The Reign of Terror (TV story)

The Reign of Terror was the eighth and final story of the first season of Doctor Who. It was the first story to utilize location filming, and the first to feature a double for an actor playing any of the series regulars — in this case, William Hartnell. It also heralded the arrival of writer (and future script editor) Dennis Spooner to the programme.

Amongst its most lasting narrative significances were two notions. First, Susan's assertion that the French Revolution was her grandfather's favorite period of history was later remembered by Russell T Davies and Steven Moffat in their writing of the Tenth Doctor, who had a clear bias for all things French. Second, "Prisoners of the Conciergerie" brought to an end a continuous narrative — in which every episode ended on at least a mild cliffhanger — that stretched back to "An Unearthly Child". This definite break would allow future writers of stories in other media a useful "gap" in which to place their new adventures featuring the Doctor, Susan, Ian and Barbara.

Synopsis
The TARDIS materialises not far from Paris in 1794 - one of the bloodiest years following the French Revolution of 1789. The travellers become involved with an escape chain rescuing prisoners from the guillotine and get caught up in the machinations of an English undercover spy, James Stirling - alias Lemaitre, governor of the Conciergerie Prison.

The Doctor - posing as a Regional Officer of the Provinces - is twice brought before the great tyrant, Robespierre himself, and has to talk himself out of trouble. Ian and Barbara, meanwhile, have a close encounter with a future ruler of France, Napoleon Bonaparte.

As events reach their climax, Robespierre is overthrown - shot in the jaw and dragged off to the prison - and the Doctor and his friends slip quietly away.

A Land of Fear (1)
The Doctor, Ian, Barbara and Susan arrive at a destination that the Doctor assures his guests, is 1960's Earth. He intends throwing Ian and Barbara out there and then however they butter him up and convince him that they should jst check to see if he has been accurate in his landing of the craft.

When they leave the TARDIS it is clear that it is Earth but they note how dark it is and that their appears to be no street lights around. While Ian investigates he finds a small feral child in the wood. After questioning he informs the travellers that they are 12kms from Paris. The Doctor states that 100 miles from the intended destination - whilst not perfect - is pretty good. Before they can question the child anymore he runs off. The foursome continue to explore and eventually find an abandoned house. They split up and explore it. Barbara, Ian and Susan begin to suspect that The Doctor has not been as accurate as he imagined when they find 18thcentury furniture and clothes around the house. They also find fake papers, some of which bear the signature of Robespierre, the chief orchestrator of government during the Reign of Terror in the year 1794 They deduce the farmhouse is being used as a staging post in an escape chain for counter-revolutionaries. They put on some of the clothes so as to not look conspicious to the others when they go backto the TARDIS. Ian goes to look for The Doctor but as he leaves he is accosted by by two counter-revolutionaries named D'Argenson and Rouvray. They hold a gun to Barbara, Ian and Susan and try to ascertain if they are loyal to the revolution or counter-revolutionaries like themselves. They ask if they are travelling alone, Barbara replies in the affirmitive. Rouvray says that this is a lie as they have found The Doctor upstairs. They assure them that he is alright but still is hostile to the travellers.

The impasse is ended when a band of revolutionary soldiers surrounds the house and demands their collective surrender. Instead of storming the house they wait outside, counting on the counter-revolutionaries to lose their nerve. This ploy bears fruit when D'Argenson, who has seemed nervous from the off, gives himself up thinking that his surrender will spare him the guillotine. Reluctantly Rouvray joins him. They are both killed.

The soldiers now enter the house and capture Ian, Barbara, and Susan, thinking they are counter-revolutionaries also. They inform them that they will bemarched to Paris and the guillotine. The parting action of the soldiers is to set fire to the farmhouse – unaware The Doctor is inside. The travellers stare at the house as the roof falls in and The Doctor lays unconcious on the floor.

Guests of Madame Guillotine (2)
The Doctor awakes the next morning suffering from exhaustion and smoke inhalation. He was saved from the blaze by a young boy, who tells him his friends have been taken to the Conciergerie Prison in Paris. He sets off after them and, after a brief period press-ganged into a road mending crew for lack of papers, makes some speed in the twelve kilometre journey.

Things are looking grim for Ian, Barbara and Susan. They are all sentenced to death as traitors without a chance to speak in their own defence, and are all promised the guillotine for their crimes. Back at the Conciergerie, Ian is confined in one cell, while the women are taken to another. Ian's cellmate is an English prisoner named Webster who only lives long enough to tell him there is another English spy, James Stirling, highly placed in the French Government who is now being recalled to England. It was Webster's job to find him and he only knows that Stirling can be found through Jules Renan at the sign of "Le Chien Gris". Once Webster is dead a government official named Lemaitre arrives and probes any conversation between Ian and the dead man. Lemaitre also crosses Ian's name off the execution list. Susan and Barbara are less fortunate. Confined to the filthiest cell in the jail when Barbara refused the advances of their drunken jailer, they are soon taken on a tumbrel to the guillotine.

