Sara Kingdom

Sara Kingdom was a Space Security Service (SSS) agent who turned against Mavic Chen, the traitorous Guardian of the Solar System. With the help of the First Doctor and Steven Taylor, she defeated Chen and his secret allies, the Daleks. The price of victory was, however, her own life. (TV: The Daleks' Master Plan)

Early life and career
Sara had two brothers, both fellow SSS agents — David Kingdom and Bret Vyon, the latter of whom the Doctor also encountered on Kembel. (TV: The Daleks' Master Plan, AUDIO: The Destroyers)

At the age of 7, (AUDIO: The Sontarans) at the foundation of the Space Security Service, she was chosen by Colonel Marc Forest and the artificial intelligence Compuvac as an agent in charge of the organisation's field operations.

As a woman, she was chosen for the first mission of the agency and she was sent to Barzilla to divert the plans of the Golden Dalek from Earth to that planet by spreading the news of its gold mines among the Dalek spies. The trap worked, the Dalek forces were annihilated by their enemy alliance and she was praised for the success of the mission. (PROSE: The Outlaw Planet)

Trained and efficient, Sara had the strength of ten men. She was sent to Vara to rescue the kidnapped Professor Lomberg and prevent him from being forced to give the Daleks the formula of a metal for a new outer casing which would have made them unstoppable. She sneaked into the Dalek slave camps, found the Professor and helped him to give the Daleks a wrong formula, causing the explosion of the camp and foiling the Daleks' plans. (COMIC: Sara Kingdom: Space Security Agent)

She was charged with investigating the leak of confidential information that the Daleks were using to attack Earth strategic bases, discovering that the new Dalek Emperor was able to read the thoughts of Earth's defence scientists through radio waves. She made up a plan that employed the scientists as bait for the Emperor, while human forces attacked and wiped out the Emperor's fleet. (COMIC: The Brain Tappers)

Sara, with fellow SSS agents Jason Corey, the humanoid robot Mark Seven and her brother David Kingdom, encountered the Daleks in a brief confrontation early in her career. David went missing at the end of the mission. (AUDIO: The Destroyers)

Mark Seven had written a file about the mission, which Mavic Chen consulted when he and Bret Vyon unexpectedly met a future version of Sara in 3999; she was supposed to be stationed on Venus at the time. As a result of her older self's intervention, Sara received a surprise promotion and was re-assigned to Earth. (AUDIO: The Guardian of the Solar System)

Meeting the Doctor
On Earth the following year, Sara was briefed by Chen and was told that Bret was a traitor. In an experimental testing facility, she found the Doctor, Steven Taylor and her brother, the last of whom she shot to death. Sara would have done the same to the Doctor and Steven, but all three were accidentally transferred from Earth to Mira by cellular transportation. There she learnt, to her horror and grief, that her unquestioning obedience had not only led her to unjustly kill her brother but had prevented Vyon from warning Earth of the Dalek plot. Deciding to help the Doctor, they stole a Dalek spacecraft and set off back to Kembel. While on board, they managed to create an exact copy of the taranium core. Arriving back on Kembel, Sara was more than displeased to see Chen allied with the Daleks. She then escaped after handing over what Chen believed was the taranium core, with the Doctor and Steven in the TARDIS, taking the real taranium core with them. (TV: The Daleks' Master Plan)

Travels with the Doctor
With Steven and the Doctor, Sara took a short, stress-free trip to (in Sara's terms) long-ago Earth. (TV: The Daleks' Master Plan, PROSE: The Little Drummer Boy) After spending Christmas Day on Earth, Sara and the others spent six months having other adventures before once more getting involved with the issue of the Daleks and Chen. (PROSE: The Mutation of Time) Shortly after celebrating Christmas, a ship tried to land inside the TARDIS and Sara had to explore a desert island in order to discover where the TARDIS had gone after it crashed. Whilst exploring the island she fell off a cliff and broke her arm. She was relieved when it was revealed that the desert island was actually the TARDIS emergency systems. When Natalie Lang tried to pilot the TARDIS, Sara was knocked unconscious, and found herself trapped inside the memory of her brother's birthday; however, she knew it was just a dream or a fiction. She was eventually freed by the Doctor and Steven; then, the three of them left Lang and her crew stranded on the Cobalt Moon and resumed their travels. (AUDIO: The Anachronauts)

