Wednesday 23 February 2022

575 The Visitation Part Four

EPISODE: The Visitation: Part Four
OVERALL EPISODE NUMBER: 575
STORY NUMBER: 120
TRANSMITTED: Tuesday 23 February 1982
WRITER: Eric Saward
DIRECTOR: Peter Moffatt
SCRIPT EDITOR: Antony Root
PRODUCER: John Nathan-Turner
RATINGS: 10.1 million viewers
FORMAT: DVD: Doctor Who - The Visitation (Special Edition)

"I have a sneaking suspicion this fire should be allowed to run its course."

The Doctor frees Tegan & Mace from the Terileptil control. The Terileptil leader leaves for the city with the plague, sending the miller to secure the house and the Android to bring the Tardis to Earth. The Android scares off the men holding Adric and follows him back to the Tardis where Nyssa destroys it with the sonic booster. Escaping from their cell the Doctor, Tegan & Mace free deactivate Terileptil control system. Adric brings the Tardis to the house and the Doctor seeks the Terileptil in the nearest city, London, by tracing some high technology emissions. They materialise outside a bakery where the Miller's horse & cart are waiting. Going inside they confront the Terileptils but in a scuffle the bakery is set on fire and the Soliton gas explodes. The Doctor has the remaining plague samples thrown in the fire and he makes an exit with his friends in the Tardis as Mace stays to fight the flames. As the Tardis leaves the London Street Name is revealed - Pudding Lane.

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This is one of those occasions where the revelation at the end of the episode, that the Doctor caused the great fire of London, will be the main thing that stays with you. Oddly it's the dropped torch and overloading gun which are seen to set things going and not the machine producing the soliton gas, which was flagged as volatile when mixed with oxygen in episode 2!

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The Doctor causing The Great Fire of London is another entry into the cannon of his interference in/contribution to historical events including, but not limited to, the invention of fire in An Unearthly Child, the burning of Rome in The Romans, making sure the Battle of Stamford Bridge occurred in The Time Meddler and inventing the Trojan Horse in The Myth Makers. Historians argue as to whether the fire actually did contribute to stopping The Great Plague but here it foils the Terileptil plot.

But what about the rats left in the cellar of the house? The Doctor is rather relying on that cage holding them in until they die!

Before their death we get a much better look at the other two Terileptils, revealing that they're much more colourful than their leader.

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Their death is rather graphic though, with the leaders face melting and bubbling away in the flames!

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Bar an illusionary appearance in Time Flight this is the last we see of the Terileptils. There's a reference to Raaga, the planet they were imprisoned mining on, in The Awakening and one of the costumes resurfaces as the Possicar Delegate in Trial of a Timelord: Mindwarp, but other that that, nothing. A shame as I thought they had some unfulfilled potential and would have been good for a rematch.

Their android too also gets destroyed in this episode, vibrated to pieces by the sonic booster that Nyssa has spent the last two episodes building in her bedroom:

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Nyssa has spent half of this story in the Tardis, following sleeping for all of Kinda. Fortunately she gets more of the limelight next story.

Adric's "delicate technical adjustment" - thumping the Tardis console - to get it moving makes me giggle:

NYSSA: Try and think what the Doctor would do if he were here.
ADRIC: He'd probably get angry.
NYSSA: I said empathise, not be silly.
ADRIC: Got it!
NYSSA: Brilliant!

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It's even more amusing because the Doctor does do exactly the same thing a few minutes later!

Richard Mace is the first visitor to the Tardis during Fifth Doctor Peter Davison's time but he won't be the last as the next few stories see a cavalcade of visitors!

MACE: This isn't possible.
ADRIC: That's what I thought at first, but it is.
MACE: It's amazing! Quite amazing.

