1. "The villagers are in the Master's power
and attack the Doctor.
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2. "Jo falls into the Master's hands -
and comes face to face with the Dæmon."
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3. This episode was first shown
on 12 June 1971,
and was seen by 8.1 million viewers.
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4. Roger Delgado was especially fond
of his costume in the conjuring scenes.
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5. "Namyah Siramad"? Damaris Hayman!
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6. That was Roger Delgado's
unscripted little joke.
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7. The ladder was a last-minute addition
by Christopher Barry.
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8. Conscious of Katy Manning's myopia,
he gallantly wanted to make it easier
for her to get herself down.
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9. The script emphasises
that Jo is obviously still sedated here.
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10. The pub "floorboards"
were painted on by the scene crew.
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11. Alec Linstead
Really didn't get on with Jon Pertwee.
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12. "Christmas after next"
was the even worse prognosis
in the script.
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13. The plan was for Azal's voice
to be supplied by a different actor,
and played in from tape.
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14. Two weeks later,
the cast began rehearsing this episode
and the next.
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15. so in the end
the Dæmon's voice and body
both belonged to Stephen Thorne.
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16. He returned to Doctor Who
to play another near-divine being, Omega
in 'The Three Doctors' (1972-3),
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17. and contributed to another apotheosis
by serving as the second actor
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18. at the 1973 audition
which led to the casting
of Elisabeth Sladen as Sarah Jane Smith.
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19. The Master's amulet
is the magical symbol
known as the Goat of Mendes,
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20. The "heat haze" is achieved
using a sheet of "mirrorlon",
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21. The reflected, vibrating action
was then electronically flipped
the right way round.
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22. The ivy was supposed to be
more obviously self-animated
as it tries to choke Jo.
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23. It was originally planned
as an animated willow branch
rather than moving plastic ivy,
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24. but the idea was scaled down
for budgetary reasons.
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25. This meant forgoing her bathroom,
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26. so she asked a favour:
Might she use Damaris Hayman's bath
to do her washing?
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27. Damaris kindly agreed,
and, returning to the hotel one evening,
was startled to find
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28. that her bathroom had been transformed
into a jungle of dripping panties,
about fifty pairs hung out to dry...
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29. Since she was interested in the occult
at the time,
she spent one of those days
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30. The script calls for
"a twenty-year-old clapped-out car".
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31. The Doctor was supposed to chalk
the circuit diagram on the ground,
but the wet weather ruled that out.
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32. In other words, not very simple at all,
unless you're the Doctor,
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33. but the Special Theory of Relativity
is indeed simpler than the later
General Theory of Relativity (1916).
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34. The script describes Devil's End Church
as "very squat, very Norman" -
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35. This is the sequence
based on the Jo Grant audition scene,
which Barry Letts had put together
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36. to elicit from the actresses
the range of core emotions
required by the Doctor Who girl's role:
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37. She had to be brave and terrified
at different points,
and to scream convincingly.
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38. The scene showed Yates
rescuing Jo from a church.
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39. He demonstrates the danger
by throwing a book onto a stone
inscribed with cabalistic symbols.
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40. It is torn apart
by an "elemental piranha fish"
- and that could have been her fate too.
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41. Jo panics and turns around to run,
only to be confronted by - the Devil!
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42. Jack Silk replaces Jon Pertwee
for the stunt.
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43. Jon Pertwee replaces Jack Silk
for the close-up.
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44. but mainly because the dates clashed
with a holiday
she had planned in Greece.
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45. Then she read the script, was hooked,
and decided
that Greece would have to wait.
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46. The location experiment with
"crystamatic" three-camera film shooting
was not entirely successful, either.
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47. into a position where it could be seen
by all three cameras at the same time.
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48. The film operations crew also
hadn't supplied enough hardboard
to lay down for all of the cameras.
