The Aztecs (TV story)

The Aztecs was the sixth story of season 1 of Doctor Who. It was the first story to address the issue of altering the course of history, and the first to involve a romantic subplot concerning the Doctor.

"The Warriors of Death" was the first episode of the programme recorded at BBC Television Centre, following a pitched battle on the part of Verity Lambert and several allies for better studio accommodations. The move to Television Centre was brief, though, since the production team had to return to Lime Grove Studios by the end of the serial. (DWM 266)

Synopsis
The arrival of the TARDIS in 15th century Mexico leads the crew to the doomed Aztec people, a mixture of high culture and brutal savagery. Matters are further complicated when Barbara is mistaken for a god and the Doctor becomes engaged to be married.

The Temple of Evil (1)
The TARDIS crew arrive in Mexico in the 15th century in the inner sanctum of an Aztec tomb. Barbara and Susan leave the TARDIS first and begin to explore the crypt. Barbara, whose specialist knowledge is on the Aztecs, finds a bracelet on the floor and absentmindedly puts it on. Susan finds a door in the wall and Barbara goes through it. Susan goes back to the TARDIS for the others. Barbara is met by a man who fetches warriors, thinking she is a trespasser. When the warriors come for her, however, he sees the bracelet on Barbara's wrist and his opinion changes.

When the First Doctor and Ian go through the trap door, they find Barbara gone. Even more worrisome, the door closes behind them and refuses to open. The Doctor says that it would have been built to allow the gods out but no one in. Soon the man that accosted Barbara returns and introduces himself as Autloc, the High Priest of Knowledge, and says that Yetaxa seeks an audience with them. The travellers go to meet this deity. On their way they are introduced to High Priest of Sacrifice, Tlotoxl, a gruesome figure. When the travellers are taken to Yetaxa they are surprised to see that it is Barbara. Once they are alone, she explains that as she was wearing Yetaxa's bracelet when she was captured, the Aztecs believe her to be a reincarnation of the deceased High Priest, and therefore a god.

Barbara demands the Aztecs give Doctor and Ian free run of the civilisation. Although they agree, Tlotoxl has ideas of his own. He convinces Autloc that Ian should be the leader of their army, which Ian begrudgingly agrees to. While Ian goes to meet Ixta, his rival for command, the Doctor is taken to the Garden of Peace. Here he meets Cameca, a local sage and philosopher, of whom he quickly becomes very fond. This does not stop him from smooth-talking her into a meeting with Ixta, the son of the designer of the temple, Topau, to find a way of retrieving his TARDIS from the centre of the tomb. Ian meets up with the Doctor again and says that in order to prove himself to Autloc and Ixta, he needs to sacrifice to the god of rain to put an end to a drought. Ian is reluctant but the Doctor says that he has to do this to not blow their cover. The Doctor tells Barbara of this and Barbara refuses to allow it. She believes that if she stops human sacrifices, the Aztecs will not become extinct and will live on as a better civilisation. The Doctor tells her that she cannot change history. Barbara remains obdurate. Just before the sacrifice takes place Barbara puts a stop to it. Both Ixta and the First Victim are outraged. The sacrifice, furious that he has not had the chance to prove himself, throws himself from the top of the tomb. The rains soon come. Triumphant, Tlotoxl says that this proves that sacrifices are necessary. Barbara denies this, and says that sacrifices shall no longer be practised. This infuriates Tlotoxl, who vows that he will unmask Barbara as the fraud that she is.

The Warriors of Death (2)
The Doctor berates Barbara for letting Tlotoxl suspect that she is not the real god. However he soon brightens up when he recounts to her his encounter with Cameca and the chance he could learn more about the construction of the tomb. Meanwhile Ian and Ixta are practising for their showdown. Ian is angered by Ixta's boasting and states that he could kill Ixta with just his thumb. He soon proves this by applying his thumb to a pressure point at the back of Ixta's neck that renders him unconscious. Tlotoxl enters to this sight and is shocked to see that Ian is gaining the upper hand over his favoured candidate. Autloc says that as Ian has disarmed Ixta, he is the rightful Commander of the Aztec army. Desperate to prevent this, Tlotoxl convinces the next human sacrifice, the Perfect Victim (whose last days are spent in total control of those around them), to order that another, more equal contest be held. This is agreed to. Tlotoxl offers Ixta untold riches if Ian is killed in their battle.