A Change of Identity (3)
Luckily for them their transport is hijacked by two men, Jules and Jean, who spirit them back to their safe house. Susan is, however, somewhat ill from her exposure to damp conditions. They are told they will be given food and a place to rest, and then they will be smuggled out of France in the escape chain, but Barbara is nervous about leaving France without the Doctor and Ian. Jules and Jean reassure her they will try to reunite the four travellers, and they all exchange tales of the fate of D'Argenson and Rouvray, whom it seems were part of the same escape chain. Another counter-revolutionary, Léon Colbert, arrives and joins their company, quickly striking up a romantic flirtation with Barbara. The Doctor has finally reached Paris and exchanges his clothes and Roman ring for the costume of a Regional Officer of the Provinces plus some parchment and writing materials. In this guise he heads for the Conciergerie, but by the time he gets there all three of his companions have gone. Ian has successfully stolen the key to his cell from the incompetent gaoler and managed to get away, not least because Lemaitre seems to have rendered the gaoler unconscious to aid his escape. The Doctor ascertains what has happened to his friends and is about to leave when Lemaitre arrives and insists he accompany him to visit First Deputy Robespierre to report on his province.

The Tyrant of France (4)
They are soon taken to an audience with "The Tyrant of France" himself, who appears as both a zealot and a psychopath with his constant talk of needing to increase the pace of execution. Little the Doctor can say to the contrary seems to have any sway, and he departs angrily.

Ian follows Webster's words and hunts out Jules Renan, who turns out to be the man sheltering Barbara and Susan, who remains critically ill in bed. Ian shares the last words of Webster with his host and they both agree that Stirling must be found and returned to England to help end the war with France which is helping to create the climate of fear that is sustaining Robespierre and his tyranny. Barbara meanwhile takes Susan to a local physician who wastes no time in reporting them as escaped prisoners to the authorities and they are seized once more before the revolutionary police. Things take a turn for the worse for Ian too when he goes to meet Leon in secret – only to find he is the mole in the escape chain and there are armed troops waiting for him.

A Bargain of Necessity (5)
Leon Colbert is desperate to find out what Webster said to him, but Ian is very guarded in his comments.

The Doctor has returned to the Conciergerie where two people are waiting to see him. The first is Lemaitre, who reports that Robespierre wishes to see him again the following day. The second is the tailor who sold the Doctor his clothes and has reported his suspicions of him to the jailer and Lemaitre. The latter confiscates the ring and dismisses the tailor, saying he will deal with the situation. Lemaitre ensures the Doctor spends the night in the Conciergerie in order that he remains in Paris for his second audience with Robespierre. He is still there when Barbara and Susan are brought in as prisoners, and effects a reunion with his friends without raising too much of an alarm. With Susan too weak to be moved, he engineers Barbara's release first on the pretext that she can be trailed to lead the security forces to the core of the escape chain.

Jules Renan has meanwhile rescued Ian, killing the traitor Leon Colbert in the process. Ian has been wounded but yet they both know they need to get their friends freed from the Conciergerie somehow. They return to Jules' house and are stunned to meet Barbara there, released on the authority of the Doctor of whom Jules knows nothing. Barbara is hurt and saddened by the death of Colbert, seeing good in all sides during the revolution.

Robespierre's mental state is deteriorating and he suspects his deputy, Paul Barras, is conspiring against him in the Convention. He asks Lemaitre to track Barras the following day to a secret assignation outside the city. When Lemaitre heads back to the Conciergerie it is to confront the Doctor, whom he unmasks in private as an impostor. Lemaitre now insists the Doctor help him find Jules Renan's house and expose the spy ring. With Susan held in the prison as a hostage, the Doctor takes him to the very place, much to the concern of Ian, Barbara and Jules.

Prisoners of Conciergerie (6)
Once there Lemaitre reveals that he is in fact James Stirling. In response, Ian relays Webster's message that Stirling should return to England immediately. The spy agrees but presses Ian for more detail on Webster's last hours. When Ian recalls the words "Barras, meeting, 'The Sinking Ship'", Stirling recalls his own conversation with Robespierre and the inn on the Calais road, and they realise that is where the conspiracy against the First Deputy will take place. Jules, Ian and Barbara head to the inn and there overhear Barras conspire with a young general, Napoleon Bonaparte, in the indictment and overthrow of Robespierre. Barras seeks to persuade the young general to take the mantle of leadership when it comes as one of three Consuls. Napoleon urges Barras to topple Robespierre, but warns him that if this fails to happen he will deny this meeting ever took place.

