Henry Gordon Jago

Henry Gordon Jago was the owner of the Palace Theatre and the New Regency Theatre in London during the late 19th century.

Early life
As a young man, Jago performed at the Glasgow Empire. (AUDIO: The Lonely Clock)

Both of his parents had died by the 1890s. His mother claimed that he "had all the grace of a bull in a china shop." (AUDIO: Jago in Love)

Jago had an aunt named Maude who was still alive in the 1890s. As an elderly woman, she lived in Margate and was engaged to a fishmonger named Robert Botcherby. (AUDIO: The Spirit Trap)

Later life
In 1889, Li H'sen Chang performed his magic act at the Palace Theatre. Secretly, Chang worked for Magnus Greel, who was kidnapping and cannibalising women to heal himself. Jago helped the Fourth Doctor with his investigations of the disappearances, believing him a police officer. Chang's plan was revealed during a performance and he tried to commit suicide, while Greel escaped.

George Litefoot joined forces with Jago to find where Greel escaped to. They followed him to the House of the Dragon, where they were captured by members of the Tong. The Doctor tried to help free them, but he was captured as well. During the final confrontation with Magnus, Jago and Litefoot helped to distract Mr. Sin, with Jago taking a glancing blow from a laser. (TV: The Talons of Weng-Chiang)

He may have sold the Palace Theatre after these events. (PROSE: The Shadow of Weng-Chiang) At some later time, he acquired the New Regency Theatre. (AUDIO: The Theatre of Dreams)

Jago, along with his friend Litefoot, were confronted by a bloodsucking beast, which had originally been a captain who was scratched by a beast in India. Jago was forced to shoot an innocent man as he quickly transformed into another of the beasts in front of his eyes. The man turned out to be Ellie Higson's brother. (AUDIO:  The Bloodless Soldier)

Jago and Litefoot were forced to resort to bodysnatching as they tried to discover the mystery of a resurrecting man. He was almost drowned in the Thames after hearing too much about the Far-Off Travellers, organised by Doctor Tulp. (AUDIO:  The Bellova Devil)

He later became trapped in an unusual cabinet, which held the souls of the future inside. Along with Ellie Higson's help, he managed to escape. (AUDIO: The Spirit Trap)

An animated copy of Jago, made out of wood, was created by Tulp to fool George Litefoot. Inside Doctor Tulp's warehouse, he helped to destroy the beast that had transformed from Tulp's body. (AUDIO:  The Similarity Engine)

Jago and Litefoot descended into the London sewers to kill the rest of Greel's remaining giant rats with a Gatling gun and on the way there, failed to recognise the Fifth Doctor, who had regenerated since their first encounter with him. (PROSE: A Victorian Interlude)

His association with Professor Litefoot continued beyond their adventure with the Doctor. (PROSE: The Bodysnatchers) The pair were involved as amateur sleuths in several other mysteries. (AUDIO: The Mahogany Murderers, AUDIO: Jago and Litefoot)

In 1894, Jago spent time with his sister in Brighton after a bout of dyspepsia. (PROSE: The Bodysnatchers)

After Jago and Litefoot assisted the Sixth Doctor and Leela in defeating Mr Kempston and Mr Hardwick, they were invited to join the Doctor as his companions aboard the TARDIS. They eagerly accepted the offer, though Jago was concerned about motion sickness. (AUDIO: The Hourglass Killers)

Jago eventually returned to his own time. He was long dead by the time that the New Regency Theatre, which he had owned and operated in the 1890s, was destroyed in the Blitz at 8:47 p.m. on 12 October 1940. (AUDIO: Swan Song)

Behind the scenes

 * According to The Brilliant Book 2012 a book that contains non-narrative based information, some time prior to 1881 he presented the "Monstre Gathering". This featured Madame Vastra, known as "The Amazing Lizard Lady", as the main act.