Blake's 7

Blake's 7 (alternately styled as Blakes 7 or Blake's Seven) was a science fiction adventure drama television series in the space opera sub-genre which had a considerable cross-over between its crew and that of Doctor Who, which was airing at the same time. Some Doctor Who universe stories have featured crossovers between elements of Blake's 7 and Doctor Who. It was created by Dalek creator Terry Nation.

While Blake's 7 is generally considered the programme's proper and grammatically correct title, the title Blakes 7 (without the apostrophe) was shown in the series' opening titles. The reference to the series in the novel Cold Fusion appears as Blake's Seven.

Premise and tone
The series was set an unspecified time in the future. The first two seasons concerned the adventures of the experienced but still idealistic rebel Roj Blake and the crew of the Liberator, an alien starship they had acquired. They fought the despotic Terran Federation, represented by Servalan, aided by Travis.

In the third season, Blake vanished and was replaced by his second in command, the vengeful genius Kerr Avon. The Liberator was destroyed at the end of the season and in the next replaced by another starship, the Scorpio.

Blake's 7 was a less fundamentally optimistic series than Doctor Who. The majority of the protagonists met violent deaths during the course of the series and the dystopian setting remaining basically unchanged or even, perhaps, got worse as a result of the actions of the rebels.

Aliens and "monsters" appeared, though rarely, with the arguable exception of Cally, a telepathic crew member who either came from a telepathic non-human species or from a race of biologically modified humans. The human Terran Federation was, apparently, the only major power structure throughout the sector of space visited by the crew.

Production history
Blake's 7 was first broadcast on BBC 1 between 1978 and 1981. Its characters, setting was created by, and, for the first season, was entirely written by Terry Nation, the creator of the Daleks. Prolific Doctor Who director David Maloney produced the first three seasons of the series (sometimes referred to as Season A, Season B and Season C) and Chris Boucher, the writer of several Doctor Who serials, acted as Script Editor and writer on all four seasons. (Former Doctor Who Script Editor Robert Holmes, on declining the job of script editor of Blake's 7, had suggested Boucher as a substitute.)

On 4th July, 2011, Big Finish Productions announced they had acquired the licence to produce new audiobooks and novels based on Blake's 7. The new stories will premiere in 2012. 

Actors common to both franchises
category=Actors who appeared in Blake's 7 columns=3

Crew common to both franchises
namespace=0 category=Worked on Blake's 7 columns=3

Production Materials

 * Many generic science-fiction props appeared in both series. For instance, ray guns carried by Bayban's men in City at the Edge of the World were also used by the Fosters in The Keeper of Traken.
 * Model footage (of explosions and so on) was also occasionally recycled (for instance, the same footage is used to show the destruction of a DSV in Redemption and Mawdryn's ship in Mawdryn Undead).
 * More specifically, Federation trooper uniforms were reused as Orderly uniforms in Frontios.
 * Sea Devil costumes were cosmetically altered and used to represent Phibians in Orac and Dorian's former associate in Rescue.

Proposed crossovers
A crossover between the two series was proposed at least twice.

The last episode of Season B of Blake's 7 featured an invasion of the galaxy by aliens, called Andromedans, from outside the Galaxy. The aliens were so powerful that the crew of the Liberator pitched in with the Federation to fight them off. Terry Nation had wanted to feature the Daleks as the invading force. However, as Chris Boucher recalls, the idea was strongly rejected by the producer and Boucher himself.

Tom Baker and Gareth Thomas, who played Blake, thought it would be amusing for the Doctor and Blake to meet for a few seconds in a corridor on either Doctor Who or Blake's 7, but this idea was, again, over-ruled.

Crossovers and Doctor Who Universe continuity
Eventually a crossover did appear; albeit, only in novels, not on either television programme.


 * Chris Boucher's novel Corpse Marker, a sequel to The Robots of Death, features the psychostrategist Carnell, a character who had first appeared in the Blake's 7 episode Weapon. The novel indicates that he settled on Kaldor two years after he first went on the run from the Federation, which would have followed his failure in Weapon. The character appeared again in the Kaldor City series of audios.

References also exist to Blake's 7 as a television series in the Doctor Who Universe.


 * Tegan Jovanka mentions the series in Cold Fusion, saying that she understood the concept of transmats (or in Blake's 7 terms, teleportation), having seen it on the show.


 * The Least Important Man by Steven Moffat from the Bernice Summerfield anthology The Dead Men Diaries features this quote:


 * "I managed to find him two entire episodes of Blake's 7, on the original video tape. I found them to be a wonderful insight into the literature of Gavin's era. He taught me how to do the 'maximum power' thing. With the arms."

This refers to a scene involving Servalan, in the third season finale episode "Terminal". Bernice Summerfield comments on another occasion that Roj Blake seems to exist both as a fictional character and as a real person, "which can't be right".


 * In addition to the above, in NA: Death and Diplomacy, Benny mentions knowing someone who was in Blake's 7, which she quickly qualifies with "the terrorist group, not the TV show".