1. "Fear reigns in San Martino
as the Hooded Terror seeks
further victims." (Radio Times)
Copy !req
2. This episode was first shown
on 11 September, 1976.
Copy !req
3. It was seen by 9.8 million people.
Copy !req
4. The Doctor's upcoming escape
from the headsman was originally
going to be a lot simpler.
Copy !req
5. As written, he just lunges
at the guards, pushes them off
the scaffold, and makes an equine exit.
Copy !req
6. But Tom Baker was always keen
to find inventive uses
for the Doctor's scarf.
Copy !req
7. The scarf first became important
in the pre-shooting revision,
when the execution was still being done
with an axe and block.
Copy !req
8. The cliffhanger was planned
as a close-up of the Doctor's head
on the block.
Copy !req
9. The axe thuds down -
and chops the scarf in two.
The Doctor has moved his neck
out of harm's way!
Copy !req
10. The changed staging meant
the scarf was reprieved -
so it could be made useful
in other ways.
Copy !req
11. The Doctor spends longer
on horseback in the script.
Copy !req
12. Before dismounting, he gallops
past the guards we're about to see.
Copy !req
13. "That fellow thinks he's at the races,"
the guard was scripted to say.
Copy !req
14. During filming, coloured felt was used
to mask off Portmeirion's
modern windows -
or most of them, at least.
Copy !req
15. This market sequence
was a late addition,
written in to suit the location
after the pre-production recce.
Copy !req
16. Originally, the Doctor was
to steal bread rather than an orange.
Copy !req
17. Parts of the chase were filmed
with a handheld camera.
Copy !req
18. As well as adding new scenes,
the pre-production revisions
also entailed some restructuring
and reordering of the action.
Copy !req
19. For example,
this sequence switched episodes.
Copy !req
20. Originally it formed part of
a multiple cliffhanger
at the end of Part One.
Copy !req
21. The Brethren found their masks
uncomfortably heavy to wear.
Copy !req
22. "Ades'is Latin for "be present",
and is customarily said in ceremonies
summoning up the Devil.
Copy !req
23. Peter Walshe (on the right) did another
Doctor Who for Rodney Bennett in 1975:
'The Sontaran Experiment'.
Copy !req
24. Car noise ruined an earlier take
of this shot.
Copy !req
25. In the script, the cautious pikeman is,
more conventionally, the older one.
Copy !req
26. A cut line says that the catacombs
have a "stench of evil".
Copy !req
27. A stench of polystyrene would
be more accurate: That's what
the scenery was mostly made of.
Copy !req
28. The upcoming rescue worried Tom Baker:
How could he possibly do as scripted,
and sneak up on the altar undetected?
Copy !req
29. Rodney Bennett kept his camera
angles tight, and hoped viewers
wouldn't think too hard
about what was going on out of shot.
Copy !req
30. 'Doom of Destiny' went though several
changes of title before it became
'The Masque of Mandragora'.
Copy !req
31. Late in pre-production,
they decided to focus
on the underground setting,
Copy !req
32. so in mid-April, 1976,
the serial was renamed
'Catacombs of Death'.
Copy !req
33. On location in May, the cast and crew
thought they were working on
'The Secret of the Labyrinth'.
Copy !req
34. But that still wasn't right,
and the final title was decided
during the rehearsal period
later that month.
Copy !req
35. They were thinking of
The Masque of the Red Death,
Copy !req
36. the 1964 Roger Corman film version
of Edgar Allan Poe's 1845 short story.
Copy !req
37. Hinchcliffe was watching
a late-night BBC showing of the film
on 12 January, 1976.
Copy !req
38. It helped to define part of what
he hoped to achieve with the serial
he was already discussing
with Louis Marks.
Copy !req
39. A pre-production decision
to drug Sarah for the sacrifice
resolved a problem with this scene.
Copy !req
40. In the script,
she's awake and terrified.