Meanwhile in the Garden of Peace, the Doctor and Cameca share stories and flirt. He convinces her he should meet the son of the tomb's designer by saying that he is only called the Doctor because he is "a scientist, an engineer. I'm a builder of things." When Cameca leaves to ask the son, it is clear that the Doctor is smitten by her. Tlotoxl visits Barbara and warns her that he is getting more people to believe that she is not the real Yetaxa and that Autloc is going to question her later. Until then she is confined to the tomb. To tease her, he tells her of the fight that is to take place between Ian and Ixta. This clearly distresses her.

Ixta is elsewhere, practising for his fight. Cameca visits him and tells him the "older servant of Yetaxa" wishes to see him. Realising the Doctor doesn't know his name or his rivalry with Ian he will meet him and try to destroy the travellers from within. All this time Susan has been receiving tutoring from Autloc and Tonila on how to be a good wife; whilst successful in some ways she struggles with some of the more antiquated views of a woman's role in this society.

Ixta goes to the Garden of Peace to meet the Doctor. He says he would love to show the Doctor some drawings that his father made of the tomb, but he is to be in a fight that evening and he must do well. He asks the Doctor if he has any ideas as to how he could get the upper hand on his opponent. The Doctor goes to a plant he has been studying and draws a pin through it. Presenting it to Ixta, he states that one scratch from this needle will render his opponent weak and unable to fight anywhere near his true capability. Ixta accepts this gratefully and says that he will meet the Doctor there the following day. At the tomb Autloc questions Barbara on why she deems it so important to stop the sacrifice. She claims to prophesy the downfall of the Aztec civilisation with such barbaric acts of butchery. This affects Autloc. Later the Doctor goes to visit Barbara, who immediately tells him he should not be there. She is supposed to be in isolation whilst she is being questioned. However the Doctor has enough time to recount his encounter with Ixta, only for his pride to be spoilt by Barbara who informs him that Ian is the adversary the Doctor has aided Ixta against. As the Doctor leaves the tomb he is arrested by Tlotoxl for talking to Barbara. Barbara demands that the fight between Ian and Ixta not go ahead, but Tlotoxl insists that this is something that cannot be quibbled about.

The fight between Ian and Ixta begins and Ian is clearly winning until Ixta scratches him with the needle. As he flags, Ixta strangles Ian. Tlotoxl bays for Ian's death whilst Autloc says that Yetaxa forbids human sacrifice. Barbara tries to break up the fight. Tlotoxl says she should not have left the tomb but then states that if she is truly Yetaxa she would be able to break up the fight herself. An unsure Barbara approaches the pair of men.

The Bride of Sacrifice (3)
Barbara responds to Tlotoxl's demand by unsheathing his knife and holding it to Tlotoxl's neck, saying that if the fight continues she shall kill Tlotoxl. Tlotoxl reluctantly stops the fight. Back at the tomb Barbara further tries to convince Autloc that the ritual of sacrifice is one that will soon see the end of the Aztec civilisation and she seeks his support in stopping the coming sacrifice. Tlotoxl finds the Doctor in the Garden of Peace to ask why he gave Ixta the needle that would weaken Ian. The Doctor says that he didn't know who Ixta was fighting and that he did it to get the plans of the tomb. He convinces Tlotoxl that the only way for him to prove if Yetaxa is real is by also finding his way into the centre of the tomb to see if the body remains. Back at the scene of the fight Ixta wakes Ian and tells him what has happened. He is more amiable with Ian now, assured that, come the next fight, he can beat him. Tlotoxl asks Ixta if he can see the plans that he promised the Doctor. Ixta informs him there never were such plans. He was using the information that Cameca gave him to get the draft from the Doctor. As Ian and Ixta leave, Ian overhears Tlotoxl trying to convince Tonila that the only way to prove Yetaxa a god is by poisoning her. If she dies she is a fake, if she lives she is a god and poison will not affect her. Tonila seems convinced by this argument.

