1. This episode was first shown
on 5 March 1977,
Copy !req
2. All the script asks for in this scene
is "a glimpse of something grey and huge
in the tunnel",
Copy !req
3. followed by the impact
of "something heavy" hitting the ladder
"with shuddering impact".
Copy !req
4. There was a crowd of onlookers
when this sequence was shot.
Copy !req
5. One of them made himself unpopular
by shouting "Go to it, Doctor!"
During a take.
Copy !req
6. In the script, the Doctor's retort is:
"You can't get a field howitzer
down a sewer."
Copy !req
7. The scripted scene ends with the Doctor
explaining that they need a plan
of the sewers to locate another way in.
Copy !req
8. In the script,
Jago takes Casey even less seriously
than on screen.
Copy !req
9. He's too busy admiring the cellar walls:
"Not a spot of damp.
Sound as the day they were built."
Copy !req
10. Casey is played by Chris Gannon,
who specialised in Irish roles,
Copy !req
11. ranging from comic leprechauns
in such series
as Rumpole of the Bailey (1978)
Copy !req
12. To an IRA commander in Gangsters (1976).
Copy !req
13. He had also appeared
in the BBC's drama-documentary series
Jack the Ripper (1973).
Copy !req
14. but it appears
on a gentleman's letterhead
rather than a lady's glove.
Copy !req
15. Sergeant Kyle is played
by the Scottish actor
David McKail.
Copy !req
16. He had recently played the sixth suspect
in the BBC's Lord Peter Wimsey serial
'Five Red Herrings' (1975).
Copy !req
17. In the script,
Leela incriminates herself here:
Copy !req
18. "I killed him," she says,
and the Doctor
physically hustles her out.
Copy !req
19. At the time this serial was being made,
a lot of the routine paperwork
in the Doctor Who office
Copy !req
20. "Jago almost leaves his skin,"
says the script here.
Copy !req
21. He then infers that Chang has come back
"to practise some new piece
of preternatural prestidigitation".
Copy !req
22. 'The Talons of Weng-Chiang' was made
at a time when Doctor Who's budget
was at its highest in real terms.
Copy !req
23. The make-up department quoted £4,351.
Copy !req
24. The Outside Broadcast facilities
for location taping
were quoted at £9,598.
Copy !req
25. The costume department quoted £6,640.
Copy !req
26. The design department,
which supplied the props and scenery,
quoted £15,915.
Copy !req
27. These figures, remember,
are not necessarily the actual costs,
Copy !req
28. they're just what the departments
budgeted for those costs.
Copy !req
29. In reality, things turned out
a little more expensive...
Copy !req
30. In the script,
Chang mutters, "Occidental pig,"
as he watches Jago return to his office.
Copy !req
31. Among his notable recent contributions
was the majestic Time Lord theme
in 'The Deadly Assassin' (1976).
Copy !req
32. He later specialised
in performing baroque keyboard music.
Copy !req
33. His 1970s film work included
Stanley Kubrick's Barry Lyndon (1975)
And Revenge of the Pink Panther (1978).
Copy !req
34. The sound effects here
were dubbed on afterwards
Copy !req
35. because the trapdoor
is really made of wood.
Copy !req
36. The script describes this
as a "Phantom of the Opera set
with Chinoiserie dressing".
Copy !req
37. As Doctor Who's script editor,
Robert Holmes encouraged writers
to pastiche well-known horror scenarios.
Copy !req
38. In this serial
he evokes Gaston Leroux's novel
The Phantom of the Opera (1911),
Copy !req
39. which had been made into
three classic horror films
between 1925 and 1962.
Copy !req
40. Leroux's story features a masked villain
with his lair in the sewers
beneath a theatre,
Copy !req
41. though unlike Weng-Chiang
he's not a serial killer:
He only abducts one girl.
Copy !req
42. That aspect of the plot owes more
to white slavery and Jack the Ripper,
Copy !req
43. while Chang is a variant
on Sax Rohmer's Fu Manchu,
Copy !req
44. the fiendish oriental villain
of fifteen books
published between 1913 and 1959.
Copy !req
45. Fu also appeared in five horror films
between 1965 and 1968,
played by Christopher Lee.
Copy !req
46. The first of these
was The Face of Fu Manchu,
Copy !req
47. which was shown by the BBC
on 12 March 1975.
Copy !req
48. It has several elements in common
with 'The Talons of Weng-Chiang'.
Copy !req
49. and he is abetted
by a band of murderous,
devoted fanatics.
Copy !req
50. Meanwhile, the hero's sidekick,
Dr Petrie, is a pathologist,
Copy !req
51. just like Professor Litefoot.