Copy !req
41. But does she try to escape?
Copy !req
42. At first, it was planned to have
the cult leader dressed in black
like the others.
Copy !req
43. But black robes would absorb the light,
and they wanted him to stand out.
Copy !req
44. Ten boxes of petal confetti
were supplied for the Brethren
to scatter.
Copy !req
45. As first written, the temple
was to be restored above ground
as well as below.
Model footage was proposed.
Copy !req
46. In the end, they made the temple
entirely subterranean
and used a much older theatrical trick:
Copy !req
47. "Pepper's Ghost",
devised in the 1860s by John Pepper.
Copy !req
48. The pristine temple is painted on gauze,
and is only visible
when lit from the front.
Copy !req
49. Previously, the gauze was backlit,
so we could only see the black drapes
behind it.
Copy !req
50. In the script, the guard implies
that Giuliano should know
the cause of death because
of his "interest in the new learning".
Copy !req
51. "The new learning does not always
have answers," replies the young Duke.
Copy !req
52. "It means only that we must
throw away old beliefs, like
witchcraft and sorcery and demons,
and trust to our own intelligence."
Copy !req
53. Giuliano and Marco were known on set
as "Gert and Daisy",
Copy !req
54. alluding to a 1940s comedy double act
played by Elsie and Doris Waters.
Copy !req
55. Once Hinchcliffe had settled
on a Renaissance period setting,
Louis Marks (born 1928)
Was the obvious choice of scriptwriter.
Copy !req
56. He had more than 15 years'
experience in television,
working as a script editor and producer
as well as a writer.
Copy !req
57. He was also an expert
on Renaissance Italy.
Copy !req
58. In 1954, as a historian at Oxford,
he had submitted a doctoral thesis
with a typically catchy academic title:
Copy !req
59. 'The Development of the Institutions
of Public Finance in Florence
During the Last Sixty Years of
the Republic, c. 1470-1530'.
Copy !req
60. The script draws heavily on
his specialist knowledge of the period,
on many different levels.
Copy !req
61. The name Mandragora derives
from the English form of
the Italian word mandragola.
Copy !req
62. It refers to a mandrake root,
which was used during the Renaissance
as a sleep-inducing drug.
Copy !req
63. Its narcotic properties are central
to the plot of the Florentine comedy,
La Mandragola (1518).
Copy !req
64. Louis Marks used the name
as a coded allusion to
the play's author: Machiavelli.
Copy !req
65. The scripted stage direction here
reads, wryly:
Copy !req
66. "Resistance is useless."
Copy !req
67. The cult's leader "seems held
in an ecstasy of paralysis,"
says the script.
Copy !req
68. The light column effect
combines the output of two cameras.
Copy !req
69. Camera 3 shoots the altar,
while Camera 4 is on the other side
of the studio,
Copy !req
70. taking a defocussed shot
of an Astra lamp (or, as it
is better known, a lava lamp).
Copy !req
71. The pre-recorded voice of the Titan
is supplied by Peter Tuddenham
(1918-2007).
Copy !req
72. He worked extensively in radio
from the 1950s, notably on the
soap operas Mrs Dale's Diary
and Waggoner's Walk.
Copy !req
73. He'd been another disembodied voice
in the 1975 Doctor Who serial,
'The Ark in Space', also directed
by Rodney Bennett.
Copy !req
74. When cast to be seen as well as heard,
he often played doctors:
Copy !req
75. He took a medical role in
Rodney Bennett's classic serial,
North and South (1975),
Copy !req
76. and another in the same director's 1978
J. M. Barrie biography, The Lost Boys,
produced by Louis Marks.
Copy !req
77. More doctoring came his way
in the spy drama Quiller (1975)
And the gentler Nanny (1981-2),
Copy !req
78. but he was best known as the voices
of the various resident computers
in Blake's 7 (1978-81):
Zen, Orac and Slave.
