Series 1 (Doctor Who)


 * For the 1963-1964 season of the original series, see Season 1.

Series 1 of Doctor Who is also known as Season 27 to differentiate it from Season 1 of the original series. The series ran between 26 March 2005 and 18 June 2005, nearly sixteen years after the last season of what became known as the "classic series" (the series was broadcast 1963-1989) was aired. Unlike the "classic series", this was the first series produced by BBC Wales, shot primarily within Wales, with Cardiff often "standing in" for London. This series starred Christopher Eccleston as the Ninth Doctor and Billie Piper as Rose Tyler, and later starred John Barrowman as Jack Harkness. The head writer of the series, Russell T Davies, was the one responsible for bringing Doctor Who back on television, and continued his post as head writer and executive producer until 2010. Davies wrote eight episodes of the thirteen episode series, with writers Steven Moffat, Paul Cornell, Mark Gatiss and Robert Shearman writing the other five. Robert Shearman was the only one of these writers not to write for a future series.

Unlike the original Doctor Who series, in which stories consisted of as few as two and as many as twelve episodes, stories in the revived series consist mainly of individual episodes and occasional two-or-three-parters.

Although it was a continuation of the earlier series, the BBC chose to restart its series numbering rather than possibly alienate new viewers by branding this the twenty-seventh season. This series saw the show return to forty-five-minute episodes for the first time since 1985. Many episodes served to reintroduce concepts of Doctor Who to a new generation, with key episodes being Aliens of London, which reintroduced UNIT (albeit in a minor way), and Dalek, which reintroduced the Daleks.

Series 1 was unusually well-received. It won the National Television Award and BAFTA for "Best Drama Series", confirming both its popular and critical success. Its BAFTA nomination was the first for the series since season 15 and the first ever for the programme in an "adult" category. Perhaps more importantly, it was the first time that a series of Doctor Who had actually won a BAFTA. Christopher Eccleston and Billie Piper both won National Television Awards for "Favourite Actor" and "Favourite Actress". Writer Steven Moffat also began a three-year domination of the Hugo Award "Short Form Presentation" category by winning one for for his The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances two-parter.

Series 1 was later shown (after some initial hesitation) by the American network, Sci-Fi Channel - the first time a nationally broadcast commercial network had broadcast the series in the US.

This first season, and those immediately following, would credit the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation for assistance in providing production support. The season aired on the CBC only a few days after the UK broadcast, with Christopher Eccleston appearing in specially shot bumpers. (This practice did not continue beyond this first season.)

Overview
Series 1 introduced the Ninth Doctor along with new companion Rose Tyler. It dealt with the words "Bad Wolf" being spread across time and space, which was the main arc of the series. This meme was seen through the series in the majority of the episodes.

Series 1 also provided the first major information about the Last Great Time War, and The Parting of the Ways, which featured the revived series' first regeneration. The season also introduced Jack Harkness and laid the initial seed for the later spin-off Torchwood.

Primary cast

 * The Doctor - Christopher Eccleston
 * Rose Tyler - Billie Piper

Secondary cast

 * Jack Harkness - John Barrowman
 * Jackie Tyler - Camille Coduri
 * Mickey Smith - Noel Clarke
 * Adam Mitchell - Bruno Langley

Guest cast

 * Clive Finch - Mark Benton
 * Lady Cassandra - Zoë Wanamaker
 * Jabe - Yasmin Bannerman
 * Gwyneth - Eve Myles
 * Charles Dickens - Simon Callow
 * Harriet Jones - Penelope Wilton
 * Joseph Green - David Verrey
 * Margaret Blaine - Annette Badland
 * Henry van Statten - Corey Johnson
 * The Editor - Simon Pegg
 * Pete Tyler - Shaun Dingwall
 * Jamie - Albert Valentine
 * Nancy - Florence Hoath
 * Doctor Constantine - Richard Wilson
 * Lynda Moss - Jo Joyner
 * Rodrick - Paterson Joseph
 * Voice of Daleks - Nicholas Briggs

Introducing

 * Tenth Doctor - David Tennant

Aliens and enemies

 * Autons
 * Nestene Consciousness
 * Cassandra O'Brien.Δ17
 * Forest of Cheem
 * Adherents of the Repeated Meme
 * Metal spiders
 * Crespallion
 * Face of Boe
 * Moxx of Balhoon
 * Ambassadors from the City State of Binding Light
 * Mr and Mrs Pacoo
 * Hop Pyleen
 * Cal MacNannovich
 * Scholars of the University of Rago Rago 56 Rago
 * Gelth
 * Slitheen family
 * Space Pig
 * Daleks
 * Henry van Statten
 * Mighty Jagrafess of the Holy Hadrojassic Maxarodenfoe
 * The Editor
 * Automated Corpses
 * Reapers
 * Empty Child plague
 * Nanogenes
 * Anne Droid
 * Trine-E
 * Zu-Zana
 * Davinadroid
 * Dalek Emperor

Novels

 * The Clockwise Man
 * The Monsters Inside
 * Winner Takes All
 * The Deviant Strain
 * Only Human
 * The Stealers of Dreams

Promotional trailers
For the series, several promotional trailers were created, utilizing specially shot footage of the cast breaking the fourth wall and addressing viewers.
 * The show's main trailer begins with an explosion rushing through a tunnel and the Doctor running. He enters the TARDIS and asks the viewer: "Do you want to come with me?" He then walks around the console room, warning of the dangers that lie ahead, but promising "the trip of a lifetime." This promo uses an early arrangement of the Doctor Who theme that was replaced by a more upbeat arrangement for the series itself.
 * Rose, in the console room, telling the viewer about the choice she had to make - working in a dull shop, or chasing monsters. As the camera pulls back to show the Doctor standing behind her, she says "What do you think?"
 * Several short, wordless five-second "stings" were also produced. These showed closeups of the Doctor, Rose, the two together, and the TARDIS. No series logo or title is shown, with only a snippet of the Doctor Who theme or the TARDIS sound effect to identify the programme.