1. "The Drashigs attack the ship,
and the Doctor and Jo are separated.
Copy !req
2. "Jo is left behind as the Doctor escapes
to the alien world beyond the Scope."
Copy !req
3. This episode was first shown
on 10 February 1973.
Copy !req
4. It was seen by 9 million people.
Copy !req
5. Barry Letts was interviewed
in The Sun newspaper
during the transmission of the story.
Copy !req
6. He said he felt that the Drashigs were
one of the most "striking and original"
monsters seen in the programme.
Copy !req
7. The neck and head of the Drashig
was operated like a glove puppet,
covering the operator's forearm.
Copy !req
8. The caterpillar-like rear
of the creature was manipulated
using two controlling rods.
Copy !req
9. The bodies of the Drashigs were
constructed from flexible hose ducting.
Copy !req
10. The heads were moulded in latex around
the bleached skulls of terriers.
Copy !req
11. An extra line was scripted for the
Doctor at this point -
"Perhaps... If we get there."
Copy !req
12. The script indicates that they hear
"Distant Baskerville noises",
Copy !req
13. In February 1972, Barry Letts wrote
to Peter Shepherd, the Head
of the BBC Costume Department,
Copy !req
14. praising of James Acheson's work
on 'The Mutants',
which had just finished recording.
Copy !req
15. He formally requested
that Acheson be allocated to work
on 'Carnival of Monsters'.
Copy !req
16. 'Carnival' became the second of eight
stories that James Acheson worked on
between 1972 and 1976.
Copy !req
17. A day and a half were spent
at Tillingham Marshes.
Copy !req
18. The filming was done on the afternoon
of both days - Tuesday 30
and Wednesday 31 May 1972.
Copy !req
19. The high tide occurred at the mid-point
of the afternoon's filming,
Copy !req
20. so the marshlands maintained
a fairly consistent degree of wetness,
suitable for the story.
Copy !req
21. During the afternoon of the first day,
Roger Liminton
and a small crew of scenemen
Copy !req
22. travelled to Carwoods Quarry to set up
the cave mouth scenes that would be
filmed the following morning.
Copy !req
23. Jon Pertwee was concerned
about this sequence.
Copy !req
24. He didn't want viewers to think that
the sonic screwdriver was a weapon.
Copy !req
25. He might have been even more alarmed had
he read Robert Holmes's original idea.
Copy !req
26. In the storyline, the Doctor
has a Very Pistol with him (presumably
acquired from the SS Bernice).
Copy !req
27. When one of the Drashigs lunges for
them, the Doctor fires a signal flare
into its open mouth.
Copy !req
28. The Drashig contorts in agony, and when
the rest of the pack arrive, they tear
the wounded creature to pieces.
Copy !req
29. Among the "Special Requirements"
for filming on the marshes were:
Copy !req
30. Waders, a small boat,
a large quantity of towels, lifelines,
ropes and 33 life jackets.
Copy !req
31. We'll come back
to those life jackets later...
Copy !req
32. Notice Jo's remarkable
self-drying trousers!
Copy !req
33. Roger Liminton
Was briefly interviewed about his work
in the 1973 Doctor Who Special
Copy !req
34. produced by the Radio Times to mark
the tenth anniversary of the programme.
Copy !req
35. He was pictured with the cardboard
set model of the Inter Minorian city.
Copy !req
36. He explained: "One of the most exciting
things I had to do was the inside
of a piece of gigantic circuitry,
Copy !req
37. "which the Doctor and Jo had to climb
around on, looking miniaturised.
Copy !req
38. "I based that design on
a tiny printed circuit which gave lots
of jutting ledges to clamber on."
Copy !req
39. Here, Jo namechecks the planned title
for the story - 'Peepshow'.
Copy !req
40. In late November 1971,
as Robert Holmes was preparing
the scripts for the four episodes,
Copy !req
41. he jokingly sent Terrance Dicks
a cutting from the small ads
of a London newspaper.
Copy !req
42. Placed by a magazine called Mentor,
it read:
Copy !req
43. "Freelance writers wanted for magazine.
Knowledge of fetishes and erotica
an advantage."
Copy !req
44. "A lucrative new market
for the inventive fiction writer?"
Hinted Holmes.
Copy !req
45. "Thanks for the enclosed ad,"
replied Dicks.
Copy !req
46. "My script 'The Secret Sex Life of
Dr Who' is already on its way to Mentor.
Copy !req
47. "I'll spare you the details but it is
sufficient to say that it's not only
hearts that he has two of!"