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Visitors to The Tardis have been relatively rare, with Laurence Scarman, in Pyramids of Mars, and Lowe, in Invisible Enemy, both played by Michael Sheard springing to mind from the early years of the Fourth Doctor . There's a few more in both of the Doctor's Galifrey visits in Deadly Assassin and Invasion of Time, and Duggan in City of Death. Tom Baker's last season saw an increase with the Outlers in Full Circle, Biroc in State of Decay, The Keeper in Keeper of Traken and The Watcher in Logopolis!

The only new speaking character in this episode if the briefly seen Nightwatchman played by Don Paul, who I can't find anywhere else in Doctor Who or on IMDB!

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Appearing in this episode as one of the Villagers who attack Adric is stuntman Stuart Fell. He had previous been a UNIT soldier & Auton in Terror of the Autons, UNIT staff member & a photographer in The Mind of Evil, a UNIT Soldier & Axon in The Claws of Axos, Alpha Centauri in The Curse of Peladon which was his first credited appearance, a Guard, Sailor & Sea Devil in The Sea Devils, a Functionary in Carnival of Monsters, Alpha Centauri once again in The Monster of Peladon, the Tramp in Planet of the Spiders part two, who the Doctor drives the hovercraft over, and a Guard later in the same story, a Wirrn Larvae & Wirrn in The Ark in Space, Double for Styre in The Sontaran Experiment, The Kraal in The Android Invasion part three, the Monster in The Brain of Morbius, Forking peasant / Guard / Acolyte in The Masque of Mandragora, a Policeman, Coolie & the Giant Rat in Talons of Weng Chiang, a Guard in The Sun Makers, a Sontaran in The Invasion of Time, a Shrivenzale in the Ribos Operation, Roga in State of Decay, and a Castrovalvan Warrior in Castrovalva. He returns one more time as a Cyberman in The Five Doctors plus he did stunts in Terror of the Autons, was fight arranger in The Talons of Weng-Chiang, more stunts in The Ribos Operation & Full Circle and served as fight arranger again in State of Decay. In Blake's 7 he was Dortmunn in Mission to Destiny, a Subterron in Project Avalon, a Goth Warrior in The Keeper, a Sarran in Aftermath, a Labourer in The Harvest of Kyros, a Guard in City at the Edge of the World, a Federation Trooper in Rumours of Death, a Guard in Moloch, a Gunman in Death-Watch, a Link in Terminal & Rescue and a Hommik Warrior in Power plus he was the stunt coordinator for Project Avalon, The Keeper, Aftermath, Volcano, The Harvest of Kyros, City at the Edge of the World, Rumours of Death, Moloch, Death-Watch, Terminal, Rescue & Power. He plays a man in the Doomwatch episode Spectre at the Feast. He's in The Empire Strikes Back as a Snowtrooper and does stunts in Return of the Jedi. He also does stunt work on the Roger Moore James Bond films For Your Eyes Only, Octopussy & A View to a Kill. And so much more.

One of his Masked Villager companions is another long-time stuntman for the series, Alan Chuntz. Chuntz was previously a UNIT Soldier in The Invasion, Technician Harvey & a Security Guard in The Seeds of Death, one of Collinson’s Men & a UNIT Soldier in the Ambassadors of Death, a Technician, UNIT solider and RSF Soldier in Inferno, during which he was injured when Jon Pertwee ran him over in Bessie, an Auton in Terror of the Autons, a Prisoner in Mind of Evil a Sea Devil & Sailor in The Sea Devils, Omega's Champion in The Three Doctors, a Security Guard in The Green Death, a Guard in Planet of Spiders, a soldier in Genesis of the Daleks, a Vogan in Revenge of the Cybermen, the Doctor's stunt double in Planet of Evil, the Chauffeur in Seeds of Doom, a Horda Pit Guard in Face of Evil, a Coolie in Talons of Weng-Chiang, and a guard in State of Decay. This is his last Doctor Who appearance.

He also did stunt work on the Sean Connery James Bond film You Only Live Twice and on The Italian Job.

The Visitation isn't a bad story, building on genuine historical event, the Plague & the Fire, and adding a science fiction twist to it. It's competently done, easily accessibly & understandable and there's not really a lot wrong with it. On the strength of this it's writer Eric Saward got the script editor's job and he'll be making an important contribution for the next few years.

