Doctor Who returned to the BBC this past Saturday with a brand new episode, The Bells of Saint John, and a brand new companion, Clara, played by Jenna-Louise Coleman.
Last week the BBC held a press conference with writer and executive producer Steven Moffat, to answer questions about Doctor Who in general and this new season in particular. Moffat was, as usual, very witty and engaging, giving reporters little tidbits about future episodes, without giving too much away about the upcoming adventures of the Eleventh Doctor and his mysterious new companion.
The Doctor Who Spring 2013 trailer can be seen here, and a prequel to The Bells of Saint John can be seen here.
Earl Dittman of Digital Journal: Americans now have finally embraced Doctor Who the way that the British always have, what do you think it is that makes the story so universal now that everybody can get into it?
Accessibility in a way, you can start watching Doctor Who at any point in its history. You don’t have to catch up with the rest of it. It’s a very simple myth. It’s a man that can travel anywhere in time and space, in a box bigger on the inside.
That’s as much format as we have. You can join it anytime, absolutely get a hold of it, and dare I say I just think it’s one of the great pieces of television entertainment that’s ever been.
That’s why we latch onto it, it’s terrific, it’s simple to understand what it’s about and it’s hugely entertaining, and every so often it completely reinvents itself to feel at home in its new era, which is really its key ingredient.
It always feels at home in the present day because it always adapts itself. We are, after all, on our eleventh leading man.
Curt Wagner: Can you tell us about Jenna and what she brings to the series and to the relationship with the Doctor and with Matt?
She has a tremendous speed and wit and sort of an unimpressed quality that makes the Doctor dance a bit harder I suppose, he works a bit harder with Clara.
Clara is always just a little bit out of reach…you know, secretly devoted to him but a little bit harder to impress. She’s tough, she’s fast and she’s hard to impress, exactly the way the Doctor generally speaking doesn’t like them but of course he’s absolutely devoted to Clara.
That’s very much driven by Jenna’s particular style, which is a very, very fast, snappy style. A very, very beautiful girl but there’s a real sense of toughness in that face of someone that can be a real adversary if she wants to be.
Curt Wagner: In The Bells of Saint John are you trying to tell us that we’re too tied to technology with the Spoonheads? (The Doctor’s newest adversaries.)
No I’m trying to make up a really, really good adventure about the Doctor really. What Doctor Who often does is grab hold of whatever is omnipresent in your life and turn it into a monster.
And there’s no grand plan in what you tie to technology, I love it all.
Tiffany Vogt of TV Addict: What can you tell us about the Spoonheads?
Suffice to say Wi-Fi covers every civilized country now. So if something got into the Wi-Fi that would be a problem for us all, a new way to invade us.
Tiffany Vogt of TV Addict: in this upcoming season do you have a favorite episode or scene that you can share with us?
I think The Bells of Saint John is a great episode, I think Cold War is a terrific traditional episode, and The Ice Warriors. I think we’ve got a great finale. We’ve got some new cybermen. But you know I change my mind all the time about which my favorite is, and it’s almost invariably the next one.
Tony Tellado of Sci-Fi Talk: regarding getting Dame Diana Rigg to be on this year, how did you manage that?
It wasn’t me, it was really Mark Gatiss who wrote that episode, and who works on Sherlock with me, and was appearing in a play with Diana Rigg’s daughter Rachael Stirling.
He was writing a Doctor Who episode at the time and he said to Rachael “Look I think you and your mom should play the mother and daughter parts in this Doctor Who I’m writing,” and they were up for it.
So it was all done through Mark. Mark and his little black book, he knows absolutely everybody.
Aaron Sagers of CNN: What is it about Jenna-Louise Coleman that when you watch her work, you think damn, I really made the right decision in hiring her.
Well she’s terrific. I mean the first, most obvious answer to that is she’s a terribly, terribly good actress. I know that sounds like a terrible dull thing to say but it’s the truth. You can be as beautiful and charming as you like, if you’re not terrific at acting it will mean nothing on the screen, but she’s a terrific actress.
In addition, she looks great, she has great comic timing. She looks like she belongs somehow next to Matt Smith. When the two can stand together it looks like an instant team. They have enough in common and yet have enough sharp contrast that it’s instant poster when you stand them together.
Tom Gardiner of threeifspace.net: I’d like to know since you grew up loving Doctor Who like many of us did: what’s it like to go from behind the sofa to behind the curtain as it were, it’s got to be a lot of fun.