Copy !req
48. The Doctor rather seems to be forgetting
here that he travels in a time machine,
Copy !req
49. so they could easily be in a period
prior to the banning of the Miniscopes.
Copy !req
50. He clearly doesn't know in what year
they've landed,
Copy !req
51. otherwise he'd have known that
they weren't really on the SS Bernice
as soon as they stepped from the TARDIS.
Copy !req
52. Jon Pertwee recounted the making of
'Carnival of Monsters' in his 1996 book,
I Am The Doctor.
Copy !req
53. While rehearsing the chase scene inside
the Scope's workings, he recalled,
Copy !req
54. his boot skidded on the smooth floor
as he turned a corner.
Copy !req
55. This sent him crashing into a row
of multi-coloured Perspex tubes
that made up part of the set.
Copy !req
56. Listen carefully to the end
of Pletrac's speech here.
Copy !req
57. Peter Halliday actually had one more
line to say - "In that way we dispose
of the entire problem."
Copy !req
58. Terence Lodge came in too early
with his "Agreed", so Halliday
only gets out the first word.
Copy !req
59. Jo's opening line, "They're still
following," was cut from the beginning
of this scene.
Copy !req
60. If you look carefully, you can spot that
they've gone through the scene
several times already.
Copy !req
61. Look at all the dirty marks around
the "ladder" section of the set.
Copy !req
62. Among the amendments which Robert Holmes
made to his storyline
Copy !req
63. The sub-plot centred around X10's desire
to usurp his older brother, X8,
President of the Odronocracy.
Copy !req
64. X8 is attempting to lift the planet's
"iron curtain" and increase
galactic trade, travel and culture.
Copy !req
65. The very fact that such a thing could
happen under the benevolent regime
of X8, X10 calculates,
Copy !req
66. will be enough to start an uproar among
the nervous Odrons and bring about
the President's downfall.
Copy !req
67. Michael Wisher had already
appeared in Doctor Who a few times.
Copy !req
68. He was reporter John Wakefield
in 'The Ambassadors of Death' (1970).
Copy !req
69. Barry Letts cast him as Rex Farrell
in 'Terror of the Autons' (1971).
Copy !req
70. He supplied Dalek voices
in 'Frontier in Space',
Copy !req
71. 'Planet of the Daleks'
and 'Death to the Daleks',
Copy !req
72. and then created the role of Davros,
the crippled scientist
in 'Genesis of the Daleks' (1975)
Copy !req
73. In Tom Baker's first two seasons
as the Doctor, he also played
Copy !req
74. the Vogan scientist Magrik
in 'Revenge of the Cybermen'
and Morelli in 'Planet of Evil'.
Copy !req
75. Michael Wisher died in 1995.
Copy !req
76. The "Great Space Plague" that Kalik
speaks of here was enlarged upon
by Holmes in his outline amendments.
Copy !req
77. "The Odron civilisation was almost ended
in 16013rec
Copy !req
78. "by the accidental importation of an
alien bug in a cargo of Jacrac yananas,
Copy !req
79. "since which ancient date the Odrons
have become the most insular planet
in the galaxy."
Copy !req
80. "Jo and the Doctor stand
with a metal abyss before them.
Copy !req
81. "In front there is some form of
mechanism - a huge stationary cog wheel.
Copy !req
82. "It will then be comparatively easy
to shin across the central spindle
to the far side of the shaft.
Copy !req
83. "By this time there is no choice,
anyway. The Drashigs are already bashing
dents in the solid steel behind them.
Copy !req
84. "The Doctor jumps onto the wheel
and balances there,
ready to catch Jo should she slip.
Copy !req
85. "She does, but he catches her.
Copy !req
86. "Unfortunately, their combined weight
on the extreme edge of the cogwheel
is enough to start it moving.
Copy !req
87. "It swings downward, gathering speed,
and they see the meshing teeth of
another cog waiting to grind them up..."
Copy !req
88. The term "lateral thinking"
first appeared six years before the
transmission of 'Carnival of Monsters'.
Copy !req
89. It was coined by the creativity expert,
Edward de Bono, in his book
The Use of Lateral Thinking (1967).
Copy !req
90. In the script, Jo concludes her thoughts
by confirming,
"When in doubt, go sideways!"
Copy !req
91. This is the internal layout
of the Scope's circuitry that we saw
the Doctor sketching earlier on.
Copy !req
92. It's a mystery how he manages to
work out from his drawing that there's
another way back onto the ship!