Copy !req
79. In the script, the voice also orders
the elimination of the only other
being on Earth who knows
of their purposes.
Copy !req
80. "He is called the Doctor."
Copy !req
81. The Titans of Mandragora aren't
the only ones after the Doctor.
Copy !req
82. After this sequence followed a cut scene
in which the Captain reports
to Count Federico on the progress
of the search.
Copy !req
83. The Doctor has evidently been seen
since he emerged from the catacombs,
but he won't evade capture for long,
Copy !req
84. because now he is even more distinctive,
with an accomplice at his side
"dressed in strange, foreign garb".
Copy !req
85. Federico orders that they are to be
executed as soon as they are caught:
Copy !req
86. "At any hour of the day or night,
they are to be taken straight
to the block!"
Copy !req
87. "Whatever happened to that
old-time Italian courtesy?"
Asks Sarah in the script.
Copy !req
88. There wasn't really a Duchy of
San Martino. (The similarly named
San Marino, in the Apennines,
was and is a democratic republic.)
Copy !req
89. However, some of the characters
are named after people and places
of Renaissance Italy.
Copy !req
90. These include
Giuliano de' Medici (1479-1516)
And the Convent of San Marco.
Copy !req
91. Then there's Federico da Montefeltro
(1422-82), a somewhat more enlightened
ruler than his namesake in this serial.
Copy !req
92. There is an English prototype
for San Martino's indecisive scholar
prince and his wicked uncle:
Copy !req
93. Hamlet and Claudius
in Shakespeare's play of 1600.
Copy !req
94. When making the serial,
the cast were not conscious
of the script's Hamlet associations,
Copy !req
95. but, in later publicity interviews,
Philip Hinchcliffe emphasised
the "positively Shakespearian" ambience.
Copy !req
96. Gareth Armstrong (born 1948),
who plays Giuliano, is now best known
as a Shakespearian actor.
Copy !req
97. 'The Masque of Mandragora'
was his next job after a season
with the Royal Shakespeare Company,
Copy !req
98. including parts in The Merry Wives
of Windsor, Richard III, and Hamlet
(but playing Rosencrantz,
not the Prince).
Copy !req
99. In 1978, he was one of the voice artists
who dubbed Monkey,
the Japanese comic fantasy,
for British consumption.
Copy !req
100. He later worked as a director,
and founded the Made in Wales Stage
Company to promote new Welsh writing.
Copy !req
101. He is also the author of Shylock (1998),
a one-man show he conceived
after playing the role
in The Merchant of Venice.
Copy !req
102. At a Renaissance court,
very senior noblemen were also
the ruler's personal servants.
Copy !req
103. It was deemed a great honour
to be the one who served the Duke
his wine, not menial work at all.
Copy !req
104. The original choice
to play Count Federico
was a slightly older-looking actor.
Copy !req
105. David Swift (born 1931) was offered
the role on 19 March, but he was
heavily in demand that year.
Copy !req
106. With parts in Within These Walls,
The New Avengers,
and Victorian Scandals,
he just couldn't fit in Doctor Who.
Copy !req
107. So the Count is played instead
by Jon Laurimore, who often
gave his roles a streak
of heavyweight cynicism.
Copy !req
108. His other notable appearances
included a PR man in
The Organization (1972)
And a technician in Space. ; 1999 (1975).
Copy !req
109. Soon afterwards, he played a senator
forced to commit suicide
in I, Claudius (1976).
Copy !req
110. The first name on the list is
King Ferdinand I of Naples
(reigned 1458-94).
Copy !req
111. There wasn't a Duke of Padua:
The city had been ruled by
the republic of Venice since 1405.
Copy !req
112. The Signora of Florence
(in effect, the First Lady) was
Philippina de' Medici until 1492,
Copy !req
113. then Alfonsina de' Medici until
the fall of the Medici dynasty in 1494.
Copy !req
114. We'll come back to the other names
on the list in the next episode.
