1. The script
describes Weng-Chiang's face as
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2. "a distorted jumble of features-
eyes, nose, mouth- compressed gruesomely
and set into a texture like fresh veal.
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3. "It is a face from a Picasso nightmare."
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4. to conceal the fact that
the actor is wearing it all the time.
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5. The deformed face was cast in latex,
sculpted on a model
of actor Michael Spice's own face.
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6. Most of the time, of course,
he just wore the leather mask.
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7. The mask was made in two pieces,
and for camera rehearsals he preferred
to leave the front section off.
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8. Tom Baker and Michael Spice
used to compete with one another
during rehearsals
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9. to see which of them could finish
the Times and Guardian crosswords first.
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10. The toy car is a Batmobile
from the 1960s Batman television series.
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11. The offer of a jelly baby was
Tom Baker's spontaneous contribution:
It's not in the script.
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12. This sequence was written
as the cliffhanger of Part 5:
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13. A freeze-frame shot
of Mr Sin striking was recorded,
but not included in the final edit,
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14. and the scene was moved
so that Part 5 ended on the unmasking.
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15. The talons of Weng-Chiang
made life uncomfortable
for Michael Spice.
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16. This made it difficult for the actor
to pick up or manipulate props,
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17. not to mention his knife and fork
at lunchtime!
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18. Among the horrified witnesses
in the BBC canteen
were the pop group Brotherhood of Man.
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19. Then there was the little matter
of using the lavatory...
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20. The serial was not originally
called 'The Talons of Weng-Chiang'.
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21. The working title was
'The Talons of Greel',
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22. but this had to be changed
because we don't hear the name of Greel
until this episode.
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23. At one stage the production team
flirted with calling the serial
'The Cabinet of Weng-Chiang',
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24. but the grip of the talons
was too strong:
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25. When the serial was first shown,
they struggled with the unfamiliar name,
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26. giving versions ranging from
"Wang-Cheng" to "Wen-Chang"!
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27. A take of this scene was ruined
by someone creeping around the studio
during the recording.
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28. There were none of the usual compromises
between production standards
and budget limitations.
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29. Eventually he left the production early,
exhausted by the workload,
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30. and to portray what he called
"British Empire behaviour",
seen here in Jago and Litefoot.
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31. In the script, the Doctor asks
for "Foo Yung with noodles".
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32. Robert Holmes and Philip Hinchcliffe
combined several of their preoccupations
in the conception of Weng-Chiang.
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33. Holmes was fascinated by the idea
of cannibalism,
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34. which he wrote into
several subsequent Doctor Who serials,
notably 'The Two Doctors' (1985).
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35. and liked stories dealing with
how he coped with that environment.
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36. The twist here is that he's a villain
and the hostile world is London.
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37. Holmes created him
as a futuristic version
of a Nazi war criminal.
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38. Many senior Nazis disappeared
at the end of the Second World War,
just as Greel escaped into the past;
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39. Greel's nickname links him
with Commandant Josef Kramer,
known as "the Beast of Belsen",
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40. who supervised the mass murder
of inmates at Belsen concentration camp,
and was executed by the British in 1946.
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41. But the character
has even closer similarities
with Dr Josef Mengele (1911-1979),
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42. He escaped to South America
after the war, and was still alive
when the serial was first broadcast.
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43. He also calls Greel's time
"the blackest period in human history",
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44. and uses more adjectives
to express his contempt:
Degenerate, squalid, sub-human.
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45. He becomes so passionately engaged
in his argument with Greel
that he takes less care
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46. to hold the key precariously
on a point of balance,
with the threat that it might fall,
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47. which is why Greel can take the risk
of having Mr Sin shoot him down.
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48. This had to be reshot because the sight
of the shaking curtains
made somebody laugh.
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49. The pulsing cabinet was wired up
by effects assistant Andy Lazell.
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50. The script refers
to the interior workings
of the cabinet as "the quantum panels".
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51. At this time the Doctor
was characterised as having a fondness
for obscure quotations.
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52. Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)
Was not the author.
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53. Nor was the music hall comic
Harry Champion (1866-1942),
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54. who was best known for cockney songs
like 'Any Old Iron'
and 'Boiled Beef and Carrots'.
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55. No, the author was in fact
J. Milton Hayes (1884-1940).
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56. According to the script,
the soup is "more Mickey Finn
than shark's fin".
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57. Apologising afterwards,
he complimented her
on her "lovely legs".
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58. Louise Jameson bruised her shin
doing this.
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59. Keep your eye on her knife
in the next shot.
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60. Ho fails
to knock it out of Leela's hand,
so Louise has to throw it away herself!
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61. In a line cut from the finished version
of the serial, the Doctor remarks,
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62. "Leela puts too much faith
in simple physical violence."
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63. At a very early stage,
Robert Holmes suggested that
the villain might be the Master,
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64. who had been reintroduced,
in mutilated form, three serials earlier
in 'The Deadly Assassin'.
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65. But Philip Hinchcliffe
wanted an original creation instead -
hence Magnus Greel.
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66. Production wrapped on 10 February 1977,
just over a fortnight
before the first episode was broadcast.