The Visitation was repeated in 1983 as the first of that summer's repeat stories over the evenings of 15th to 18th August. The author novelised his script in 1982 and it was the first Target novel featuring the fifth Doctor to be released and the first to bear a photo cover. It was released on video in July 1994 in a double pack with the following story, Black Orchid, and on DVD in January 2004.

Doctor Who Season 19, containing Castrovalva, Four To Doomsday, Kinda, The Visitation, Black Orchid, Earthshock & Timeflight, was released on Blu Ray on 10th December 2018.

Tuesday 22 February 2022

574 The Visitation Part Three

EPISODE: The Visitation: Part Three
OVERALL EPISODE NUMBER: 574
STORY NUMBER: 120
TRANSMITTED: Monday 22 February 1982
WRITER: Eric Saward
DIRECTOR: Peter Moffatt
SCRIPT EDITOR: Antony Root
PRODUCER: John Nathan-Turner
RATINGS: 9.9 million viewers
FORMAT: DVD: Doctor Who - The Visitation (Special Edition)

"Our rats will ensure there are no survivors. A final visitation!"

The Doctor's execution is interrupted by the village head man, who is controlled by the Terileptils, and has them locked up in the barn's harness room. The Terileptil leader attaches a slave bracelet to Tegan and she is put to work. Adric returns to the Tardis and aids Nyssa building the sonic device. The Terileptil leader reports to his compatriots that he has discovered group of time travellers and intends to acquire their ship. The Android attacks the barn taking the Doctor & Mace prisoner returning them to the house. The doctor confronts the Terileptil leader offering to take him home but he refuses, being a fugitive having escaped from the Tinclavic mines on Raaga, Adric goes to find the Doctor but is captured by villagers. The Terileptil has the miller load his cart with the chemical he has been developing. The Doctor tries to escape, but the Terileptil destroys his sonic screwdriver and tells him he has been developing a genetically modified plague to wipe out humanity. The Terileptil leaves, with the controlled Tegan given instructions to open the cage containing plague rats when he has gone. The Doctor tries to talk her out of it as her hand moves towards the fastening of the rat cage....

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The Sonic Screwdriver 16 March 1967 - 22 March 1982: "I feel like I've lost an old friend" comments the Doctor.

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Introduced in Fury from the Deep episode one The sonic Screwdriver was originally just a silver rod, a pen torch I believe. It pops up in several later Second Doctor Patrick Troughton an is a near constant with the Third Doctor Jon Pertwee so much so that there's a flashback sequence using it in his last story Planet of Spiders!

3 CofM 1k Clegg Screwdriver

Fourth Doctor Tom Baker continues to us it regularly but it's appearances with the Fifth Doctor Peter Davison have been more limited, with it's most major uses being in Four To Doomsday where both The Doctor & Nyssa use it to immobilise Manopticons and androids.

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Of course it would be easy enough for The Doctor to build a new Sonic Screwdriver but, like K-9 previously, producer John Nathan-Turner had taken against it, feeling it was effectively a get out of jail free card for the series to do anything with, so it had to go. If only he could see it now....

Nyssa spends all this episode in the Tardis either building an electronic thing to fight the Android or scolding Adric! In the process she returns to the bedroom to work and we discover, as I suspected in episode 1, that there are two beds in there as well as clothes for both female companions so we must assume they're sharing. Surely the Tardis has enough rooms for them to have one each?

Behind the door is Nyssa's skirt, jacket and bag. Presumably that's her bed next to it. That would make the other bed, that Nyssa moves and we saw in episode 1, Tegan's. She's left her Stewardess' hat behind on her dressing table!

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There's some loose stuff round the edges of this episode that's worth thinking about: we discover the Terileptil leader has been creating a genetically enhanced version of the plague to wipe out humanity.