In the Garden of Peace Autloc asks Cameca why she has been so happy of late. Cameca confides in him that she is in love with the Doctor and intends to get him to drink cocoa with her, an Aztec way of getting someone to ask you to marry them. Cameca spills the cocoa beans she is holding in front of the Doctor, and her plan works when he asks her to join him in a cup of cocoa. Meanwhile Ian has sneaked into the tomb to warn Barbara her plans are going wrong. Tlotoxl is plotting against her and her plans to save the Aztec nation are futile. She has earlier thought that all Aztecs were like Autloc and that Tlotoxl is a bad apple. In reality it is Autloc who is the exceptional man. This conversation is interrupted by Tlotoxl and Tonila, who present Barbara with wine in the guise of friendship. Ian, who has hidden behind a column when the men came in, gestures to her not to drink it. Barbara asks Tlotoxl to drink first. When he refuses, Barbara shouts at Tonila to leave and then confides to Tlotoxl that she is indeed a fake but that if he tells anyone she will get the Aztecs to destroy him.

At the Garden of Peace the Doctor and Cameca are sharing their cocoa when Cameca says that she is happy they are getting married. The Doctor is shocked. Meanwhile Autloc and Tonila are talking about Susan's impressive progress as their student, but they recount the headlong ideals she holds about marriage. Tlotoxl overhears them and decides to use this against Barbara in order to unmask her as a fraud to the rest of civilisation. Again he enlists Tonila to help him.

Later that day, during Susan's studying, Tonila brings the Perfect Victim to her, who demands that Susan marry him. She refuses. Tonila jumps on this defiance and says that Susan must be punished for such a breach of conventions. Back in the Garden of Peace Cameca shows the Doctor a brooch that belonged to Ixta's father with whom she was once in love. She says that it was found in the Garden of Peace from whence he went missing years ago.

Tlotoxl and Tonila tell Barbara that someone has being defying conventions. According to the law she must be punished. Barbara reluctantly agrees, anxious not to further blow her cover. Whilst this is happening, the Doctor goes to Ian to show him the brooch that belonged to Ixta's father, who he suspects had escaped into the tomb, and tells Ian he plans to find out if there is a secret entrance anywhere. Ian says he'll meet him at the Garden of Peace that night. The Doctor also tells Ian about his proposal. Ian finds it most amusing.

Autloc goes to see Barbara and says that he plans to stand with her in her objections to sacrifice. This pleases Barbara, but her joy is short lived when he informs her that the person to be punished is Susan. Barbara says that both the sacrifice and the punishment have to be stopped. Autloc is unsure, asking Barbara whether she would sacrifice the civilisation for one girl.

Later that night Ian sneaks out of his dormitory to meet the Doctor. He is followed by Ixta. When they get to the Garden of Peace, the Doctor has discovered that one of the panels in the wall can slide. Ian slides it away and goes in. He leaves the Doctor behind, saying it might be too dangerous. Whilst Ian explores the passage, Ixta shows himself. Feigning ignorance that he saw Ian go in, he tells the Doctor that the stone must be put back. It forms part of a dam. Unless the stone is replaced the garden will be flooded. He does this, much to the Doctor's discomfort, as the water begins to puddle around Ian's feet.