Copy !req
93. The conclusion of this scene is cut
from the transmitted episode.
Copy !req
94. When Vorg says that
they'll lose the collection
if he shuts off the support system,
Copy !req
95. Shirna replies,
"Frankly, I wouldn't mind if we did."
Copy !req
96. "You're unhinged," retorts Vorg.
"You don't know what you're saying."
Copy !req
97. As Vorg complains that the Scope
contains a "unique and priceless
collection", Shirna replies:
Copy !req
98. "Oh, come off it! That is a cheap,
rubbishy box of fourth-rate life forms.
Copy !req
99. "No wonder those terribly distinguished
Minorian gentlemen didn't give us
permission to enter their planet."
Copy !req
100. "Terribly distinguished? Them!"
Says Vorg, shocked.
Copy !req
101. "In a grey sort of way" replies Shirna.
Copy !req
102. As scripted, Major Daly was
to have continued, "The old briny
might be all right for fish but..."
Copy !req
103. The term "doggo" means to be concealed
or to stay hidden.
Copy !req
104. "Memsahib" was a term used
formally in colonial India as a form or
respectful address for a European woman.
Copy !req
105. It was an order to clear
the studio floor because
everyone was being too noisy.
Copy !req
106. Pertwee protested that
this was a little drastic,
Copy !req
107. A zip bag with ticking noise
coming from within.
Copy !req
108. One of the effects assistants puppeting
the Drashigs refused to leave,
Copy !req
109. so Pertwee explained to him
the real reason why they had to go.
Copy !req
110. Despite this admission, the studio
was cleared and the bag checked before
they could all continue working.
Copy !req
111. Claire Daly is played
by Jenny McCracken.
Copy !req
112. Her television career included
a brace of Dickensian nurses:
Copy !req
113. Polly Toodle in 1983's Dombey and Son,
produced by Barry Letts,
Copy !req
114. and the faithful Peggotty in the
1986 production of David Copperfield,
produced by Terrance Dicks.
Copy !req
115. As scripted, Andrews was to say at
this point, "The poor child's deranged.
All those weeks in a dark hold..."
Copy !req
116. "How do you happen to know my name?"
Asks Major Daly.
Copy !req
117. "We've been introduced, Major," says Jo.
Copy !req
118. At this point, they hear the roar
of the Drashig in the forward hold.
Copy !req
119. Visiting the set on the day these scenes
were recorded was Keith Miller,
who ran the Doctor Who Fan Club.
Copy !req
120. In DWFC Monthly #14,
Keith recalled how this particular scene
didn't quite go as planned.
Copy !req
121. "The practice shots rang through the air
with John and the sailors
firing at the monster,
Copy !req
122. "but there was one little chap there
who was going berserk!
Copy !req
123. "Barry, who was directing
this particular adventure,
as well as producing it,
Copy !req
124. "wondered what on earth this little man
was up to, so they had to take him off
and replace him!
Copy !req
125. "He was still jumping up and down
when they took him away..."
Copy !req
126. Recalling the event for these subtitles,
Keith recalls:
Copy !req
127. "Katy Manning thought the whole thing
was hilarious!"
Copy !req
128. With the location filming taking place
on the River Medway as well as
the Essex tidal marshes,
Copy !req
129. it was deemed essential that
life jackets be made available
for all the cast and crew.
Copy !req
130. However, at the end of the location
filming, only 25 of them were returned.
Copy !req
131. Property organiser F. J. Holland decided
that the loss would have to be paid
for by the production office.
Copy !req
132. The claim was disputed: Karilyn Collier
insisted that all 33 jackets were put on
board the prop van for return to London.
Copy !req
133. Holland refused to accept this and duly
made plans to charge the production
£62.40 for the loss,
Copy !req
134. stating that the assistant floor manager
was responsible for all safety equipment
until it was returned.
Copy !req
135. The operative stated that all the
life jackets save two were safely
returned back to the BBC
Copy !req
136. after which they were immediately
dispatched out to another production.
Copy !req
137. The outcome of the dispute
was never recorded.
Copy !req
138. You may remember that
the RFA Robert Dundas was about
to be broken up for scrap.
Copy !req
139. The film crew were told that they could
help themselves to any of the fitments
they wanted, with one exception.
Copy !req
140. The one thing they were asked
to leave alone was the ship's compass
in the binnacle.
Copy !req
141. Jon Pertwee had served in the Navy,
so he was aware that the vessel
would also carry a spare compass.
Copy !req
142. Figuring that this would be fair game,
he located the spare on the bridge.