It sort of happened so long ago, I’ve been involved in this for quite a long time, nearly ten years, that I’m starting to forget. It’s very, very exciting. I mean it’s massively demanding.
I don’t have any doubt that Doctor Who had always been and will always be that. I mean your fancy remains intact, you stay excited by Doctor Who and the idea of Doctor Who always remains thrilling.
I think you couldn’t function on the show unless that was true but, you know, it’s a terrible thing to say in a way, but I’ve been on the other side of the curtain for quite a while now and I’m starting to forget that this used to be a show that I wasn’t involved in.
One day when I’m not involved in it again it will all come rushing back but, you know, right now it feels as though I have always worked on it. It retains its excitement, it retains its shine, that’s the main thing to say about that I think.
Tom Gardiner of threeifspace.net: During the course of discovering the mystery behind Clara, is this Clara ever going to remember her other incarnations? Will we get to see that?
Well I would know the answer to that question and I certainly wouldn’t give it to you. (Laughs) And you will uncover the mystery of Clara in the next eight episodes. All will be made clear and you’ll get your answer that way.
Fran Mags of Televixy: why do you think it is that the companion is such an important element of storytelling in Doctor Who?
It’s the person to whom the story happens. A hero is somebody who saves the day and is extraordinary and you stand back and admire, and that’s the Doctor.
But for the storytelling, the emotional connection has to happen to somebody. The Doctor himself has to happen to somebody. And so very often in Doctor Who the companion is sort of the main character, not the hero, not the one with all the cool lines, not with all the cool moments. The person whose story it is and how this experience changed them.
We never see how the Doctor began his journey, we will probably never see how he ends it, we’ll probably never know why he embarked on it, but we know all those companions, who they were before they met the Doctor. We know why they ran away with him and we know roughly where they ended up. Those stories are complete. The Doctor is the enigma that enters their lives and changes them.
The story is always about the person who changes the most, rather than necessarily about the person who effects those changes.
The story is always about the person who changes the most, rather than necessarily about the person who effects those changes.
Ann Morris of Airlock Alpha: I was curious if you find it easier or more difficult or the same to write about established iconic characters like Sherlock and Doctor Who, or is it easier to write about characters that you’ve originated.
Well in both Sherlock and Doctor Who there are characters that we originated, so actually it’s been both all the time. I don’t think it’s a lot different…Because even after you’re created a character of your own that you’ve evolved after a very short while that’s an existing artifact and you have to write for them.
So it’s not a lot different. I think you have to treat the characters you create as real in a way so they have to start calling the shots. And you have to handle characters like Sherlock Holmes and the Doctor, the ones that were given to you from before, you have to treat those characters, I’ll get into trouble for saying this, as if they’re your own otherwise you’re not writing them properly. I keep saying to the writers and directors that have come on to Doctor Who and Sherlock, you know, treat it like you own it, it’s not an heirloom.
It has to be – you have to be authorial even though you know in your heart it’s not really yours, you behave as though it is. So really the slightly dull answer is there isn’t a lot of difference, I don’t feel a huge amount of difference.
Elizabeth Wallace of pixelatedgeek.com: With the Weeping Angels, the Silence and Vashta Nerada, and now the Spoonheads, you’ve created some of the most recognized, iconic monsters on Doctor Who, but in all the episodes you’ve written, which monsters were the most fun to write and why?
The ones so much fun to write, I’m tempted to say Weeping Angels because I’m standing looking at one because it’s in my back garden. I probably – the one I got the most kick out of might have been the Silence.
I loved the gimmick of the Silence, you couldn’t remember them. I just thought finding ways to employ that and finding ways to make that frightening…I think it was a very exciting thing, I hugely enjoyed writing the Silence.
The Weeping Angels are, of course, by far the most popular adversary I’ve invented, and I’m sure will always be the most popular ones I’ve invented. But they are a bugger to write because they don’t move and it’s always really hard to work out how you’re going to do a chase scene this time.
Steven Aramo of Sci-Fi and TV Dock: What was your impetus for wanting to bring the Ice Warriors back and what were some of the challenges in reimagining that old foe?
The impetus really was Mark Gatiss, I wasn’t that keen initially on that of bringing the Ice Warriors back. They’ve never been any special favorite of mine in the old series. I thought they were good but I never quite got into them, but Mark Gatiss kept nagging me about bringing them back and then he came up with an idea, which – I’m going to leave that as a surprise in Cold War, which really made them come to life for me. I think that could be brilliant. So at that point I really got into it but that was into Mark’s creativity rather than mine.
