1. "The Doctor discovers the deadly secret
of the daffodils - but is captured
before he can warn the Brigadier.
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2. This episode was first shown on
23 January 1971, and was seen
by 8.4 million viewers.
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3. In the studio, all the sets were built
on the same level,
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4. but the bomb sequence in Episode 2
established that the Doctor's lab is
not on UNIT HQ's ground floor.
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5. So watch Nicholas Courtney's eye
movements as the Brigadier hears
the Doctor calling for help.
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6. The dummy staircase outside the door
completes the illusion of
an upper-storey setting.
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7. The scene after this one, aboard
the Auton coach, was cut altogether.
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8. Now he plans to leave them to deal with
his "unfinished business".
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9. "You have wasted too much time on
your feud with the Doctor,"
the Auton Leader rebukes.
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10. "I speak for the High Command.
You are failing in your principal task."
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11. "In a few hours," retorts the Master,
"when the operational signal
is transmitted,
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12. "the main Nestene assault force will
land on Earth unopposed. Does your High
Command call that a failure?"
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13. In the script, he runs electrical
currents through the flower rather than
using the Bunsen burner.
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14. The burner is set on a very low flame,
so that the hot air moves the leaves
but doesn't melt or ignite the prop.
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15. Post-production planning for this serial
began even before
the start of rehearsals.
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16. On 25 September, Barry Letts met with
the composer and the sound effects man
at the Radiophonic Workshop.
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17. The score was realised entirely at
the Workshop using a synthesiser,
the VCS3.
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18. so that the electronic score could be
written precisely to the time required.
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19. Doctor Who's UNIT serials were
consciously set in the near future
rather than the present day,
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20. but the Brigadier's map shows
the English counties as they were
before the boundary changes of 1974.
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21. The call to the RAF was introduced
in revision, to replace something
a little more ambitious...
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22. Post-production editing took place
on four days between 12 October
and 1 November.
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23. Dudley Simpson then composed the music,
though he wasn't formally commissioned
until 4 December.
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24. The complete score ran to 22 minutes
and 31 seconds, amounting to a little
over five minutes in each episode.
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25. There's also one stock track, for
a circus sequence:
'Spotlight Sequins No. 1 ',
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26. composed by Keith Papworth and played by
the International Studio Orchestra
under the baton of Jack Trombey.
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27. He's even fiercer in the script,
which calls for him to be armed
with a machine carbine.
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28. In the storyline, the coach has been
traced to the Sussex Downs.
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29. "Aren't you going to offer them
a chance to surrender?"
Asks Jo in the script.
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30. "The Doctor tells me these Nestenes
are in constant two-way communication,"
scintillates the Brigadier.
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31. "I want the others to know the sort
of thing we've got waiting for them."
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32. In 1968, the Army helped out Doctor Who
by supplying men and equipment to fight
the Cybermen in 'The Invasion'.
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33. The production team hoped for a repeat
arrangement in staging UNIT's attack
on the Autons.
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34. In fact, one of the serial's "selling
points'was'a full-scale pitched battle
between Autons and UNIT soldiers".
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35. This time, however,
the Army was unable to help.
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36. And that's why the planned attack
on the coach at ground level turned into
an air strike by the RAF.
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37. Jo uses the standard-issue TM45 UNIT
radio, originally made by BBC Visual
Effects for 'The Invasion' (1968).
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38. The prop has been refurbished
with a new aerial.
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39. This sequence was added at scripting
stage, to show one of the Nestene
daffodils at work.
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40. In the storyline, the flowers are
pre-programmed to kill when the ambient
temperature reaches 65 Fahrenheit,
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41. so the Nestenes have been waiting for
a spell of hot, dry weather.
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42. The daffodils' mode of operation gives
the working title its central pun:
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43. A spray of flowers emitting
a spray of death.
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44. Their range is specified as eight feet.
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45. The script specifies the solvent:
Dimethyl sulfoxide.
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46. Sprayed onto the skin like that,
it would give Jo a nasty rash.
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47. In the storyline, the weather has been
unseasonably cold, causing a delay
to the Nestenes' plans.
