The Sarah Jane Adventures

The Sarah Jane Adventures is a spin-off series, produced by BBC Wales for CBBC, starring Elisabeth Sladen and created by Russell T. Davies. The programme focuses on the adventures of investigative journalist Sarah Jane Smith. The series debuted on BBC One with a 60-minute special on 1st January 2007.1 A full series of ten 30-minute episodes followed later in the year. 2

Premise
The series is set in present-day West London and features the adventures of Sarah Jane, her next-door neighbor Maria Jackson and adopted son Luke and other young friends, assisted by the computer, Mr Smith.

Production team
The executive producers for The Sarah Jane Adventures are Davies and Julie Gardner. Susie Liggat produced Invasion of the Bane, but Matthew Bouch produced the series; Phil Collinson held the title of Series Producer. Gareth Roberts, writing in Doctor Who Magazine, said, "We're all determined that this will be a big, full-blooded drama; that nobody should ever think of it as 'just' a children's programme."

Development
In 2006, Children's BBC expressed an interest in producing a Doctor Who spin-off. Their initial idea was "a drama based on the idea of a young Doctor Who", but Russell T. Davies vetoed this. "Somehow, the idea of a fourteen-year-old Doctor, on Gallifrey inventing sonic screwdrivers, takes away from the mystery and intrigue of who he is and where he came from," said Davies. He suggested instead a series based on the Doctor's former companion Sarah Jane Smith.

The character of Sarah Jane, played by Sladen, appeared in Doctor Who from 1973 to 1976, alongside Jon Pertwee as the Third Doctor, and later Tom Baker as the Fourth Doctor. A pilot for another Doctor Who spin-off series, K-9 and Company, made in 1981, featured Sarah Jane and the robot dog K-9; however, the option to make a series was not picked up. Sarah Jane and K-9 returned to Doctor Who in various media many times over the years, most notably in the 20th anniversary special The Five Doctors (1983) and in the 2006 episode School Reunion. Reports of a spin-off series first appeared around the time of "School Reunion"'s original airing, with the series having the working title of Sarah Jane Investigates.

K-9 appeared in the special, but only appeared as a cameo in the series. This is due to the concurrent development of the television series K-9, which is not associated with the BBC and will not feature any Doctor Who connections beyond K-9 himself.

Special

 * Invasion of the Bane

Series 2
A second series has been confirmed. It will have six stories, two episodes each, for a total of twelve episodes. Nicholas Courtney, playing Sir Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart will return in at least one story, along with the Sontarans in the same episode who are the first classic series Doctor Who monsters to appear in The Sarah Jane Adventures. David Tennant (the Tenth Doctor) is also said to have filmed a scene.

Connections with Doctor Who

 * The family Slitheen, a Star Poet similar to Mary from the Torchwood episode "Greeks Bearing Gifts", Slabs and a Graske appeared.
 * The Sonic lipstick is much like the Sonic screwdriver, but in disguise as a lipstick.
 * The Sontarans are referenced in Eye of the Gorgon.
 * K-9 Mark IIIb makes cameo appearances in Invasion of the Bane and The Lost Boy.
 * UNIT are referenced a lot, including when Sarah Jane is on the phone, she says "love to the Brig" Also, a picture of Brig is pinned onto Sarah jane's attic wall. (Invasion of the Bane)(Revenge of the Slitheen), a book called UNIT in Sarah Jane's attic (Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane?) and a police officer says "you have some very powerful friends" to Sarah Jane when she is in custody. (The Lost Boy)

Novelisations
Although the BBC has so far (as of 2008) refrained from commissioning novelisations based upon episodes of the revived Doctor Who or Torchwood, All but two of the serials from the first series of The Sarah Jane Adventures have been adapted as novels by Penguin Character Books, including volumes written by stalwarts Terrance Dicks and Gary Russell, which were published in late 2007. The remaining two stories from the first season will be released as novelisations in late 2008, marking the most intense period of episode novelisations since the end of the Target Books era in the early 1990s.