omega: "The best thing about books is that you can always tell when you're getting to the end. No matter how tricky the situation the hero's in, you hold the book to your hand and think, "Hang on, I'm two hundred and twenty-nine pages in, with only another fifty-one to go."..."

- The Doctor

In Bang-Bang-a-Boom! part four, the theme music starts and then cuts out when Mel points out that the supposed resolution was "too easy."

In Night Terrors, Alex notes to the Doctor that their son is scared of shows on the television and that he considers turning it off, the Doctor snaps "Don't do that!" This is a reference to the controversy that Doctor Who had gained over the years for being frightening to children. In the same story, the Doctor mentions a Gallifreyan tale called Snow White and the Seven Keys to Doomsday. Whilst since connected to a short story portraying the tale, the title itself is a cross between  and Doctor Who and the Daleks in Seven Keys to Doomsday.

Just before her death in Asylum of the Daleks, Oswin Oswald says, "Run you clever boy. And remember," and turns to the camera.

At the end of The Snowmen, the Eleventh Doctor breaks the fourth wall by saying "Watch me run" to the camera.

In the proms special, Music of the Spheres, the Tenth Doctor breaks the fourth wall by addressing the audience at the Royal Albert Hall.

At the end of the Series 1 finale of K9, The Eclipse of the Korven, K9 breaks the fourth wall by looking directly at the camera and saying, "Affirmative".

In The Night of the Doctor, the Eighth Doctor claims, "I'm a Doctor... but probably not the one you're expecting." In context, he is replying to Cass Fermazzi's conversation with a computer about doctors; however, the line also alludes to the incarnation's unexpected appearance in the story.

In The Time of the Doctor, the Eleventh Doctor makes eye contact with the camera as he says "I will always remember when the Doctor was me" in reference to this being Matt Smith's final episode as the Doctor.

In Deep Breath, after the Half-Face Man has fallen from his "escape pod" and been skewered on a spike on the top of the Elizabeth Tower, the Twelfth Doctor looks directly into the camera as the question is posed: "Did the robot self-destruct or is the Doctor a murderer?"

In the Titan back-up comic Wholloween, after the Doctor sees that the TARDIS has been egged and tepeed by angry trick-or-treeters, he notes "This is why I stick to Christmas Specials."

The beginning of Before the Flood features a lengthy segment where the Twelfth Doctor talks directly to the audience and explains the "bootstrap paradox", telling the viewer to Google it. He uses an analogy of how a theoretical time traveller went back in time to meet his hero Ludwig van Beethoven, only to find out he didn't exist, so the time traveller copies down all of Beethoven's music based on his future knowledge, and then publishes them under Beethoven's name. However this means the time traveller was inspired by Beethoven, who was inspired by the time traveller. The Doctor then leaves the viewer with the question "who composed Beethoven's fifth?" before he takes out an electric guitar and plays the Fifth Symphony which transitions to the Doctor Who theme.

In Heaven Sent, the Twelfth Doctor breaks the fourth wall by saying he is nothing without an audience while looking directly at the screen. This fourth-wall break is among a few rare instances in the TV series that were specifically included at the script stage.

The Torchwood audio drama Torchwood_cascade_CDRIP.tor explicitly and blatantly breaks the fourth wall throughout, right down to its title and premise.

The character of Iris Wildthyme is often the culprit for many mischievous fourth wall breaks, such as winking directly at the reader (PROSE: Iris Wildthyme and the Unholy Ghost), saying "you better be following this at home (referring to the listener understanding the complicated mind swapping) (AUDIO: The Iris Wildthyme Appreciation Society), or even having a multitude of well spirited references about the narrative medium, of Doctor Who, in particular. (PROSE: From Wildthyme With Love) With Iris though, this can all be explained with the simple idea that due to being continually tipsy, it's messed with her sense of reality.