I own every existing full Doctor Who story on VHS. Quite how this happened would require a whole dissertation on the 1996 tornado, a friend of mine in Sacramento, a massive box of tapes, hours of dubbing, whatever happened to all of the “retired” SVHS tapes discarded by Fox 46, and boxes so heavy that their shipping costs rivaled some countries’ gross national debt. I had these tapes long before BBC Video really got with it and made everything from the series available, due to the generosity of my friend Mark, and I’ve been dubbing off the B&W ’60s episodes to DVD-Rs en masse while housecleaning, so I can discard the much bulkier tapes later. Why those particular episodes? With the remainder of this year’s DVD releases almost entirely in the Tom Baker and Peter Davison eras, there seems to be a clear signal that the lower-selling B&W episodes are being put on the back-burner when it comes to DVD releases. Also, I’ve only had to dub three Troughton adventures (The Krotons, The Dominators, The War Games), because almost all of the second Doctor’s complete stories are on the market already (there aren’t that many that are complete and therefore marketable). Somehow I doubt that we’ll be getting The Gunfighters (purportedly the worst episode in the show’s entire history), The Sensorites (the story in which Susan describes her home planet as having orange skies and silver leaves, a description that the new series made sure to follow up on in The Sound Of Drums) or The Romans on DVD anytime soon. I’m popping them into Amaray keep cases with covers by talented fan artists like Simon Holub, Lee Johnson, Thomas Evans and Tom Payne, and slotting them in among the official releases happily.
But what I really love about these, and what I’m preserving carefully alongside the main course of each adventure, is the introductory material produced by Sacramento’s PBS affiliate, KVIE. Three presenters would, on a rotating basis, provide a wealth of background material on each story in about three minutes before the show. I could go on about ogling their meticulously-built TARDIS console, Police Box and Dalek props that appeared on set, but what made these intros so great was the piles of trivia, background and quite frankly educational material layered into each one. Historical stories were given some real-life context, missing episodes were noted (and viewers were encouraged to go check out the novelizations of those stories from the library – a shrewd move that suddenly puts this silly old sci-fi show on the map as an educational item), and ties to the show’s past and future adventures were pointed out. The BBC should be including these on the official releases whenever they deign to release a 1960s story on DVD. The presenters are personable, even if their costumes verge on convention cosplay contest goofiness, and they clearly know their stuff – they’re both knowledgeable Who fans and capable public speakers.
I don’t know where these three, or their more-than-handy prop and stage crews have wound up, but this entry is a salute to all of them. Very, very well done. You guys clearly did this for the love of the show, and that’s what makes this stuff so special.
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