Doctor Who and the Pescatons (audio story)

Doctor Who and the Pescatons was the first original, officially licensed audio drama based upon Doctor Who. Released originally by Argo Records — but now an AudioGO property — the dramatised story featured Tom Baker and Elisabeth Sladen as the Fourth Doctor and Sarah Jane Smith. The story was divided into two episodes, complete with opening and closing themes, simulating the televised series.

Discounting a couple of radio appearances, and an LP version of Genesis of the Daleks with added narration, The Pescatons was the last time Baker participated in an original Doctor Who audio drama until the Hornets' Nest arc in 2009.

The story ws unusual because of its first-person perspective. Though first-person narratives weren't entirely without precedent — the predating Doctor Who in an Exciting Adventure with the Daleks had been written from Ian Chesterton's point of view — this was the first time that a story had been told from the Doctor's perspective. As of 2011, it remains the only original story to feature this storytelling element.

It was further unusual for its depiction of a genocide that was devised and led by Sarah and the Doctor, without either character displaying even a tinge of remorse.

Publisher's summary
The Doctor and his companion Sarah Jane battle against some of the most heinous foes to emerge from the outer universe: The Pescatons. The Doctor finds himself in the capital city of London, where the population is bewildered and trembling beneath the violent onslaught of a merciless invader.

Who or what is the mighty Zor, whose green slanting luminous eyes glare out from the dark of night like giant emeralds? What is the powerful alien force that is bringing Earth's civilisation to a standstill, threatening to annihilate everything in its path?

This is the story of a dying Planet, of a Deadly Weed, and the merciless Creatures themselves. It is a Challenge to the Doctor -- a frightening race against time...

Cast

 * Fourth Doctor - Tom Baker
 * Sarah Jane Smith - Elisabeth Sladen
 * Zor - Bill Mitchell

Continuity

 * The plot hinges on the fact that the Fourth Doctor plays the piccolo "whenever [he's] nervous". This notion has no basis in any other licensed story.  It may have been writer Victor Pemberton's attempt to build a kind of continuity between the Fourth Doctor and the recorder-playing Second Doctor, since he was one of the architects of the Troughton era.
 * A scene which once may have played as a "Tom Baker-ism" now has retroactive continuity with A Good Man Goes to War and Closing Time. At one point, the Doctor and Sarah encounter an abandoned baby on the streets of London. The Doctor attempts to talk to him, but flatly says that "he won't talk".  Sarah corrects him by saying that "he can't talk".  Since modern listeners now know that the Eleventh Doctor can speak Baby, the scene now plays as though the Doctor's statement is probably more accurate than Sarah's.
 * Unusually, the Doctor here calls the Pescatons "evil" on many occasions. This depiction of another species is atypical for the Doctor.  Indeed, it lays the foundation for another extraordinary feature of the story: the Doctor and Sarah devise and participate in the remorseless genocide of the Pescatons.

Novelisation

 * Main article: The Pescatons (novelisation)


 * Novelised as The Pescatons by Victor Pemberton and released in 1991 by Target Books. To date it remains the only Doctor Who audio drama (as opposed to radio play) to be adapted as a novel.

Home media releases
This story has been released several times on both cassette and audio CD.

Timeline

 * This story occurs after DW: The Masque of Mandragora
 * This story occurs before ST: Eternity