Copy !req
52. If you didn't spot the mortuary's
electrical sockets in Part 1,
here's another chance.
Copy !req
53. There's a small one in his next line.
The Doctor was supposed to say
Copy !req
54. "I think so."
Copy !req
55. The exchange of dialogue coming up
parodies a line in Oscar Wilde's comedy
The Importance of Being Earnest (1895)
Copy !req
56. Lady Bracknell's response to hearing
that her prospective son-in-law
was an orphan found in...
Copy !req
57. "A handbag?"
Copy !req
58. In fact, there really was a case
of a baby girl found abandoned
in a hatbox,
Copy !req
59. in the Arizona desert
on Christmas Eve 1931.
Copy !req
60. In this shot, can you spot
when the Doctor smells the liquor
on PC Quick's breath?
Copy !req
61. PC Quick is played by Conrad Asquith.
Copy !req
62. He had recently played Little John
in the BBC's anti-heroic version
of Robin Hood (1975).
Copy !req
63. The end of the scene was cut:
Litefoot says
he'd like to pick the Doctor's brains,
Copy !req
64. and Leela says,
"I'm so hungry I could eat an owrus."
Copy !req
65. This was filmed
at Clink Street, Southwark,
on Tuesday 14 December 1976.
Copy !req
66. Filming for the cab interiors
had taken place the day before,
at Ealing Studios.
Copy !req
67. Two cabs were hired for the production,
one for Litefoot and one for Chang.
Copy !req
68. Both were the four-wheeled model
known as a Clarence,
Copy !req
69. The punitive expedition brought an end
to the Second Opium War (1856-60).
Copy !req
70. Peking was shelled by the British
in reprisal for the murder of diplomats
taken hostage by the Chinese.
Copy !req
71. After completing the cab scenes
at Ealing, the crew went to Southwark
for the evening,
Copy !req
72. to film this sequence
at Cardinal Cap Alley on the Bankside.
Copy !req
73. Leela's reaction line
isn't in the script.
Copy !req
74. 'The Talons of Weng-Chiang' began life
as a joint idea by Philip Hinchcliffe
and Robert Holmes.
Copy !req
75. Holmes gave the idea to the experienced
television scriptwriter
Robert Banks Stewart,
Copy !req
76. Stewart developed the story structure
in collaboration
with Holmes and Hinchcliffe,
Copy !req
77. and on 7 May 1976
he was formally commissioned
to write the storyline.
Copy !req
78. Knowing that he'd left the job
in safe hands, Holmes went to Italy
for his first holiday in several years.
Copy !req
79. It didn't go quite according to plan:
On the way home
his wife was taken ill in Germany,
Copy !req
80. Instead there was a note from Stewart
explaining that he had accepted a job
at Thames Television,
Copy !req
81. There was no time to start work
with another writer before the serial
was due to go into production,
Copy !req
82. The pile of hay on the left
is not all that it seems.
Copy !req
83. The scene was filmed
on Thursday 16 December
in Wapping Pier Head Square.
Copy !req
84. Local residents were approached
the weekend before,
Copy !req
85. and asked not to park their cars
in the square
on the night of the filming.
Copy !req
86. Came the night,
there was a Porsche parked prominently
in shot.
Copy !req
87. A frantic search
failed to locate the owner.
Copy !req
88. Designer Roger Murray Leach
solved the problem: Remembering that
Victorian London's horses had to eat,
Copy !req
89. he fixed a tarpaulin over the car
and made a hay mound of it!
Copy !req
90. Watch the Doctor's fingers:
They're making
the spider's legs wriggle.
Copy !req
91. In the script, the Doctor adds that
"emanations of some kind"
are "affecting fauna in the vicinity".
Copy !req
92. Litefoot and Sherlock Holmes
both have a housekeeper
named Mrs Hudson.
Copy !req
93. in the character description
that was issued to writers in 1974
when Tom Baker took over the part.
Copy !req
94. The others were Bernard Shaw
and Professor Quatermass.
Copy !req
95. As a savage, Leela has no concept
of civilised behaviour.
Copy !req
96. Robert Holmes enjoyed
writing scenes like this
which contrasted her barbarian innocence
Copy !req
97. with the civilised conventions
of Victorian times,
as exemplified by Litefoot,
Copy !req
98. who knows it's polite
not to embarrass guests.
Copy !req
99. In reality, Litefoot's house
is a private address in Twickenham,
Copy !req
100. not far from the home
of the serial's director, David Maloney.