The travellers discovered the TARDIS kept landing on Christmas Day in various different years throughout Earth's history. Eventually they ended up in France in 1914 and while Steven and the Doctor celebrated the Christmas truce with the troops, Sara discovered a small boy called Robert. Not only had Robert been following them through time, but he was a time machine in human form. Inside, Sara and her friends found the real Robert, now an adult, unconscious. The ship malfunctioned and Robert was desperate to see another Christmas, the time before his brother died. Luckily the Taranium core de-aged Robert and, once the Doctor shut down the ship, they took Robert home. (PROSE: The Little Drummer Boy)

They then landed inside the Great Clock in 3999, and saw the old men trapped in it. They were captured by Space Security Service, and kept for questioning. The database recognised Sara's date and she was taken to confront an officer, who turned out to be Bret. He explained to her that the prisoners of the Clock were free thinkers, men who questioned authority, kept here to both care for the Clock and feed it with their thoughts. He then brought her to Mavic Chen, who explained to her how the Clock made hyperspace travels possible, thus guaranteeing Earth's dominion over the galaxy. Chen lured her by stating his disapproval of the Clock and asking her advice on how they could avoid using it; Sara, hoping she could change the future, started giving him suggestions. Chen was so impressed by her that he arranged for her being moved to work for him on Earth - the same promotion she had received a year before meeting the Doctor. Realising she changed nothing, she ran away in despair to retrieve her companions, and found herself inside the Clock, already become part of the machine because their efforts to escape from it. Being completely devoid of hope of escaping her destiny, she resisted the influence of the Clock thanks to it, and in doing she managed to disrupt his mechanism and destroy it. The travellers escaped amidst the following confusion. (AUDIO: The Guardian of the Solar System)

On a world covered in water, they encountered a set of miners who had survived an earthquake in the mine. Here they were attacked by a tentacled creature. (AUDIO: The Drowned World)

They came upon a house in Ely that granted wishes; after the adventure, a copy of her mind lived on inside it for thousands of years. (AUDIO: Home Truths)

The TARDIS later crash-landed in 1950s London, as a result of the psychic attack by a race of anemone changelings. Because of his bond with the ship, the Doctor fell into a coma as Steven and Sara brought him out, moments before the TARDIS locked itself as a defence mechanism. Steven and Sara were given shelter by Joseph Roberts, a Jamaican immigrant, and his nephews, Michael and Audrey Newman, but Michael was actually a changeling duplicate, and kidnapped the Doctor and the TARDIS, thus leaving Steven and Sara stranded. Thanks to the Newmans, Steven found work at the same dock as Michael, while Audrey helped Sara adjust to life in what for her was the past. Wanting to make herself useful, after Steven was fired from the dock, Sara went to a nearby police station and offered herself as an agent; to prove her worth, she fought against the local policemen and knocked out many of them. Eventually, though, she was beaten and spent an entire afternoon locked in a cell. After being released, she went back to the Newmans' house, just in time to see an ambulance carry away Joseph, who had been the victim of a heart attack as he confronted some racists assailing his house. She heard from Audrey that a crowd of people looking exactly like Michael and others they knew had also come along and kidnapped their same assailants; Michael went away with them and Steven followed him, presumably to the dock. Sara wanted to go after them, but Audrey insisted on going in her stead and entrusted her new-born baby, Josetta, to Sara's care. Sara was later confronted by Audrey and Steven's duplicates, asking her to give them the baby, but managed to escape from them and ran into the Doctor, who for the past two weeks had been unconscious and a prisoner of the changelings, and had only now awoken thanks to Steven. He explained to her that the anemone wanted to duplicate everyone using the TARDIS' energy, and instructed her on how to stop them: she was to run to the dock, take away their knot-heart from Michael Newman's chest and destroy it. Leaving Josetta to the Doctor, Sara ran to the dock and awoke Michael; with his help, she managed to destroy the core. She then promised Steven never to let him forget what happened, since, as a result of being copied, he barely remembered anything other than being stranded with her. (AUDIO: An Ordinary Life)