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49. And whereas, in conventional filming,
each shot would be set up and lit
to look perfect from one angle,
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50. In all, 'The Dæmons' features 54 minutes
and 33 seconds of specially shot film,
nearly half its overall running time.
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51. However, the experiment
caused some problems in the studio.
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52. and this all had to happen
during the three hours of recording time
allocated in each studio session.
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53. This caused a 15-minute overrun
on the first studio day.
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54. the film sequences should run
in continuous stretches
separate from the studio action.
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55. They were the oldest established
morris-dancing group in England,
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56. Beware the bladder-man:
He also does this
to members of the audience.
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57. This is a version of the folk dance
known as "Bean Setting".
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58. What's about to happen to the Doctor,
after the bladder-man
has finished with him,
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59. is loosely based on a traditional dance
from Revesby in Lincolnshire.
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60. But several things went wrong here,
starting now.
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61. So this is genuine pain.
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62. On morris-dancing day,
the shoot was visited by Dennis Hooper,
the editor of Countdown,
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63. a children's comic
which had launched two months earlier
and included a Doctor Who strip.
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64. which ran for ten episodes
from July to September
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65. Bert quotes the Bible: Exodus 22.18.
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66. Another visitor to the location filming
was the co-author, Robert Sloman.
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67. "Nema" is "Amen" backwards.
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68. In the script,
Bok turns his head
and looks directly at them.
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69. The Cloven Hoof is really the Blue Boar.
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70. Bert's next line is based on a challenge
issued to Jesus during the Crucifixion:
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71. "Save thyself
and come down from the cross"
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72. The morris dancers have vanished
because these maypole scenes
were shot four days later, on 28 April.
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73. It was originally written
as a shattering flowerpot.
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74. Spinning the weathercock
cost the effects budget
24 man-hours and £3.
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75. John Levene felt
he needed to look authentic
when firing his pistol,
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76. so he watched some Clint Eastwood movies
to study technique.
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77. Silencers notoriously
reduce the accuracy of any pistol
to which they are affixed.
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78. The turn in the weather on location
coincided with some mechanical problems
for Bessie.
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79. with one foot stretched down
to work the pedals
and the other on the driving seat,
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80. while he reached over the windscreen
to operate the wiper by hand.
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81. The wiper's motor had failed,
but he needed it to get the car
through the terrible weather!
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82. The Doctor puns on a line
famously attributed to,
but never said by, Sherlock Holmes.
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83. It was John Levene's idea
to use Bessie's running-board
to put some bounce into his leap.
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84. A wag suggested
that the backwards incantation
should be the bawdy ballad Eskimo Nell,
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85. which later became two 1975 films,
one with Katy Manning in the cast
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86. and the other directed
by a Richard Franklin.
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87. The script calls for
"a feebly flapping chicken".
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88. On screen it's not altogether clear
what becomes of the bird,
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89. The script specifies
that he ends up 20 feet high.
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90. The cavern roof
was composited in from Camera 4.
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91. Also seen in this episode were:
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92. Marion Deuchar
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93. Pat Gorman, David J. Graham,
John Scott Martin, John Tatham,
Vic Taylor
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94. Ron Taylor
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95. Maria Burns, Lesley Matcham,
Lyn Matcham
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96. That's it. He is a god.
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97. You really are a magician.
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98. I'm sorry to disappoint you, madam,
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99. but if I were,
I'd hardly need your assistance
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100. in extricating me from this...
this sacrificial gift wrapping.
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101. How on Earth did you do that, Doctor?
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102. Elemental, my dear Benton.
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103. Oh, no, you don't, chum.
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104. We've all got a date with the Master,
haven't we?
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105. Io evohe!
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106. Azal! We have power over life,
you and I.
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107. Accept this life I now dedicate to thee.
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108. No! Stop it! It's evil!
Don't you see that? It's evil!
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109. You are too late, my dear!
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110. Eko, eko, Azal!
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111. Eko, eko, Azal!
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112. Azal!
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