LEADER: And then there would be the argument over the Tardis. Ah, you would have made a useful ally, but I'm afraid I think you are better dead. I said I would demonstrate how I'm to rid this planet of all it's primitives. It's very simple.
DOCTOR: The poor old black rat and his flea.
LEADER: The infection it now carries has been genetically re-engineered. Although heavily infected, it will outlive you all.
DOCTOR: But you'd need thousands of them.
LEADER: I have thousands of them. They are awaiting release in... a nearby city. Their infection will kill every living thing.
DOCTOR: I thought the local plague was already doing that?
LEADER: Ah, but our rats will ensure there are no survivors. A final visitation.
DOCTOR: Then who will serve you?
LEADER: Now we have your Tardis, we can travel the universe and acquire androids.
DOCTOR: This carnage isn't necessary.
LEADER: It's survival, Doctor. Just as these primitives kill lesser species to protect themselves, so I kill them.
DOCTOR: That's hardly an argument.
LEADER: It's not supposed to be an argument. It's a statement!

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Has he been conducting trials local to the house? From Episode 1:

DOCTOR: How bad is the plague?
MACE: Oh, the worst I've ever seen. More virulent here than in the city, but that's only to be expected.
DOCTOR: Why?
MACE: Did you not see the comet a few weeks ago? A portent of doom, if ever I saw one. Its aurora barely faded from the sky before the first local case was reported.
ADRIC: You were clear until then?
MACE: Oh, completely.
DOCTOR: They're not due for a comet for years.

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It's not explicitly stated but it's worth thinking about.....

LEADER: Look at me, Doctor. Do you see this? This is not natural to my physiognomy.
DOCTOR: So you've been to prison. What does that matter?
LEADER: How do you know that?
DOCTOR: There's only one place in the universe a Terileptil can acquire such scaring. The tinclavic mines on Raaga.
LEADER: And to be sentenced to Raaga is always for life.
DOCTOR: Terileptian law was never my strong point.
LEADER: Doctor, I am a fugitive. The last place I want to go is home. Only death awaits me there.
The Tinclavic Mines on Raaga will pop up again in a later story: episodes 613 & 614 The Awakening, also set in an English village.

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DOCTOR: You didn't take very good care of your own ship.
LEADER: If it not been badly damaged in an asteroid storm, it would have not succumbed to the gravitational pull of this planet.
DOCTOR: I gather it's break-up made an impressive spectacle.
LEADER: It cost the lives of all but myself and three of my comrades.
DOCTOR: There are only four of you?
LEADER: Three now, but it is enough.
The fourth Terileptil survivor was presumable the one we heard briefly in episode 1, whom entered the house with the Android and was slain by Charles & The Squire.

The other two remaining Terileptils are seen on a monitor scree here, presumably in the "nearby city" mentioned by their leader. They are played by David Summer and Michael Leader. Leader has been in Doctor Who before as one of the Pangol Army in The Leisure Hive and returns as a Mutant in Mawdryn Undead and a Man at Arms in King's Demons. In Blake's 7 he was a Technician in Dawn of the Gods and a Rebel in Rumours of Death. In Red Dwarf he's one of the Hooded Horde in Terrorform. He was an extra in Star Wars where he recalled playing a Stormtroooper. He had a recurring role in EastEnders as The Milkman and the 27th December 2016 episode carried an "in memory of" caption following his death.

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The Headman of the Village is Eric Dodson who was disgraced dentist Mr. Banyard in the Porridge episodes Just Deserts and No Peace for the Wicked. Another comedy role to his name, and there were a fair few is in Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'Em where he plays Mr. Cooper in Wendy House, but there's an equal number of serious roles on his CV including two appearances in The Sweeney firstly in Chalk and Cheese, where he plays Mr. de Courcy, and then in Bait, where he is Mr. Dodds.