For now, let's stick
with Florentine history.
Copy !req
115. Hieronymous is the English form
of the Italian name Girolamo.
Copy !req
116. Louis Marks intended a coded allusion
to the fanatical theocrat,
Girolamo Savonarola (1452-98).
Copy !req
117. Savonarola was a Dominican friar
who emerged as the effective ruler
of Florence after the Medicis
were expelled.
Copy !req
118. Like Hieronymous, he found
his apocalyptic statements,
or "prophecies", starting to come true.
Copy !req
119. He regarded himself as God's messenger
preaching to a corrupt land,
and spearheaded a religious revival.
Copy !req
120. His preaching whipped up the people
into a frenzy of superstitious,
fundamentalist penitence.
Copy !req
121. This culminated in the
Bonfire of the Vanities in 1497,
in which the artefacts of
moral laxity were burned.
Copy !req
122. These included important works
of art, literature and scholarship.
Copy !req
123. His objective was to establish Florence
as a centre of "purity" from which
he could conquer the rest of Italy
in God's name.
Copy !req
124. In the 1950s, when he was still
a postgraduate student,
Louis Marks published a learned essay
on Girolamo Savonarola:
Copy !req
125. 'Savonarola, the Unarmed Prophet',
in the August, 1952 issue
of the journal History Today.
Copy !req
126. For Marks, the story's background
boiled down to a fundamental conflict.
Copy !req
127. He articulated it in human terms
as Savonarola versus Machiavelli.
Copy !req
128. Marks interpreted the Renaissance
as a period of transition between
the two philosophies they represented:
Copy !req
129. Savonarola's obscurantism was superseded
by Machiavelli's rational pragmatism.
Copy !req
130. To understand this clearly, you need
to get rid of a lot of the baggage
that has been loaded onto
the name of Machiavelli.
Copy !req
131. For centuries afterwards, he was reviled
as an amoral schemer
by people who disapproved of
his political philosophy,
Copy !req
132. and also by people
who practised what he preached,
but didn't want it generally known!
Copy !req
133. Marks, however, admired Machiavelli
for his lucidity of thought,
and, in particular, his analysis
of Girolamo Savonarola.
Copy !req
134. But the ascendancy of "Machiavelli"
over "Savonarola", human intellectual
freedom over superstition,
wasn't inevitable.
Copy !req
135. Marks saw the late fifteenth century
as a crucial moment, when history
could have gone either way.
Copy !req
136. And that's why the Titans have brought
the TARDIS to this particular time:
There's a chance for them
to change the future.
Copy !req
137. Notice that Hieronymous's beard
isn't forked in this scene,
Copy !req
138. because he's had it tucked up
underneath the mask, with no chance for
the make-up girl to comb it out again.
Copy !req
139. Hieronymous is played
by Norman Jones (born 1935).
Copy !req
140. He made his West End debut in 1960
as a musical comedy actor,
Copy !req
141. but he later developed a knack
for playing manic, obsessive,
and corrupt characters who are
not quite yet at the edge of madness.
Copy !req
142. He gave notable performances in
this line in Doctor Who (1970),
The Sweeney (1976),
and The XYYMan (1977).
Copy !req
143. Like several other members of
the 'Mandragora' cast,
he had recently worked on
North and South,
Copy !req
144. in which Rodney Bennett cast him
as an industrial labourer.
Copy !req
145. He later gave an uncharacteristically
mild-mannered performance
in The Borgias (1981)
Copy !req
146. As that rarity of the
Italian Renaissance,
a genuinely Christian Pope
(and therefore a doomed one).
Copy !req
147. Barry Newbery's set designs drew heavily
on Italian Renaissance painting.
Copy !req
148. In particular, he looked for inspiration
to the work of the Venetian artist
Vittore Carpaccio (c.1460-1526).