Copy !req
143. It was under a wooden bench-seat -
but was swiftly wrapped in paper
and placed in his bag.
Copy !req
144. A while later, the vessel's owners
complained to Barry Letts.
Copy !req
145. Someone had walked off with the compass
from the bridge!
Copy !req
146. Rather guiltily, Pertwee secretly
returned his booty to the bench-seat
from whence he'd taken it,
Copy !req
147. only to find out later on that
they didn't mean the spare compass
he had found.
Copy !req
148. Someone had whipped the main compass
in the binnacle - the one
they'd been asked not to touch!
Copy !req
149. Jon Pertwee later recounted that,
after hearing him tell the story
at a Doctor Who convention,
Copy !req
150. stuntman Terry Walsh confessed
to having taken the compass.
Copy !req
151. However, there is no indication
that Terry Walsh was ever aboard
the Robert Dundas.
Copy !req
152. He had been at the filming at Tillingham
Marshes, but he went home
before the unit moved to Chatham.
Copy !req
153. In his memoirs of working on Doctor Who,
Who and Me, published in 2007,
Barry Letts explained
Copy !req
154. that Jon Pertwee had a habit
of embellishing tales for an audience,
Copy !req
155. and that his "editing" of various
stories could be rather "flagrant"!
Copy !req
156. Aboard the SS Bernice,
the Doctor says he needs
"about a dozen fathoms" of rope.
Copy !req
157. A fathom is the unit of length used
to measure the depth of water.
One fathom equals six feet,
Copy !req
158. so 12 fathoms
would equal 72 feet of rope.
Copy !req
159. Originally, the script specified
"fifty fathoms" or 300 feet of rope.
Copy !req
160. Rather too much for the Doctor to carry!
Copy !req
161. Cut from this part of the episode
was the Doctor being attacked
by a Drashig at the top of the shaft.
Copy !req
162. As he ties the rope, he is spotted
by a Drashig, which charges towards him.
Copy !req
163. The Doctor's foot catches in the coil
of rope and he falls, tangled,
back into the shaft,
Copy !req
164. and the Drashig shoots straight over
the precipice to its death.
Copy !req
165. The Doctor disentangles himself
and climbs down the rope.
Copy !req
166. So the Drashig we see at the bottom
of the shaft is the one that fell, not
the one blasted by Andrews's dynamite.
Copy !req
167. When we left Robert Holmes's
original storyline,
the Doctor and Jo were in peril,
Copy !req
168. negotiating a huge set
of now-moving cogs in the shaft.
Copy !req
169. The Doctor tries to distribute
his weight out across the cogwheel
in an effort to restore its balance.
Copy !req
170. Eventually, the movement stops
and they both make their way over
to escape on the far side.
Copy !req
171. So why is it that only the Doctor
escapes in the finished episode?
Copy !req
172. Well, not a pleasant change, I'm afraid.
He's certain to put you under arrest.
Copy !req
173. Well, last time he was too busy
to see me.
Copy !req
174. Last time?
Copy !req
175. Well, yes, when I was put in your cabin,
Major Daly.
Copy !req
176. No, wait a minute.
No, that wasn't last time.
Copy !req
177. That was the time before.
Copy !req
178. Oh, can't any of you remember anything?
Copy !req
179. There it is again, Andrews!
Copy !req
180. And it did come from the forward hold!
Copy !req
181. I don't believe it!
- Fire!
Copy !req
182. - Where are they going?
- To the guard block.
Copy !req
183. One ordered them to take their repasts.
Copy !req
184. But regulations state that
no eradicator must be left unattended.
Copy !req
185. If there's a heat build-up,
it could engage accidentally!
Copy !req
186. But this one won't, Orum, will it?
Copy !req
187. What is it, man?
Copy !req
188. Sir!
Copy !req
189. Right, get going.
It's through into the outer hold, sir.
Copy !req
190. Well, where on earth
did it come from, man?
Copy !req
191. Out of the bilges?
Copy !req
192. It's as big as an elephant, sir, bigger.
Copy !req
193. Bosun, where's that gun?
Copy !req
194. I know where there's something
even more useful, sir.
Copy !req
195. In the forward hold, dynamite.
Copy !req
196. Psst! Psst!
Copy !req
197. President Zarb
has granted special powers.
Copy !req
198. The Lurmans and their machine
are to be deported.
Copy !req
199. - Excellent!
- And the Tellurian vessel?
Copy !req
200. Oh, that too can be loaded
and jettisoned in deep space,
Copy !req
201. unless, of course, the Lurmans wish
to enter a claim of ownership.