Wednesday 16 February 2022

573 The Visitation Part Two

EPISODE: The Visitation: Part Two
OVERALL EPISODE NUMBER: 573
STORY NUMBER: 120
TRANSMITTED: Tuesday 16 February 1982
WRITER: Eric Saward
DIRECTOR: Peter Moffatt
SCRIPT EDITOR: Antony Root
PRODUCER: John Nathan-Turner
RATINGS: 9.3 million viewers
FORMAT: DVD: Doctor Who - The Visitation (Special Edition)

"Your Doctor is a dead man. You saw what was in the cellar. The great reaper, Death!"

The Doctor reveals himself, having found a way through the illusionary but seemingly solid wall. He, his friends & Richard Mace explore the house's cellars, finding caged rats and an alien machine producing the flammable Soliton gas. They are in turn found by an Android, dressed as Death but while escaping from it Tegan & Adric are captured. Doctor, Nyssa & Mace find a half buried escape pod, but are trapped in it by villagers controlled by the alien visitors. Adric & Tegan are interrogated by an the Terileptil leader then flung in cell. They manage to get out of the cell but Tegan is recaptured as Adric escapes through the house's window. Nyssa is sent to the Tardis to build a sonic device to destroy the android while Doctor & Mace go to speak to the Miller who they had seen leaving the house. They are trapped in the Miller's barn by villagers and sentenced to death as plague carriers.

Good stuff again, not really a word wrong I can say about it!

The new monster the Terileptil is a nice bit of work, with a costume from Richard Gregory's Imagineering and a head from the BBC Effects Department's Peter Wragg. The head in particular is superb, with the right hand side of it covered by what looks like a massive injury, giving it a very asymmetric appearance.

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DOCTOR: Nothing in there. Let's get back to the Tardis, help Nyssa.
MACE: Now?
DOCTOR: At once.
VILLAGER: Plague carriers.
MACE: You jest, sir. I am without plague.
VILLAGER: The mark of the plague is on you.
MACE: You're mistaken, sir.
DOCTOR: We haven't got the plague. I can help you. Wait. Listen.
VILLAGER: Execute them!
DOCTOR: Not again.

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The "Oh no, not again" line at the end of the episode is a nod to the end of the third episode of Four to Doomsday where once again The Doctor is pushed to the floor and is about to be beheaded!

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The line dropped into the story that the Soliton gas, which the the Terileptils breath, is highly flammable will become significant later. As Terrance Dicks was known to quote from Chekov's Gun: "if you show a gun hanging on the wall you have to use it later"

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Lot of the little mysteries from the previous episode are cleared up, including what the necklace and power packs are for:

DOCTOR: You see this? This a part of a control bracelet. It's a device used on prison planets to control difficult prisoners. It isn't an ornament. And the thing you saw in the cellar comes from the same place as the bracelet.
MACE: How can that control anyone?
DOCTOR: Like this. If this was on your wrist, you'd have lost control of your mind by now.
MACE: Nonsense, sir. That glow is a conjuring trick. I'm a man of the theatre. I'm not impressed by trickery, however clever it is.
We see several of the villagers enslaved by the bracelets during this episode:

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Then there's the shooting star:

DOCTOR: No one here.
NYSSA: The place has been stripped.
DOCTOR: Most of the hardware is up at the house, I should think.
MACE: What is this structure?
DOCTOR: An escape pod. A sort of life boat, only from a ship that flies.
MACE: Flies?
DOCTOR: That's right.
MACE: But how are the dimensions greater within?
DOCTOR: Because it buried itself on impact.
MACE: And how is it lit?
DOCTOR: Vintaric crystals. Quite a common form of lighting.
MACE: I don't understand any of this.
NYSSA: This is all that's left of the craft that brought the android to Earth.
DOCTOR: The lights you saw in the sky a few weeks ago, were the main part of the ship burning up in the atmosphere.
MACE: I can't believe any of the things you are telling me.
NYSSA: It's true.
DOCTOR: The presence of the pod confirms it.
MACE: How do you know all these things?
DOCTOR: Ah. That would be rather difficult to explain.
NYSSA: You can trust us.
DOCTOR: Which is more than you can say for the owners of this ship.