The TARDIS once again landed in France during the First World War, this time in 1916. The Doctor, Steven and Sara soon discovered, to their horror, the Battle of the Somme was overdue by a month. With the help of Captain Steadman they found a great number of soldiers buried under ground. The Doctor theorised time was trying to compensate for the losses that should have already happened and thought a sinister presence may be influencing events but he and the others left before he could be certain. (AUDIO: Men of War)

Sara recognised the asteroid belt which the Doctor had landed the TARDIS in. She found the surroundings interesting. She met Ellis and Gage and devised a way to attack the Sontarans to rescue the Doctor and Steven. She convinced the Doctor to help as she would have a different history. She hypothesised that the Sontarans could survive in lava and didn't want to leave Gage after he was shot. She later helped the Doctor to give medical attention to Gage. She found it weird that the natives couldn't see them. Sara, the Doctor and Steven helped other SSS agents fight the Sontarans. She was tortured by Slite to get the Doctor to open the TARDIS. After that, the TARDIS detected an unidentified time machine following them, leading them to return once more to the struggle against the Daleks. (AUDIO: The Sontarans)

Death
The Daleks turned against Mavic Chen (who intended to betray them) and killed him. The Doctor had returned to Kembel to activate the Time Destructor to finally stop them. The Doctor ordered his companions back to the TARDIS for their protection. However, Sara followed him, not knowing the nature of his plan but concerned that it might fail. She was caught in the field of the Time Destructor and, being a human rather than a Time Lord, aged to death. As Steven and the Doctor watched helplessly, Sara died, her remains ageing to dust. (TV: The Daleks' Master Plan)

Undated events
A photograph existed in UNIT's Black Archive showing Kingdom standing next to UNIT Captain Mike Yates, who was primarily associated with the Third Doctor. (TV: The Day of the Doctor)

At some point, Sara was abducted by Adam Mitchell as part his plan to get revenge on the Doctor, in collaboration with. She was placed in stasis alongside the Doctors' multiple other companions, before being released by the Doctors first eleven numbered incarnations with the help of Frobisher. (COMIC: The Choice, Endgame)

Legacy
The death of Sara, as well as their other allies Bret Vyon and Katarina, caused Steven to confront the Doctor about the violence that seemed to follow him. (TV: The Massacre)

In his seventh incarnation, on the ruined planet Adeki, the Doctor thought that he had found Sara among others of his companions alive again and desperate to leave in the TARDIS. He learnt that one of a race of shape-shifting Gwanzulum had used his sentiment in order to manipulate him into helping it escape the dead world. (COMIC: Planet of the Dead)

Later, while in a Hell-like world composed of the Seventh Doctor's mind, Ace met an eerie, ghost-like recreation of Sara along with other companions of his who had died because of him. Ace did not recognise her. (PROSE: Timewyrm: Revelation)

On the Space Security Service Station 7, the Eleventh Doctor told Tranter that he had worked with Sara and Bret, prompting the station commander to comment that he had impressive credentials and must have started fighting the Daleks at a very young age. (COMIC: The Only Good Dalek)

Reincarnation
The copy of Sara's mind left behind in the house in Ely lived on into an age of Earth's history in which advanced technology had become almost non-existent. An academic named Robert befriended her, interested in hearing stories from her past. When a terrible disease struck mankind, she saved the life of his daughter in exchange for him staying in the house for life. (AUDIO: Home Truths, The Drowned World)

