Melody Pond

Professor River Song is a mysterious archaeologist who shared a close relationship with the Doctor. Although his first meeting with her ended in her death, she told him that, due to the complicated nature of time travel, he had many adventures with her yet to come.

Early Life
River Song was an archaeologist already highly familiar with the Doctor when they first meet (from his perspective) in the 51st century. She was, in fact, a future companion of his who travelled with him off and on. According to her, he came to trust her implicitly, though at the start of their relationship (from his perspective) he was generally suspicious of her and almost hostile to her at times. Prior to her encounter with the Weeping Angels, she was imprisoned for murder (and the victim was strongly implied to have been the Doctor—"A very good man. Best man I've ever known"). (DW: The Time of Angels / Flesh and Stone)

Crash of the Byzantium
Doctor River Song was a guest on the Byzantium ship in the 51st century. She was working for a military organisation at the time when that happened, in exchange for a pardon for the murder. She infiltrated the lower levels to the Home Box, into which she carved the message "Hello Sweetie" in the Old High Gallifreyan language to attract the Doctor. About 12,000 years later the Doctor found the Home Box in a museum. The Doctor used the cube to home in on her location where she was being pursued by guards. She then jettisoned herself from an air lock, where the waiting Doctor and Amy Pond picked her up in the TARDIS. River then showed exceptional TARDIS flying skills landing it next to the Byzantium, which had crashed into the Maze of the Dead. Along with the Bishop and his Clerics, River accompanied the Doctor and Amy into the maze. She made it out of the maze alive along with Amy and the Doctor, to be imprisoned once more. However she mentions she will see the Doctor again at Pandorica and that she remembers it well, implying the events have already happened for River but are yet to come for the Doctor. (DW: The Time of Angels)

Death
River's expedition to the Library was financed by Felman Lux and was chartered to find out what disaster had happened there, 100 years previously, that had caused 4022 people to "die" or disappear. When her team ran into trouble during an expedition to a deserted library, it was only natural that River should try to summon the Doctor by sending him a message via psychic paper. The version of the Doctor who turned up had not yet met her. Though bewildered, he agreed to help River and her team. River and the Doctor appeared to be very familiar, even considering the strong bonds the Doctor forms with his companions. She kept a worn and battered diary which the cover looked very much like the TARDIS doors, keeping a journal of her travels with the Doctor. There was a suggestion that in the future the Doctor's personal future she would carry a similar journal, as she commenteted about needing to "compare" diaries. She carried a upgraded version of the sonic screwdriver which "her" version of the Doctor had given her. As the situation in the Library deteriorated, River realised she must prove to the Doctor that she was (or will become) someone he trusts completely and with profuse apologies, she whispers his true name into his ear. The Doctor was stunned by this information, and River succeeded in winning his trust.

River physically died when she chose to sacrifice herself in order to stop the Doctor from sacrificing himself in order to save Donna and the other 4022 people trapped in the Library. She pleaded with him to not try and change history, not to change one moment of what is to come for them.

After saving all the trapped people, the Doctor realized his future self must have given her his sonic screwdriver for a reason. Inside he found a data chip, which contains River's Data Ghost. The Doctor saved her by uploading her into the virtual world contained in The Library's data core. CAL, the library's data core controlled by a human girl wired into its mainframe, also managed to save the data ghosts of all of River's dead archaeological team, so she would have company in the virtual world. (DW: Silence in the Library/Forest of the Dead)

Post-Death
When Davros said to the Doctor that "Everywhere you go there are always deaths" River appeared in a flashback, as the Doctor had flashbacks over those who have died during his travels. (DW: Journey's End)

Other Information

 * River Song seemed to take shorter trips with the Doctor, living a more or less normal life between trips, rather than having one extended trip with the Doctor and never seeing him again after parting ways.
 * River Song is a skilled TARDIS pilot (with very different methods from the Doctor). She has mentioned that she "learned from the best" but implied that her teacher was not the Doctor.
 * Song appears to have knowledge of Time Lord anatomy, including knowledge of regeneration. She indicates that destruction of both of the Doctor's hearts is a circumstance after which regeneration is not possible.
 * River Song has the ability to write messages in High Gallifreyan.
 * River possessed pictures of all the Doctor's incarnations.
 * River is sentenced to prison for murdering a man described as "a hero of many" and whom she calls "A very good man. Best man I've ever known."
 * Before his death, Octavian tells the Doctor that "You think you know [River], but you don't. You don't understand who or what she is." He may be referring to her status as a murderer (possibly the Doctor's future murderer), or something else.



River Song's Timeline

 * Meets the Doctor for the first time.


 * Has an adventure with the Doctor at the Bone Meadows. (DW: The Time of Angels)


 * Has a picnic with the Doctor at Asgard. (DW: Silence in the Library)


 * Meets the Doctor when the Pandorica Opens. (DW: Flesh and Stone)


 * Kills "a hero to many", "the best man [she's] ever known" and is imprisoned.


 * Father Octavian releases her from a storm cage. (DW: Flesh and Stone)


 * Four days later, she breaches the Byzantium and is rescued by the Eleventh Doctor. (DW: The Time of Angels)


 * River Song and the Eleventh Doctor investigates the the crash landing of the Byzantium. (DW: The Time of Angels)


 * Travels to the End of the Universe with the Doctor.


 * The Doctor, with a new haircut and a suit, visits River Song and takes her to see the Singing Towers of Darillium. He gives her his Sonic Screwdriver.


 * Tries to send 'her Doctor' a message via the Psychic paper, asking him to come to the Library. (DW: Silence in the Library)


 * The Tenth Doctor, whilst traveling with Donna Noble comes to the Library in the 51st Century at her request and meets River Song for the first time, when they face an infestation of Vashta Nerada within the Library.


 * Proves to the Tenth Doctor how important she will be to him by whispering his true name in his ear. (DW: Silence in the Library)


 * Sacrifices herself to save the Tenth Doctor and the Library. (DW: Forest of the Dead)


 * The Tenth Doctor beams River Song from a Neural Relay in her sonic screwdriver into the Library's Data Core. (DW: Forest of the Dead)


 * River Song's brainwaves live on in the virtual world inside the Data Core, containing CAL and Doctor Moon. She is reunited in this virtual world with her crew mates, Proper Dave, Other Dave, Anita and Miss Evangelista, whose brainwaves must have also been added to the Data Core. (DW: Forest of the Dead)

Behind the Scenes

 * It is unknown precisely where in time and space River Song originally came from. As the Doctor has left previous companions in different parts of the universe from where he originally found them, it is possible that River was not originally from the 51st century at all.
 * Although well-known to have appeared in episodes 4 and 5 of series 5, Alex Kingston was seen filming for the finale (12 and 13) at Stonehenge, later being seen in the trailer.
 * In a recent interview by Digital Spy, Steven Moffat made a passing comment to the effect that River Song might turn out to be very different from people's presumptions as to who she really is.