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48. Terrance Dicks was unconvinced by
this aspect of the plot:
"Why not go to Morocco?" he asked.
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49. Dicks proposed the alternative method
of activation by radio waves.
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50. Ten minutes are shaved off the scripted
47, to give the situation
a little added urgency.
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51. The next effects shot was at first
deemed impossible to achieve.
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52. The solution lay around a cheese roll
in somebody's lunchbox.
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53. Cling-film was a new product on the
market, and shrivelled when sprayed
with a particular solvent.
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54. This is a variant on the poison darts
in the Sherlock Holmes film
Terror by Night (1946),
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55. which melt without a trace into
the very wound they have made.
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56. The script calls the weapon
a cobalt laser.
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57. The vainglorious "almost" was
Roger Delgado's unscripted contribution.
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58. In the storyline, the Master explains
the logic behind his choice
of plastic flowers.
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59. To achieve maximum impact, it must be
distributed economically across
a large number of weapons.
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60. Roger Delgado based aspects of his
performance on his memories of his
father, a proud Spaniard.
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61. The Master also has his hands full in
the script: He has grabbed
and pinioned Jo,
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62. so that each Time Lord has
something the other wants.
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63. Delgado opted to underplay the Master,
feeling that "casual villainy" was more
effective than ranting.
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64. He aimed to suggest a character who
always seemed in control, both of
himself and of the situation.
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65. He had struck up a good working
relationship with her while making
'Inferno' (1970),
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66. and Barry Letts agreed that this had
helped him handle
the stress of his leading role.
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67. Rex Farrel is played by
Michael Wisher (1935-95).
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68. Barry Letts had previously directed him
in Adventure Weekly (1969), in which
he played a police constable.
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69. He later originated the role of Davros
in 'Genesis of the Daleks' (1975).
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70. According to the storyline, Farrel comes
to himself because he is out of
the Master's "mesmeric range".
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71. A total of 743 feet of film was shot
for this serial, totalling just under
twenty minutes' worth of action.
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72. The Master's scripted line refers
to Farrel's mother, not his father.
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73. This is the battery-operated
energy unit.
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74. The effects team also built a version
powered through wires, which ran up
the sleeve of the actor carrying it.
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75. The Doctor's shirt has a zip front
rather than buttons,
for ease of dressing.
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76. Several duplicate shirts were made -
but some had slightly different zips.
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77. This doesn't match any sequence of
letters in the decoded message.
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78. When he was cast as Captain Yates,
Richard Franklin had long hair,
which was fashionable for men in 1970.
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79. He tried his best to keep it:
Surely soldiers in the future were
allowed to be hirsute, he argued.
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80. Barry Letts disagreed, but, as you can
see, he didn't insist on a very severe
military short-back-and-sides.
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81. The upcoming climax back at the radio
research centre replaced
the storyline's simpler ending,
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82. in which the Master is merely defeated
by UNIT firepower before it gets hot
enough to trigger the daffodils.
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83. Dicks proposed that, once the Nestenes
realise that the daffodil terror
has been defeated,
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84. they would intervene directly and
transmit one of themselves down
the radio telescope.
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85. Then he locates and punctures
the exhaust pipe.
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86. Channelled inside the coach,
the swirling exhaust fumes start
to melt the Autons' plastic.
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87. The Master
Is forced to stop the coach.
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88. A pitched battle
with UNIT troops ensues.
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89. The Master makes his escape over
the South Downs,
pausing only to kill Rex Farrel.
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90. Jon Pertwee was eager to do the jump
from the coach himself.
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91. But the vehicle was going to be moving
at around 15 miles per hour in the shot
where the Doctor leaps out.
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92. That wasn't a safe speed at which to
jump, except for a stuntman.
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93. The disappointed Pertwee accepted
the situation, asking only that his
stunt double should look like him.
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94. So cue Terry Walsh!
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95. Jon and Katy did their own landings,
of course.
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96. Plans to have UNIT attack
the coach with tanks were abandoned
when the Army wouldn't help.
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97. In the script, it's the Doctor
who might be hurt:
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98. "Doctor, are you alright?" asks Jo.
"If I break in half when I stand up,
then I'm not," comes the reply.