Copy !req
101. The exterior scenes there
were filmed on the night
of Wednesday 15 December 1976.
Copy !req
102. Chang is carrying the dummy version
of Mr Sin.
Copy !req
103. Another element of this serial
drawn from literary sources
is Mr Jago's name:
Copy !req
104. In the script, Jago doesn't faint:
He runs away blindly,
and knocks himself out against a pillar.
Copy !req
105. This was quite unusual
for mid-1970s Doctor Who.
Copy !req
106. The costume budget was usually allocated
to the futuristic serials
which needed unique designs.
Copy !req
107. Generic period clothing
would usually be hired
from a theatrical costumier,
Copy !req
108. while modern outfits
would be bought off the peg.
Copy !req
109. Holography is a technique for recording
high-resolution
three-dimensional images.
Copy !req
110. It was originally developed in 1947
by the Hungarian scientist Dennis Gabor.
Copy !req
111. Lasers were first used in the process
in 1964.
Copy !req
112. where Weng-Chiang attacks him
with a chair.
Copy !req
113. This was replaced at a late stage
by the chase through the theatre flies
which you're about to see.
Copy !req
114. The flies are the area over the stage
used to "fly" in scenery from above.
Copy !req
115. At Northampton Repertory Theatre,
the flies were still
in their authentic Victorian condition,
Copy !req
116. Here's Max Faulkner as Weng-Chiang.
Copy !req
117. Here he is-in a curly wig!
Copy !req
118. He'll give us his Leela
in the next episode.
Copy !req
119. In developing the chase sequence,
David Maloney consciously drew material
from The Phantom of the Opera.
Copy !req
120. David Maloney (1933-2006)
Began his career in the 1950s
as an actor in the repertory theatre.
Copy !req
121. He joined the BBC as a floor manager
in the 1960s and worked in that capacity
on The Forsyte Saga (1967).
Copy !req
122. Over the next nine years he directed
a further seven Doctor Who serials,
Copy !req
123. as well as adaptations of classic novels
such as Ivanhoe (1970)
And The Last of the Mohicans (1971).
Copy !req
124. 1977 saw a significant career change
which began on the night
this sequence was filmed.
Copy !req
125. Maloney was told to ring
the Head of the BBC's Drama Department,
Copy !req
126. who offered him a job
producing a new
BBC-1 science fiction series.
Copy !req
127. Maloney accepted
and worked as Blake's 7's producer
for three series (1978-80).
Copy !req
128. And that's why
'The Talons of Weng-Chiang'
was his last work on Doctor Who.
Copy !req
129. Also seen in this episode were
Copy !req
130. David J. Grahame ;
Copy !req
131. John Cannon, Jean Channon,
Bill Hughes.
Copy !req
132. Uncredited production contributors
included
Copy !req
133. Sue Box
Copy !req
134. Linda Graeme,
Jo Ward
Copy !req
135. Stan Cresswell,
Bobby Gould
Copy !req
136. Rosemary Parsons,
Carol Bolt
Copy !req
137. Alan Hughes
Copy !req
138. Someone stepped back
into the shrubbery as I looked out.
Copy !req
139. Some scoundrel up to no good!
Odd thing, I could swear he was a Chinese!
Copy !req
140. Whoever he is, I'll give him more
than he expected! No, you wait here!
Copy !req
141. - How are you feeling?
- The ghost, I saw it!
Copy !req
142. - Casey, forgive me!
- No, it was a hologram.
Copy !req
143. I thought there was something
unnatural about that cellar!
Copy !req
144. There's nothing unnatural
about a holograph technique -
Copy !req
145. a projection of light by laser beam.
Copy !req
146. It wasn't known in this century.
Copy !req
147. - Drink this. You'll feel better.
- What was that?
Copy !req
148. Sh!
Copy !req
149. Agh!
Copy !req
150. - Oh, Doctor!
- Cheer up, Jago. Cheer up!
Copy !req
151. He's gone back to his rats. Are you all right?
Copy !req
152. Yes, I think so. Who the devil was it?
Copy !req
153. I've no idea. He didn't introduce himself.
Copy !req
154. - Shall I call in the police?
- Oh, Henry Gordon Jago!
Copy !req
155. Then our reclusive phantom
would simply vanish! Boof!
Copy !req
156. - Good heavens, yes.
- We can tackle it together. You and I.
Copy !req
157. What are you going to do?
Copy !req
158. Think. I'm going to have some supper!
Copy !req
159. Nobody out there.
Fellow must have got wind of...
Copy !req
160. Professor?
Copy !req
161. Are you there?
Copy !req
162. Professor!
Copy !req