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67. In the interim, Louise Jameson
had a date with Noel Edmonds
on Swap Shop. ;
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68. The six episodes were edited
during a three-week period
from 12 February and 1 March.
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69. Dudley Simpson recorded
the incidental music in six sessions
from 21 February to 28 March.
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70. So this episode's music was only taped
on the Monday before it was shown.
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71. Now watch the resourceful Tom Baker
cope with recalcitrant props:
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72. The first match snaps,
and the next one out of the box
is missing its head.
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73. Success!
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74. In the studio, the three actors
were asked to cover their ears,
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75. but Tom Baker wouldn't:
"I'm an alien," he insisted.
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76. This is the second take: The coolies
weren't doing enough writhing in agony
the first time round.
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77. Melodramatic serial titles
were part of Doctor Who's house style
in the mid-1970s.
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78. Philip Hinchcliffe felt
they grabbed the audience's attention
and were part of the series' tradition.
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79. According to the script,
the hatchet severs the power cable that
feeds "the duo-pole catalytic splitter".
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80. was, coincidentally,
a darkened Victorian street
with bills posted on the wall.
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81. The word "magnanimous"
was Tom Baker's contribution:
The script just has "generous".
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82. David Maloney was given an advance
demonstration of the pyrotechnics
in the visual effects workshop.
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83. Effects designer Michealjohn Harris
carefully wired up the charges
the night before the studio recording.
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84. There it is on the left.
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85. Effects shots like this
were often left until the end
of the studio recording session,
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86. so there were only ten minutes to go
when the table
refused to collapse on cue.
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87. so the effects men had to break up
the prop by hand before the second take.
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88. and it is Leela who decides
she'll be the one to fetch the gun.
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89. A hand can be seen reaching through
the curtain to overturn the pot.
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90. The studio sessions for this serial
were exceptionally fraught.
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91. Recording overran on three days,
by half-an-hour on 24 and 25 January
and a full hour on 10 February.
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92. The latter was primarily due to
the misbehaving pyrotechnics,
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93. and at the end of the day
they didn't have every shot they needed
for the final edit.
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94. A notable omission
was the dragon's eyes firing at Greel,
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95. Two spent flash charges can be seen
falling from the dragon's face
in the next shot.
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96. In the script,
Greel's gun is a single-shot derringer,
and is instrumental in his death.
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97. It goes off as he struggles
with the Doctor on the floor,
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98. and he dies by
"a bullet through his black heart".
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99. Litefoot reaches to unmask Greel,
but Leela doesn't fancy
seeing his face again.
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100. 'The Foe from the Future'
was the serial's
very first working title.
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101. And here's Mr Sin's stunt double.
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102. Three keys were made in all,
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103. just in case
anything like this happened early!
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104. The muffin man's cry was not heard
in the studio:
It was dubbed on in post-production.
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105. This is the same wall seen
when Jago and Litefoot were captured
outside Greel's lair in Part 5.
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106. The set was redressed
to add the Palace Theatre poster.
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107. The "warming the pot" line
was Tom Baker's unscripted contribution.
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108. The Tardis dematerialisation
had to be reshot twice:
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109. then because they had trouble
unplugging the cable
to the Tardis light.
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110. And on the first take of this bit,
Christopher Benjamin
said "Li San Cheng".
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111. Also seen in this episode were
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112. Debbie Cummings
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113. Helen Simnett
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114. Uncredited production contributors
included
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115. Christine Baker, Jennifer Hughes,
Martha Livesley
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116. Production text commentary
written by Martin Wiggins
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117. - I order you to... No, no, not me!
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118. This is mutiny, Sin!
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119. Is Bent Face dead?
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120. - Why do you call him Bent Face?
- Because it is. No, don't!
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121. Cellular collapse.
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122. In all my years as a pathologist,
I've never seen anything like it!
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123. Let's hope you never see
anything like it again.
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124. - Where was he from? Where did he go?
- He was a foe from the future.
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125. Look out, Leela!
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126. - What's that?
- It's his fuse, Henry.
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127. What are you doing, Doctor?
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128. I'm bringing the zigma experiment to an end.
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129. - Listen.
- Get your hot muffins!
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130. - Hot muffins!
- It's the muffin man.
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131. Come on. I'll buy you some muffins.
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132. And then, for example, I would say,
"One lump or two, Miss Leela?"
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133. To which you would reply,
"One will suffice, thank you!"
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134. - Do you follow?
- Supposing I want two?
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135. - No, no. One lump for ladies!
- Then why do you ask me?
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136. Come along!
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137. Professor Litefoot has been
explaining to me about tea.
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138. - It's very complicated!
- It's not complicated at all.
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139. All you... I haven't time
to stand here discussing tea.
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140. - Goodbye, Litefoot.
- Goodbye, Doctor!
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141. - It's been such fun! Henry...
- Goodbye!
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142. Yes, the important thing
is just warming the pot.
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143. - What exactly IS that contraption?
- His personal transport - look, "Police"!
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144. - Extraordinary!
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145. No doubt Scotland Yard provided it for him!
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146. - I don't believe it!
- I've said it before and I'll say it again -
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147. our policemen are wonderful!
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148. - But it's impossible! Quite impossible!
- Good trick, eh?
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149. Li H'sen Chang himself
would have appreciated that!
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