Eventually, after his daughter left, Robert wished to take her place as the entity inhabiting the house and the alternate Sara was given human form as an older woman. She tried to leave Ely, only to find out she had no means of doing so. Robert offered to help, but only if she told him one last story, the story of how Sara, Steven and the Doctor destroyed the Great Clock. This last tale had Sara finally admitting her wish to be free, to choose for at least once in her life, and her guilt over killing Bret. Robert then abided by his word and drew the Doctor's TARDIS back to the house, allowing Sara to choose whether to join with the Doctor (in a later incarnation) or to remain on Earth. (AUDIO: The Guardian of the Solar System)

This version of Sara later joined Steven, Ian Chesterton, Polly Wright and Nyssa in being abducted by Borusa, utilising a Time Scoop, to an alternative version of the Death Zone on Gallifrey. There she met the Fifth Doctor and once again battled the Daleks as well as the Sontarans. (AUDIO: The Five Companions)

Personality
Sara was by turns aggressive, independent and ruthless in her pursuit of what was right, a single-mindedness that blinded her to the larger implications of her orders. She used to be ruthless and lacking concern for any casualties among the Dalek slaves (COMIC:  Space Security Agent) or causing riots on other planets (PROSE: The Outlaw Planet) for the sake of her missions. Meeting the Doctor changed that, and she turned her formidable skill and intellect to the defeat of the Daleks. (TV: The Daleks' Master Plan)

Steven later commented that he and Sara became fast friends over the course of their travels and that their relationship might have developed further if Sara had survived. (AUDIO: The Anachronauts)

Behind the scenes

 * In two recent interviews about her involvement with the character, Marsh has firmly and consistently maintained that Sara was not actually a companion. (DOC: From Kingdom to Queen, AUDIO extra features: The Drowned World) Despite this, over time she has come to be regarded as one in official BBC listings, reference works, and most recently by her inclusion in The Companion Chronicles series. The earliest occurrence being her brief appearance in archival footage of companions for Resurrection of the Daleks. Novelist John Peel established Sara as having spent at least six months travelling with the Doctor in the continuity of the Target novelisations. Sara was not the last character whose status is controversial, and she was joined by numerous "one-off" companions featured in the 1996 TV movie and post-2005 specials.
 * The DVD documentary Girls! Girls! Girls! - The 1960s (included on the 2008 release of The Rescue/The Romans) indicates that the character of Sara Kingdom was inspired by the character of Catherine Gale on The Avengers (coincidentally, a series created by one of the originators of Doctor Who, Sydney Newman). Marsh's physical similarity to Diana Rigg has led some to erroneously state that the inspiration was another Avengers character, Emma Peel, but Rigg had not yet made her first appearance on the series when the serial was in production.
 * Terry Nation planned to feature Sara Kingdom in an American spin-off series. Had it gone into production, the series would have concentrated on an anti-Dalek task force. Some of the concepts which would have featured in the show appeared in The Dalek Outer Space Book (in which she was featured in a short story and two comic strips). Sara appeared in the pilot script written by Nation, entitled The Destroyers. When plans for the spin-off fell through, Nation adapted his ideas and characters for The Daleks' Master Plan.
 * Jean Marsh had earlier appeared in Doctor Who, playing King Richard's sister Joanna in The Crusade. She returned to the programme in the 1989 story Battlefield, playing Morgaine, coincidentally alongside Nicholas Courtney as Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart (Courtney had played Bret Vyon in The Daleks' Master Plan).
 * Despite the character's brief tenure, there have been some spin-off works including her. John Peel, who novelised The Daleks Master Plan for Target Books, intentionally introduced a gap of several months in his adaptation into which such stories could be inserted. Most recently, Jean Marsh has reprised the character for three instalments of Big Finish Productions' The Companion Chronicles audio drama line. These stories take place between instalments of The Daleks' Master Plan and reveal that Sara has survived as an apparition.

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