The challenge, well there were a number of challenges I can’t talk about but one I will talk about: they are far, far less familiar to the general audience than say the Dalek or the Cybermen or any of those things. With the ice warrior they wanted to create a really good super duper version of the one that’s already there. So it’s a design classic buffed up a bit for HD rather than a change or revise I would say, and that was the challenge to make. The one that they designed for the fuzzy old televisions worked for the other less forgiving HD cameras of the day, so that would be the answer.
Kathie Huddleston of Blastr.com: So as you look at these eight episodes that we have coming up, what would you say that as a writer and a producer were your biggest challenges and surprises?
Well every episode is a challenge, and I suppose one of the most challenging in one of the episodes is the monster. You’re always a heartbeat away from the monster looking ridiculous.
You’re always a heartbeat away from the monster looking ridiculous.
So they’re always hard. Surprises, I’m not sure, I mean Doctor Who is the most exhaustingly planned show on earth. We have so little time to make one. We make them in sort of a couple of weeks really, two weeks. So everything is planned to the last detail and it’s relatively rare for something to surprise you because you’ve tried to factor in every single thing that could go wrong.
A very pleasant surprise was how effectively and realistically and compellingly I think we were able to create a submarine for the episode Cold War. I think they did a stunning job on that and just really, really convincing you that you’re on board a sub. At every level I just thought that was a bit of a design triumph.
It’s one of those things that you always wonder – will it just look like some corridors – but no, the art department really sold that. Michael Pickwood had a field day with that and it was brilliant.
Charlie Anders of I09: a big conflict of your era has been the Doctor needing to not be alone. People keep telling him that he shouldn’t be alone because he’s not himself when he’s not with a companion. Why doesn’t he just always get a companion, why does he resist that?
Well if you were told the way to heal yourself and to make yourself a better person and function better was to permanently endanger another human being you might be hesitant too.
He is aware that he causes damage to those people, or can cause damage to those people he travels with and he puts them in terrible danger. He’s also aware that a relationship or a friendship for him, like it or not, is postponed bereavement, and it’s not even postponed that long.
He’s also aware that a relationship or a friendship for him, like it or not, is postponed bereavement, and it’s not even postponed that long.
You know that he will outlive them, they will die and he will be roughly the same age. So I think those two factors make him very, very hesitant about taking someone on board.
And also the fact that he’s the Doctor, I mean can you imagine trying to tell the Doctor something, trying to put him right, trying to explain something to him and have him believe you. He generally speaking does know better than you but he always thinks he does.
Joel Murphy of hobotrashcan.com: I was just curious specifically with the character of Clara how you decided that this was the companion that you wanted to use, and what the dynamic was, and what drew you to her character specifically?
I think when you start with a character, or who is going to be the companion, you can’t think of the word companion, you can’t think that they know that they’re a supporting character in a TV show.
You have to think this is somebody A) who would fly away in that TARDIS and B) the Doctor would want to fly away in the TARDIS. The Doctor is quite picky, he doesn’t like everybody, he’s a difficult man to deal with, so it’s not anybody that he actually formed a proper friendship with.
I don’t know what sort of person would run through those blue doors. A lot of people would run the other direction, probably including me to be honest when I discovered how dangerous it was.
So you have to imagine somebody who’s ready to say yes to running away with a clearly insane man and ride a time machine, and that is your starting point with that character. What point in their life are they, what decisions have they made, what worked out and what hasn’t worked out for them, that leads them to respond positively to a travel request from a lunatic in a bow tie?
What point in their life are they, what decisions have they made, what worked out and what hasn’t worked out for them, that leads them to respond positively to a travel request from a lunatic in a bow tie?
Steve Sunu of Comic Book Resources: One of the cool things I think about The Bells of Saint John coming up is that you had a prologue sort of premiere on the Internet that had the Doctor encounter Clara as a small child. And the encounter made me think back to the Doctor’s first encounter with Amy, you know; precocious child, talked to the Doctor, treats them as equals. Was that a parallel that you purposely wanted to draw for long time fans of the series?
I liked the idea because he had such an odd introduction to Clara, having met her twice and lost her twice in such exotic surroundings, you know, in the Dalek and then the governess who was also a bar maid and all that.