The Day of Darkness (4)
As the water rises, Ian finds a loose slab over his head which he moves aside. He crawls through a vast network of tunnels and finds his way back to Yetaxa's tomb and the TARDIS. He ties a rope to an ornament on the door and opens it, bringing the other end of the rope with him to leave some purchase to open the door later. As Ian exits the tomb Barbara is shocked to see her friend. As she questions him as to how he got there they hear someone coming and Ian hides. Luckily it is the Doctor, panicking, thinking that Ian has been killed. Ian reveals himself and shows the Doctor his plan for getting back into the tomb. Ian decides to free Susan from the warriors so they may leave. Meanwhile Tlotoxl is congratulating Ixta on his murder of Ian and tells him that he must guard Susan. Susan is brought in to him. Ixta tells Susan that he killed Ian; Ian, approaching him from behind, knocks him out and escapes with Susan.

When Ian and Susan return to the tomb, the foursome try to open the door but the rope breaks. Meanwhile, Ixta has regained consciousness and an irate Tlotoxl berates him for his loss of Susan. Worried that Autloc will take Ian's seeming resurrection as yet another sign of Yetaxa's powers, Tlotoxl has Ixta frame Ian by using Ian's club to knock Autloc unconscious and put the blame on the travellers.

To gain access to the tomb, Ian goes through the hatch in the Garden of Peace again. He takes Susan with him to watch for others. When they get there, they find Autloc unconscious on the floor. Ian finds the club and realises he's being set up, but it is too late. Ian is arrested. As Autloc regains consciousness he proclaims Yetaxa a false goddess. With his plan falling into place, Tlotoxl plans with Tonila a way of getting rid of Barbara. He will lock her away in a room during the eclipse so that those around them think that she vanished. Meanwhile in the Garden of Peace the Doctor is making a pulley to open the door. Cameca says she will do anything for the Doctor for Ian to be saved. He says that the only thing that might help is by Autloc going to talk to Barbara.

Barbara convinces Autloc that it wasn't Ian. However he says that the situation is out of his hands. After his talk with Barbara, he goes to the Garden of Peace. In a state of confusion and doubt of his faith, he gives Cameca his badge of honour, symbolising his position as High Priest of Knowledge. He asks her to give it to Susan's guard as a bargaining chip to liberate Susan. Autloc leaves to go into the wilderness.

As the Doctor and Susan put the finishing touches on the pulley system, Tlotoxl tells Barbara that the sacrifice is preparing outside. Tlotoxl also tells her that Autloc has abandoned her and that there is no hope for her friends. Meanwhile Autloc's plan to free Susan works even better than he could imagine as, while Cameca shows the guard the badge, Ian uses the distraction to knock him out. Susan escapes with Cameca and Ian takes the guard's head dress and escapes in that disguise.

Tlotoxl lays out his plan to Tonila. He says that if it works, Tonila will take over from Autloc as the High Priest of Knowledge. Back at the tomb Susan is reunited with her grandfather and Barbara. The Doctor thanks Cameca and they take their goodbyes of one another. Cameca gives the Doctor a seal to remember her by.

Tonila finds the guard unconscious and a furious Tlotoxl orders Tonila to kill him. Tlotoxl rushes off to ensure that the travellers do not disrupt the sacrifice. As the sacrifice begins, Tlotoxl, blinded by rage, tries to kill Barbara. Ian stops him and Ixta and he fight. Ian kills Ixta by throwing him off the top of the tomb.

By this time the door has been opened and the travellers escape through it. Tlotoxl watches them go and then performs the sacrifice. Hearing all this, a desolate Barbara asks what the point of travelling through time and space is if they can't change anything. The Doctor reassures her that even if she hadn't changed a civilisation, she changed Autloc's life and made him see the truth. Barbara goes back into the TARDIS. The Doctor is about to leave Cameca's seal behind, but turns back to pick it up again.

Later in the TARDIS the Doctor looks bemused and tells his companions that half of his controls are telling him the TARDIS is stationary and the other half that it's moving. Ian wonders if they have landed on something; a worried looking Barbara asks if they could have landed in something.