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99. The injury was transferred to Jo
to help explain why she might be limping
after Katy sprained her ankle for real.
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100. Stuntman Roy Scammell did
the forty-foot fall from
the radio tower.
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101. There were lots of empty boxes
at the bottom to break his fall.
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102. When the stunt was set up, Jon Pertwee
lent a hand - or rather a head -
to get the boxes into place.
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103. "There is a flash, and the Master
falls back with a cry."
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104. The script calls for "a writhing,
growing coil of energy, suspended
like a filament between two dishes".
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105. It turns into "a palpitating,
squid-shaped radiance":
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106. Its tentacles whip over the control
room's glass dome and smash the windows.
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107. Some younger viewers in 1971 felt
that Doctor Who was starting
to become silly.
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108. In an effort to check such tendencies,
they appealed to
the highest known authority.
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109. This was of course Michael Aspel,
host of the long-running children's
clips show, Ask Aspel (1970-81).
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110. On 29 January, Ask Aspel reshowed
this battle sequence as an example
of the silliness at issue.
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111. For comparison, viewers were also shown
a clip of the Doctor's greatest enemies
in 'The Power of the Daleks' (1966).
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112. "The Master controls his computer like
a man on a Hammond organ,"
says the script.
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113. There were preliminary attempts to
realise the squid monster as a model,
but they proved unsatisfactory.
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114. In the finished episode, the Nestene
is an electronic effect.
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115. The fragments of the monster
"vanish into the sky, as quickly as
sparks up a chimney," says the script.
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116. He back-pedalled a little from the week
Only the troll sequence in
Part 2 was unacceptably frightening.
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117. Monica Sims persisted: Her anxiety
lay in the fact that the series was now
set in the real world,
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118. but she liked the idea of the Master,
"so that Doctor Who was
not the only clever one".
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119. Ronald Marsh had good news for her:
The Master would soon be back.
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120. But Huw Wheldon, the Managing Director
of Television and a long-time
Doctor Who fan, had another wish.
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121. He very much disliked having the
series set "in the real world
of Brentford",
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122. so he hoped the Tardis would soon
be repaired, and would land
on another planet.
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123. The Doctor doesn't want him shot,
but the Brigadier insists:
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124. "How many deaths has he caused?
How many more if he escapes?"
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125. So the Master is caught in "a hail
of bullets" from the UNIT firing party.
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126. But when they examine the body,
it is made of plastic: A faceless
Auton in the Master's clothes.
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127. It was a very late decision to make it
Rex Farrel's last stand instead.
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128. Wisher played dead so convincingly
that the crew wondered if
he had really passed out.
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129. That's not Roger Delgado at the wheel,
it's stunt driver Stan Hollingsworth.
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130. In the storyline, we see the Master
race back to his horsebox with
the Brigadier's men on his tail.
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131. He tries to dematerialise,
but the horsebox "grinds down, shudders,
and belches flames and smoke".
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132. The ruse with the disguised Auton
gets him past the soldiers, and he makes
his getaway in a stolen UNIT van.
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133. After this serial wrapped, the regulars
had Sunday off before travelling to Kent
to begin shooting 'The Mind of Evil'.
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134. Ronald Marsh, Head of Serials,
thought this too stark and explicit,
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135. and asked Terrance Dicks for
a softer closing line.
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136. You have also been watching:
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137. Les Conrad
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138. Roy Street
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139. Marc Boyle, Alan Chuntz, Stuart Fell,
Billy Horrigan
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140. Dinny Powell, Roy Scammell, Terry Walsh,
Derek Ware
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141. Uncredited production contributors
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142. Edward Pugh
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143. Rita Dunn
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144. Graham Southcott
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145. John McPherson
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146. Penny Forster
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147. JO: So, the one he took from you...
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148. Belonged to my Tardis, yes.
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149. Yes, I've been trying
to repair it for months.
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150. And now he's stuck here on Earth.
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151. Yes, I'm afraid so.
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152. Think he'll turn up again, Doctor?
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153. Mmm, bound to.
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154. You don't seem very worried about it.
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155. I'm not. As a matter of fact, Jo,
I'm rather looking forward to it.
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