Tardis

New to Doctor Who or returning after a break? Check out our guides designed to help you find your way!

READ MORE

Tardis
Advertisement
Tardis

History of the Doctor Who Universe

July

Unknown dates

History of Doctor Who

January

February

March

April

May

  • 18 - Doctor Who - The Nightmare Fair First Published. This is the first of a new spin-off line by Target Books dubbed "The Missing Episodes". These are novels based upon the cancelled Season 23, which was delayed a year due to the BBC-ordered hiatus and which ultimately was replaced by what became The Trial of a Time Lord. Although based upon a teleplay, the fact it was never produced makes this, in effect, the first original-to-print Doctor Who novel in which the Doctor himself is the lead character.

June

July

  • 20 - Doctor Who - The Chase First Published. Written by John Peel, The Chase was the first of a series of Dalek story novelisations by Peel that were commissioned after Target Books reached an agreement with Terry Nation that would allow his remaining Dalek stories to be adapted as novels. (Prior to this, The Chase, and other Nation-penned Dalek episodes, were expected to remain in limbo, novelisation-wise). Around the time of this book's release, it's announced that a similar agreement had been reached with Eric Saward regarding his two Daleks serials, but ultimately these two stories were never adapted.

August

September

October

November

  • 23 - Sylvester McCoy records the monologue that ends episode 3 of Survival and, ultimately, the original 1963-89 Doctor Who series. This is a late addition to the serial by John Nathan-Turner, who expects it to be the final episode. Ironically this is also the anniversary of the debut of Doctor Who in 1963. It's also one of the few times since the 1960s that a major element of a televised serial is produced while the serial in question has already begun airing.

December

  • 06 - Survival Episode 3 First Broadcast. This ultimately proves to be the final episode of the original series, and the last weekly episode to be broadcast until 2005. Final use of the Keff McCulloch theme music arrangement, while the current series logo would continue to be used for merchandise and books until 1996 and it and a version of the 1987 opening credits sequence would be used again in the 1993 special Dimensions in Time. Final 25-minute episode produced (although The Sarah Jane Adventures revives the format in 2007. Although producer John Nathan Turner later says he was aware the series was going off the air, and Sophie Aldred, in the documentary Thirty Years in the TARDIS says she was told it was cancelled, the BBC does not make any cancellation announcement, and it is widely assumed by fans, and hoped, that a 27th season would air in 1990.

Unknown dates

  • Pioneer Books publishes the second edition of The Doctor and the Enterprise by Jean Airey. An unauthorized crossover between Doctor Who, Star Trek and The Wizard of Oz, the book had previously been published in a small-press edition in 1982; this new version edits out most overt references to Star Trek character names.
  • First edition of the four-track EP, Doctor Who: Variations on a Theme released in 12-inch vinyl, standard CD and as an unusual square-shaped CD. This release features unique rearrangements of the Doctor Who theme by Mark Ayres, Dominic Glynn and Keff McCulloch that had been created for various Doctor Who Appreciation Society conventions in the 1980s. One of these, the "Latin Version", would later be adopted by BBC Video as the theme for its "Years" series of video retrospectives.
1988 20th century
1980s
1990
Advertisement