The following day Stirling fulfills a pledge to the Doctor and arranges Susan's release from prison. Speed is of the essence as the coup against Robespierre has begun, and the tyrant has been badly wounded before being seized himself and sent to the Conciergerie. The Doctor and Barbara reach the prison where he outwits the gaoler one more time, ensuring Susan is freed to escape with them. As they leave by one door, the bleeding Robespierre is brought in by another, his body broken and his rule ended. He will be guillotined himself soon.

The escape chain now demonstrates itself to best effect and smuggles several people out of Paris. Stirling will head for Calais and thence to England; Jules and Jean will lie low as they measure the future now that Robespierre has fallen; and the Doctor and his companions are keen to return to the TARDIS in the wood near Paris, reflecting on another brush with history and their role within it.

Cast

 * The Doctor - William Hartnell
 * Ian Chesterton - William Russell
 * Barbara Wright - Jacqueline Hill
 * Susan Foreman - Carole Ann Ford
 * Small Boy - Peter Walker
 * Rouvray - Laidlaw Dalling
 * D'Argenson - Neville Smith
 * Sergeant - Robert Hunter
 * Lieutenant - Ken Lawrence
 * Soldier - James Hall
 * Judge - Howard Charlton
 * Jailer - Jack Cunningham
 * Webster - Jeffry Wickham
 * Overseer - Dallas Cavell
 * Peasant - Dennis Cleary
 * Lemaitre / James Stirling - James Cairncross
 * Jean - Roy Herrick
 * Jules Renan - Donald Morley
 * Shopkeeper - John Barrard
 * Danielle - Caroline Hunt
 * Léon Colbert - Edward Brayshaw
 * Maximilien Robespierre - Keith Anderson
 * Physician - Ronald Pickup
 * Soldier - Terry Bale
 * Paul Barras - John Law
 * Napoléon Bonaparte - Tony Wall
 * Soldier - Patrick Marley
 * Double for The Doctor - Brian Proudfoot (uncredited)
 * Soldiers (all uncredited) - David Anderson, Tony Bates, Bob Berry, Don Cavendish, Joseph Cohen, Sid Deller, Adrian Drotsky, Rex Dyer, Nigel James, Tony Lambden, Maurice Leon, Jay McGrath, Bill Nicholas, Len Russell, John Sackville-West, Maurice Selwyn, Donald Simons, Gerry Wain
 * Citizens (all uncredited) - Helene Curtis, Eleanor Dalling, Jill Howard, Ralph Katterns, Jack Le White, Brian Proudfoot
 * Peasant - David Banville (uncredited)
 * Knitting Ladies (uncredited) - Eleanor Dalling, Leila Forde
 * Extras (all uncredited) - Roy Curtis, Al Raymond, Terry Wallace

Crew

 * Writer - Dennis Spooner
 * Director - Henric Hirsch (episodes 1, 2, 4-6)
 * Director - John Gorrie (episode 3) (uncredited)
 * Producer - Verity Lambert
 * Script Editor - David Whitaker
 * Designer - Roderick Laing
 * Assistant Floor Manager - Michael Cager
 * Associate Producer - Mervyn Pinfield
 * Costumes - Daphne Dare
 * Film Cameraman - Peter Hamilton
 * Film Editor - Caroline Shields
 * Incidental Music - Stanley Myers
 * Make-Up - Jill Summers
 * Make-Up - Sonia Markham
 * Production Assistant - Timothy Combe
 * Special Sound - Brian Hodgson
 * Studio Lighting - Howard King
 * Studio Sound - Chick Anthony
 * Studio Sound - Ray Angel
 * Theme Arrangement - Delia Derbyshire
 * Title Music - Ron Grainer

Individuals

 * Barbara once took a holiday in Somerset.
 * Susan is terrified of rats.

History

 * According to Susan, the French Revolution is the Doctor's favourite period of history.
 * Barbara states she has learnt her lesson to not meddle in history after her experience with the Aztecs.
 * Barbara and Susan compare their imprisonment to that they suffered "in the prehistoric age". However they say their current situation comes "with one important difference — the Doctor and Ian were with us then".