I sort of thought wouldn’t it be nice if we just did something quite sweet and ordinary and something that specifically goes back to Amy, which I’ve done twice now. It sort of keys up the fact that that relationship, whether he likes it or not, is coming back.
And there are resemblances and I suppose I’m only a bit interested – maybe too interested I’m sure some people would say – in the fact that the Doctor’s lifespan and time traveling ways means when he knows somebody, he probably knows them over a huge amount of their life span and a tiny span of his.
And I’m always quite interested in exploring that. He can know them as a child, he could know them as an adult, he could know them as an old person. I’m absolutely fascinated by that, possibly too fascinated, I’m sure I should stop repeating myself, but I think that’s probably why.
Jason Tabris of veryaware.com: can you talk a little bit about how Neil Cross came to be a part of this season and also what he’s brought to the show?
Neil Cross is a writer I knew of but I’ve never met. He’d done Luther and books and a terrific, terrific writer. I’ve actually read a script he’d written a few years ago.
We’d never quite got it together. When Caroline Skinner came on to the show, Neil Cross is an old friend of hers and she’s like “I’m going to chase him and see if we can’t work out the scheduling.”
And he’s a huge Doctor Who fan, and even though in both occasions this year he did not have the time to write an episode, he did not have the time, he leapt at the chance to shove everything out of the way, you know, to do that.
And sort of what I’m looking for all the time, this sounds terribly snobbish and awful, but I’m looking for show runner level writers who’d give their right arm to write a Doctor Who story. That’s what I’d like.
And it’s surprising how often we get that, how many of our writing staff, if I can call them that, how many of our writing team are show runners themselves.
So it was a gift to us and Neil took to it like a duck to water so it was brilliant.
Sharon Eberson of the Pittsburgh Post Gazette: I wanted to ask just a little bit about the Doctor Who 50th anniversary, only if that factored into how you planned the arc of the season. I think it’s so cool that the Doctor has this long-term arc of the companion as his big mystery this season. Is that an element of the 50th anniversary, were you considering that in planning the arc?
Not seriously. I mean you’re always wanting to make it special and huge and big. And this is one of the things that I’m concerned about this year, is that the show must be seen to be going forward. It’s all about the next 50 years not about the last 50 years. If you start putting a full stop on it, if you start thinking it’s all about nostalgia, then you’re finished. It’s about moving forward.
So, you know, the Doctor is moving forward as he always does and he wants to solve the mystery of Clara, he’s not thinking about all his previous incarnations and his previous adventures, he’s thinking about the future. And that for me is important.
The show must never feel old, it must always feel brand new, and a 50th anniversary can play against that.
Joe Dilworth of Pop Culture Zoo: one of the big components early on in Doctor Who were the purely historical adventures, where there was no extraterrestrial monster or villain. The bad guy was someone that actually used to exist. Do you think a purely historical adventure would be possible in the new series?
I don’t think it’s impossible, but I’m going to put my cards on the table, and I didn’t think those historical adventures were very good. I didn’t like them, I thought they were dull.
And so far as I remember them as a kid I couldn’t wait for them to be over so we could get back to proper Sci-Fi. Just to be honest, they weren’t my favorites.
That doesn’t mean that we won’t come up with a story that is historical but, you know, I think they were discarded for a reason and even before they were discarded they were always reduced to only four-part stories.
They were regarded as the lesser element of the show. I think if you’ve got this glittering man and his extraordinary space time machine just having him visit the past isn’t enough, I don’t think it is. There has to be something as extraordinary as he is, otherwise it’s like, you know, Sherlock Holmes investigating crimes. It’s just not enough for our hero.
Janice Kay of sciencefiction.com: Clara is such a unique companion what inspired you to just – to create her? She’s so unique from what we’ve seen in the new series, what gave you the idea “this is the one I want to challenge the Doctor”?
You need someone who challenges the Doctor, you need someone to throw the Doctor into a new light, into a new relief. Amy had done it in one particular way, I think we just needed somebody who was slightly less willing.
I mean the thing about the Doctor, the Doctor is always the remote, inaccessible, mysterious one and the companion is always the fluffy, friendly one (well Amy tested that theory from time to time.)
Where at this time Clara is the slightly difficult to get to know one, that is probably going to be slightly difficult to hug, and because the Doctor is haunted by her and met her twice before he is slightly the needy one.
So I like throwing in that around, she’s the unsolvable mystery in the enigma and he’s the one chasing after her. It’s a reversal of the normal Doctor companion dynamic, which I’ve been rather enjoying.