Copy !req
202. Agreed.
Copy !req
203. Where are the functionaries?
Why is the eradicator unattended?
Copy !req
204. Uh, one ordered them to leave it.
Copy !req
205. You ordered them? You?
Copy !req
206. They had been on duty continually
for two periods.
Copy !req
207. You have exceeded your authority, Kalik!
Copy !req
208. - There will be an enquiry.
- Very well.
Copy !req
209. - But where are the functionaries?
- In the guard room.
Copy !req
210. Well, fetch them! Fetch them at once!
Copy !req
211. From the time this tribunal
is dissolved, Kalik,
Copy !req
212. you will be suspended
pending my official report.
Copy !req
213. - Is that clear?
- Perfectly, Chairman Pletrac.
Copy !req
214. Perfectly clear.
Copy !req
215. Come on.
JO: But the Doctor's down there!
Copy !req
216. - No place for the fair sex, my dear.
- I must go!
Copy !req
217. Yes, please, in a lifeboat,
the pair of you.
Copy !req
218. I'm not leaving here.
Copy !req
219. Ah, the very thing. Give it to me, man.
Copy !req
220. Give it to me, man. Quiet!
Copy !req
221. Look out below, Major Daly!
Copy !req
222. I'm sorry, my dear,
I'm sure the Captain won't be long.
Copy !req
223. By Jove,
that beast took a bit of stopping, eh?
Copy !req
224. Well, we could all do
with a chocker peg, what?
Copy !req
225. I've never seen anything like it.
Have you?
Copy !req
226. Well, actually, I have.
There's rather a lot of them about.
Copy !req
227. Yes, strange waters these, you know?
Copy !req
228. Oh, look, please,
I've got to find the Doctor.
Copy !req
229. Ah, you feeling a bit umpty?
I'm not at all surprised!
Copy !req
230. No, man, don't!
You'll blow us all to bits! Don't!
Copy !req
231. No, man, no!
Copy !req
232. Oh, dear, oh, dear, oh, dear.
Copy !req
233. That's done it.
Copy !req
234. - Look at those dials, Vorg.
What about them?
Copy !req
235. They're suddenly dropping back,
all of them! All the circuits!
Copy !req
236. - They can't be.
- Well, look for yourself.
Copy !req
237. It's a general power failure.
Copy !req
238. Don't be ridiculous.
The power system's fully protected.
Copy !req
239. - Well?
- Well, it can't be a power failure.
Copy !req
240. The generators.
Copy !req
241. The generators were built by
the old Eternity Perpetual Company.
Copy !req
242. They're designed to last forever.
That's why the company went bankrupt.
Copy !req
243. Well, they're still dropping.
They'll be down to critical soon.
Copy !req
244. I can see that.
Copy !req
245. Well, that's that then.
That's the scope finished.
Copy !req
246. There should be enough power
already in the circuits
Copy !req
247. to keep it functioning for a time.
Copy !req
248. - How long?
- I don't know.
Copy !req
249. Nothing like this
has ever happened before.
Copy !req
250. Long enough to repair it?
Copy !req
251. - Maybe, if I still had that handbook.
- You've not lost it?
Copy !req
252. Oh, hello, old chap, sundowner?
Copy !req
253. Oh, not for me, sir?
- Claire?
Copy !req
254. No, thank you, daddy. John and I
are just going to take a walk.
Copy !req
255. Oh. 20 times round the deck is a mile...
Copy !req
256. You've forgotten, haven't you?
You've forgotten everything!
Copy !req
257. - Upon my soul!
- Who are you?
Copy !req
258. Here we go again.
Copy !req
259. You're not a passenger.
Where did you come from?
Copy !req
260. - How do you know I'm not a passenger?
- What?
Copy !req
261. Well, since none of you can remember
Copy !req
262. more than about 10 minutes ago,
how do you know?
Copy !req
263. Can't you remember shooting the monster
about 20 minutes ago?
Copy !req
264. What monster?
Copy !req
265. I was with you when you shot it down,
Major!
Copy !req
266. Oh, poor young girl.
Must have a touch of the sun, what?
Copy !req
267. Maybe. Still, we can't have stowaways
wandering about.
Copy !req
268. - No.
- Better get after her.
Copy !req
269. Watch out for the monster!
Copy !req
270. The power's still dropping, Vorg.
Copy !req
271. - What are you doing?
- I wish I knew.
Copy !req
272. Oh! Routine maintenance, your worship.
Copy !req