Cast

 * Dr. Who - William Hartnell
 * Ian Chesterton - William Russell
 * Barbara Wright - Jacqueline Hill
 * Susan Foreman - Carole Ann Ford
 * Autloc - Keith Pyott
 * Tlotoxl - John Ringham
 * Ixta - Ian Cullen
 * Cameca - Margot Van der Burgh
 * First Victim - Tom Booth
 * Aztec Captain - David Anderson
 * Tonila - Walter Randall
 * Perfect Victim - André Boulay
 * Stunt double for Ian - David Anderson (uncredited)
 * Stunt double for Ixta - Billy Cornelius (uncredited)

Crew

 * Writer - John Lucarotti
 * Designer - Barry Newbury
 * Assistant Floor Manager - Ken Howard
 * Associate Producer - Mervyn Pinfield
 * Costumes - Daphne Dare, Tony Pearce (uncredited)
 * Fight Arrangers - David Anderson, Derek Ware
 * Incidental Music - Richard Rodney Bennett
 * Conductor - Marcus Dods
 * Make-up Supervisor - Jill Summers
 * Title Music - Ron Grainer with the BBC Radiophonic Workshop
 * Story Editor - David Whitaker
 * Director - John Crockett
 * Producer - Verity Lambert
 * Production Assistant - Ron Craddock (uncredited)
 * Special Sound - Brian Hodgson (uncredited)
 * Studio Lighting - Howard King (uncredited)
 * Studio Sound - Jack Brummitt (uncredited), John Staple (uncredited)
 * Theme Arrangement - Delia Derbyshire (uncredited)

Story notes

 * All episodes exist in 16mm telerecordings.
 * David Anderson (Aztec Captain) is credited as Warrior Captain in Radio Times for "The Temple of Evil". As fight arranger, Anderson is billed on-screen for "The Day of Darkness" only, but also arranged fights on "The Warriors of Death", and is credited in Radio Times for both episodes.
 * Negative film prints of all episodes were recovered from BBC Enterprises in 1978.
 * John Lucarotti spent a lot of time researching the real Aztecs before writing this story.
 * Carole Ann Ford was on holiday during the filming of episodes 2 and 3 and appeared only in pre-taped film sequences which were shot during rehearsals for episode 5 of the preceding story, The Keys of Marinus.
 * The closing roller caption at the end of Episode 3 had to be re-filmed as it was considered too erratically printed and thus not acceptable for broadcast.
 * This is one of the stories selected to be shown as part of BSB's Doctor Who Weekend in September 1990.
 * John Ringham (Tlotoxl) would later play Josiah Blake in TV: The Smugglers and Robert Ashe in TV: Colony in Space. He based his performance as Tlotoxl on Laurence Olivier's performance as Richard III.
 * Margot Van der Burgh (Cameca) would later play Katura in TV: The Keeper of Traken.
 * Tom Booth (The First Victim) would later play a reporter in Tardisode 7, which serves as a prelude to TV: The Idiot's Lantern.
 * Ian Cullen (Ixta) would later play Nadeyan in AUDIO: X and the Daleks.
 * The story was reaired on BBC America on 27 January 2013 after a short special called The Doctors Revisited - The First Doctor.

Ratings

 * "The Temple of Evil" - 7.4 million viewers
 * "The Warriors of Death" - 7.4 million viewers
 * "The Bride of Sacrifice" - 7.9 million viewers
 * "The Day of Darkness" - 7.4 million viewers

Myths

 * The costumes used by the Aztecs covered more of their body than was the case in reality so as not to offend 1960s standards of decency (The costumes used had been researched before filming and were accurate reflections of those worn by the real Aztecs.).