Story notes

 * The first Doctor Who story to feature on-location filming.
 * Episodes 1, 2, 3 and 6 exist in 16mm telerecordings.
 * Episode 6 was returned by a private collector in May 1982.
 * Prints of all 4 existing episodes were recovered from a Cypriot television station in 1985. These included a superior print of episode 2.
 * 12 clips from episodes 4 and 5 exist in the form of 8mm home movie reel.
 * Episode 2 used the working title Guests of the Guillotine.
 * This story was a replacement for a 6 part story by David Whitaker which would have been set at the time of the Spanish Armada.
 * William Russell originally suggested the idea of a story set during The French Revolution.
 * Director Henric Hirsch suffered from exhaustion during the making of this serial and was unable to direct episode three. John Gorrie (who had previously directed The Keys of Marinus) stepped in temporarily. Some sources have credited Verity Lambert as director for this episode, as no director is credited onscreen (which at the time normally implied that the producer also directed the programme), but she has firmly denied this.
 * William Russell was on holiday during the filming of episodes 2 and 3 and appeared only in pre-taped film sequences.
 * Edward Brayshaw, later to feature as the War Chief in 1969's The War Games has a role as Léon Colbert, a counter-espionage agent allied with the Revolutionary government.
 * In a number of 1970s listing guides the story was called The French Revolution. This appears to derive from a promotional article in the BBC listings magazine Radio Times entitled "Dr Who and the French Revolution".
 * Many photographs of this story remain. Along with the soundtrack these were used by Loose Cannon Productions to make a reconstruction of this story. (see external links). An earlier reconstruction of this story was made by Michael Palmer, although this is no longer in circulation.
 * It was originally intended that Verity Lambert and David Whitaker would be responsible for finding a replacement show to run during the season break however this did not prove necessary and the slot was filled with repeats of The Valiant Varneys.
 * This was the first historical in which the Doctor was seen to wear period attire. The First Doctor would continue to do so in most of his stories set in Earth's past.  The tradition was initially continued by the Second Doctor in The Highlanders, but as pure historicals faded from Doctor Who, the Doctor generally abandoned this notion.

Ratings

 * A Land of Fear - 6.9 million viewers
 * Guests of Madame Guillotine - 6.9 million viewers
 * A Change of Identity -6.9 million viewers
 * The Tyrant of France - 6.4 million viewers
 * A Bargain of Necessity - 6.9 million viewers
 * Prisoners of Conciergerie - 6.4 million viewers

Myths

 * An elaborate model of Paris was made for this story but never used. This model was given to Carole Ann Ford as a present. (No such model was made, Carole Ann Ford was actually given the design model made by Roderick Laing to assist with his work).

Filming locations

 * BBC Television Centre (TC4)
 * Lime Grove Studios (Studio G)
 * White Plain, a nursing home in Denham Green, Buckinghamshire.
 * An Isle of Wight Farm at nearby Gerrards Cross.

Production errors

 * Robespierre gives the date as the 27th of July, 1794, at the time the revolutionary calendar was in use in France, the date should have been the 9th of Thermidor Year II. (It is possible that the TARDIS translated the revolutionary calendar date into the Gregorian Calendar)

Continuity

 * Susan also showed an interest in this period (The French Revolution) in DW: An Unearthly Child.
 * During her incarceration Barbara is reminded of her imprisonment in An Unearthly Child.
 * Barbara claims to have learnt her lesson about meddling in history after the events of DW: The Aztecs.

Timeline
Maximilien Robespierre mentions the story as taking place in 1794.

Timeline

 * This story occurs after CC: The Transit of Venus
 * This story occurs before CC: Here There Be Monsters

Video releases
Released as Doctor Who: The Reign of Terror


 * UK Release: November 2003 / US Release: October 2003
 * PAL - BBC Video BBCV7335 (2 tapes)
 * NTSC - Warner Video E1853 (2 tapes)


 * This release contains narration by Carole Ann Ford. It contains clips and stills from episodes 4 and 5.
 * The second tape contains episodes 1 and 3 of The Faceless Ones and episode 1 of The Web of Fear.
 * The North American release was also located in The End of the Universe Collection.
 * This was the final release by BBC Video in the VHS tape format, as it shifted to DVD-only releases hereafter.


 * Editing of surviving episodes for VHS release completed by Doctor Who Restoration Team.


 * A fan produced photo video reconstruction has been made of this story by Loose Cannon Productions.


 * The reconstruction of this story by Loose Cannon Production includes an introduction by Carole Ann Ford.

Dvd Release
Due to be reconstucted as much as possible and released in late 2012

Audio release
Released as Doctor Who: The Reign of Terror ISBN 0-563-52342-5 by BBC Audio on CD in February 2006. This is a double CD set with narration by and interview with Carole Ann Ford.

Novelisation and its audiobook

 * Main article: The Reign of Terror (novelisation)


 * This story was published by Target Books in August 1987 as The Reign of Terror. The novel was written by Ian Marter shortly before his death and was published posthumously.