Copy !req
149. The double-arched window in this set
is an exact copy from Carpaccio's
The Dream of St Ursula (c.1495).
Copy !req
150. So historian and television professional
Louis Marks was undoubtedly the
Renaissance man for the writer's job,
Copy !req
151. but this meant Philip Hinchcliffe
had some BBC bureaucracy to negotiate.
Copy !req
152. Marks was also a staff producer
in the Plays Department, so he needed
permission to write
for Doctor Who as well.
Copy !req
153. Story discussions were already
well under way on 6 January, 1976,
when Hinchcliffe did the paperwork.
Copy !req
154. This was typical of the BBC
in the 1970s: Producers made
the artistic decisions and getting them
authorised was a formality.
Copy !req
155. Marks eventually signed his contract
to write the scripts on 6 February,
Copy !req
156. but he only got formal permission
to do so on 10 February,
four days later.
Copy !req
157. That was at least five months
after a Renaissance serial
had first been mooted:
Copy !req
158. It had been eagerly anticipated
by many of those involved,
including the designer and lead actress,
since October, 1975.
Copy !req
159. This is Take 2 of this shot.
Problems with Giuliano's cloak
made Take 1 unusable.
Copy !req
160. The temple ruins are made
of lightweight polystyrene.
Copy !req
161. This is a retake, too: Elisabeth Sladen
lost her footing on the first attempt.
Copy !req
162. The owner of Portmeirion, architect
Sir Clough Williams-Ellis, was present
when this scene was filmed on 5 May.
Copy !req
163. He'd been to the execution the day
before and enjoyed himself so much,
that he came back
to see the temple ruins.
Copy !req
164. Barry Newbery's classical columns
caught his architect's eye.
Copy !req
165. He was always on the lookout
for new additions to his quirky town,
like the Buddha in the portico,
Copy !req
166. so he asked the crew to leave them
in place after the filming.
Copy !req
167. No could do:
One good puff of Welsh wind
and they'd have blown away!
Copy !req
168. You've seen this set before,
but differently dressed.
Copy !req
169. In the last episode, it was the bedroom
where Giuliano's father died.
Copy !req
170. The original plan was to represent
the forces being disturbed by
the Doctor using sound alone.
Copy !req
171. At first we hear only
his two hearts beating loudly.
Then other, alien sounds break in.
Copy !req
172. A tuning fork in his pocket starts
to vibrate. He tries to throw it away,
but it sticks to his hand.
Copy !req
173. Something similar had happened
to him the year before,
in 'Terror of the Zygons'.
Copy !req
174. In fact, Eratostenes proved
experimentally that the world was round,
not flat, as early as 220 BC.
Copy !req
175. Empirical proof took a little longer
to come in, with Ferdinand Magellan's
circumnavigation of the globe
in 1519-22.
Copy !req
176. During pre-production,
the episode was planned to end here.
Copy !req
177. This replaced an earlier cliffhanger,
Copy !req
178. which picked up on the Titan's command
that nobody else must stand
in Hieronymous's place at the altar.
Copy !req
179. When Sarah does so, she finds herself
trapped inside the column of light.
Copy !req
180. Also seen in this episode were:
Copy !req
181. David Glynn Rogers (Giuliano's Servant)
Copy !req
182. George Ballantine (Federico's servant)
Copy !req
183. Uncredited production contributors
Copy !req
184. Lan Brindle (Film Ops Manager)
Copy !req
185. Ken Bomphrey (Effects Assistant)
Dave Chapman (Inlay Operator)
Copy !req
186. Henry Barber (Technical Manager)
Graham Giles (Vision Mixer)
Copy !req
187. Terry Elms (Film Sound Assistant)
Copy !req
188. Carolyn Buisuinne,
Hadsera Coovadia (Make-Up Assistants)
Copy !req
189. Les McCallum,
John Neild (Design Assistants)
Copy !req
190. Jennie Betts (Facilities Bookings)
Copy !req