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The Richard Mace character is taken & adapted from some of Eric Saward's previous scripting work for Radio 4. In these Mace is a Victorian actor/manager, played by Geoffery Matthews, who becomes involved in strange mysteries but is otherwise similar to his Doctor Who version. The TV version of Mace is played by well known actor Michael Robbins, probably most famous for his appearances as Arthur Rudge, Stan Butler's brother in law in On The Buses. He'd also featured in The Sweeney episode Big Brother a Kevin Lee. Robbins was married to Hal Dyer who viewers my age will know as Mrs Perkins in Rentaghost.

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Playing the Terileptil is actor Michael Melia, then mainly known as an actor that played heavies. He too had been in The Sweeney, playing Rudd in Messenger of the Gods and had played a Federation Trooper in the Blake's 7 episode Aftermath, where he's alongside an officer played by Richard Franklin, who was Captain Mike Yates in many Third Doctor Jon Pertwee UNIT stories. In Inspector Morse Melia plays a Decorator in The Secret of Bay 5B. In 1990 he gained national recognition as Queen Vic LandlordEddie Royle in Eastenders. He's not the first actor to play a Queen Vic Landlord to appear in Doctor Who: Mike Reid, who played Eastenders' Frank Butcher, was in the War Machines as a supporting artist and appears in a few other 1960s stories. The Vic's most famous Landlord will be along in a short while in Episode 620 Resurrection of the Daleks part 2.

The Terileptil's Android is played by Peter van Dissel who had two prior encounters with science fiction much earlier on in his career: in 1969 he was in Gerry Anderson's Doppelgänger (aka Journey to the Far Side of the Sun) as Mallory and in the same year he's in the now missing third season Out of the Unknown episode Immortality Inc as Earth Blaine.

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The Miller id James Charlton who was a Mentiad in Pirate Planet and the Cafe Artist in City of Death

The lead Villager, who we saw in episode 1 in the forest and is leading the mob in the barn is Richard Hampton. He was also in a now missing Out of the Unknown episode: he played Chief Supt. Mailer in the second season episode The World in Silence. He was in The Sweeney twice: in 1975's Jigsaw he was Hilary Elkin and in 1978's The Bigger They Are he was Barnes. In The Professionals he plays Morgan in Old Dog with New Tricks, the first episode filmed which was intended to be shown first but was bumped to third in the running order.

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The Poacher, who leads the group attaching The Doctor, Mace and Nyssa is played by Neil West. His accomplice the Woodcutter, who's on the left of the picture below, is played by Thomas Knox who was an Acolyte in Face of Evil, while the Farmhand on the right is James Tye, who I can find no record of elsewhere in Doctor Who or on IMDB

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The Scytheman is Jeff Wayne who was a Mentiad in The Pirate Planet and a Pangol Doctor image in Leisure Hive. He'll be back as a Cyberman in Earthshock and a Trooper in Resurrection of the Daleks. In Blake's 7 he's a Federation Trooper in Blake.

In amongst the Villagers we have Charles Adey-Grey who was an American Diplomat in Day of the Daleks, the Theatre Doorkeeper in The Talons of Weng-Chiang and a Nobleman in Androids of Tara. In Doomwatch he plays a Male Magistrate in the now missing second episode Friday's Child.

Keith Guest had been a Marshman in Full Circle and a Security Guard Logopolis.

Tom Gandl had been a Citizen in Full Circle and one of the Peasants in the Village Centre in State of Decay. He returns as the Male Onlooker in Remembrance of the Daleks. In Blake's 7 he was a Kairos Guard / Labourer in The Harvest of Kairos.(uncredited)

Victor Croxford had been a Laboratory Technician in Claws of Axos and a Peasant in woods in State of Decay.

Bill Whitehead was previously a Councillor in The Time Monster, a Noble in Androids of Tara and a Logopolitan in Logopolis

Stuntman/Masked Villager 2 Stuart Fell Stuart Fell 1,3-4[FO]