Filming locations

 * Ealing Television Film Studios
 * Lime Grove Studios (Studio D)

Production errors

 * William Hartnell oversteps his mark during the first scene in the temple's main chamber after Barbara is deemed to be the spirit of Yetaxa. He delivers his subsequent dialogue with almost all of his face obscured by Barbara's headdress.
 * The cameras used to film this episode were incapable of zooming - instead they had to be physically moved closer to their subject. This is apparent when the camera "zooms in" on Tlotoxl during the sacrifice scene and the camera lurches violently after hitting a piece of the scenery. This is also apparent when the camera lurches violently after hitting a piece of the scenery as it "zooms in" on Autloc following Ian's arrest in the garden.
 * During the fight sequences in episode 4 it is clear that doubles are being used for William Russell and Ian Cullen.
 * At one point during the fight between Ian and Ixta, the edge of the set can be seen on the right of the screen revealing the supports holding the backcloth.
 * There was apparently no consensus as to the pronunciation of Tlotoxl's name given the varied pronunciations given by various cast members.

Continuity

 * The Doctor becomes involved in a somewhat romantic relationship.
 * The Doctor tells Barbara, "You can't rewrite history! Not one line!" The Doctor makes numerous later references to the nature of time and certain fixed points in time. (TV: Time-Flight, TV: The Waters of Mars, TV: The Wedding of River Song, et. al.) The Time Lords (including the Doctor) continue to give clear indication of their position that they and they alone understand how to properly "rewrite history". (TV: The Two Doctors, et. al.)
 * Barbara wrote her dissertation on the Aztecs. (PROSE: Nothing at the End of the Lane)
 * Considerably later in his personal timeline, the Eighth Doctor would give the Aztec bracelet to Susan as a Christmas present. (AUDIO: Relative Dimensions)
 * The Second Doctor encountered Mexican warriors who had been plucked out of time and forced to fight for entertainment of the War Lords. (TV: The War Games)
 * The Eighth Doctor returns to Mexico and thwarts a plot by an artist named Susini from creating sculptures from the flesh and bone of the dead. (COMIC:  The Way of All Flesh)

DVD releases
This story was released as Doctor Who: The Aztecs.

Released:
 * Region 2 21 October 2002


 * PAL Region 2 - BBCDVD1099


 * Region 4 2 December 2002
 * Region 1 3 March 2003


 * NTSC - Warner Video E1719

Contents:
 * Commentary by producer Verity Lambert and actors William Russell, and Carole Ann Ford
 * Remembering The Aztecs - Interviews with John Ringham, Walter Randall, and Ian Cullen.
 * Designing The Aztecs - An interview with set designer Barry Newbery.
 * Restoring The Aztecs - A look at the digital remastering process for the DVD.
 * Blue Peter - The Story of Cortez and Montezuma (UK tx: 21 September 1970).
 * Making Cocoa - An animated guide to making cocoa the Aztec way.
 * Arabic soundtrack - The final episode includes an option to view it in Arabic.
 * TARDIS-Cam #3
 * Photo Gallery
 * Production Note Subtitles
 * Easter Egg (BBC Enterprises Globe)

Rear Credits:
 * Starring William Hartnell with William Russell, Jacqueline Hill and Carole Ann Ford
 * Written by John Lucarotti
 * Produced by Verity Lambert
 * Directed by John Crockett
 * Incidental Music by Richard Rodney Bennett

Notes:
 * Editing for the DVD release was completed by the Doctor Who Restoration Team.

As with most serials released on DVD pre-2006, The Aztecs has been chosen for a special edition release. It will be coupled with the rediscovered episode of Galaxy 4. This release has been scheduled for 11 March 2013.

iTunes releases
Released in standard definition this story is available to purchase as a full story or as individual episodes.

VHS releases
This story was released as Doctor Who: The Aztecs, and was originally going to be available exclusively from Woolworths to tie-in with a special promotion. However, at the last minute, the company decided on The Twin Dilemma instead &mdash; feeling that a colour Doctor Who story would sell better than one in black and white.

Released:
 * UK November 1992


 * PAL - BBC Video BBCV4743


 * US May 1994


 * NTSC - CBS/FOX Video 8100
 * NTSC - Warner Video E1257

Notes: The 'Next Episode' caption had been removed from Episode 4.