Monday, 21 March 2016

Female Doctor Suggestions

Hi. This is an article I wrote a couple of years ago, but I felt the need to share it with you. Hope you like.
 
 
6 Actresses who would be perfect as the first female Doctor Who

An article by Rowan Crump


With a lead protagonist who travelled through time and space in a Police Telephone Box that is bigger inside than out, Doctor Who was already one of the most unique shows on television. But it was the events of 1966 that saw the show bring in one of the ideas that made it like no other, and the reason the show is still going today.

William Hartnell, who had originated the role of the Doctor in 1963, as a sometimes tetchy, but often eccentric and whimsical grandfather figure, had started to become old and tired. He often had a habit of fluffing his lines, and because the show back then was recorded as if it were live, it was impossible to do anything about it. Eventually, the production team realised that there was only one way forward – they had to replace the actor playing the Doctor. Back then, if an actor was replaced in the same role by someone else, they never mentioned onscreen the fact that they were a different actor (see roles like James Bond or Miss Marple). But when the Doctor Who team came to change the lead actor, they actually bothered to come up with an explanation for the viewers. Not only that, they also chose not to replace Hartnell with someone similar looking, playing the role as he did. They completely changed the character of the Doctor, and allowed new lead Patrick Troughton to put his own spin on the role. It is this idea (which later became known as regeneration) which allowed the show to continue on BBC One until its original cancellation in 1989, and for the new series to be running into its ninth year.

Since Troughton replaced Hartnell, there have been eleven more actors playing the Doctor, all of them male. It has been a long running discussion amongst fans, sometimes embarrassingly mumbled quietly, as to whether or not there will ever be a female Doctor. A recent survey in the official Doctor Who Magazine revealed that most fans say they are not ready for the Doctor to be played by a woman. Some even say that they will stop watching if the Doctor becomes a woman. When Helen Mirren announced her interest in possibly playing the Doctor, current showrunner Steven Moffat commented back that he would one day like to see the Queen of England played by a man. As part of the 331/3 percent who like the idea of there one day being a lady behind the TARDIS controls, I get really sick of people’s sexist attitude towards this, and am especially shocked that a lot of it comes from women. So much for sisterhood. The casting of the Doctor should be based around how good the acting is, not around whether you fancy them or not. If the Doctor became a woman it opens up a load of fantastic story possibilities. How would the character ease into being female, after nearly a thousand years of being male? How would she cope if the TARDIS landed in a time period when women were not as listened to as men? How would the Doctor’s companions and old friends or foes get used to the man they knew now being a woman? A whole universe of ideas awaits whoever makes the decision.

Here is a list of qualities essential for whoever plays the Doctor:

1)       Needs to be an eccentric character.

2)       Needs to have a playful, childish side to them.

3)       Needs to have a unique sense of fashion (but not too unique, eg. Colin Baker).

4)       Needs to be able to flit between loveable eccentric moments and moments of darkness and anger.

5)       Needs to have a good use of language.

6)       Needs to be a British actor.

7)       Regardless of age and appearence, they need to be believable as an over-900-year-old humanoid alien.

8)       Needs to be a heroic portrayal, but has to go into moments of mystery (like we don’t know what the Doctor is planning).

9)       Most importantly, needs to be a good actor.

So, with that in mind, here is my list of six actresses who I think will be perfect to add a bit of oestrogen to the iconic time travelling hero:

1)       Janet McTeer

As I previously mentioned, Helen Mirren said she would be interested in playing the Doctor, but if I were to choose a similar actress for the role, I would go for Janet McTeer. First making her name on stage and in film/TV, she first became really popular in the Lynda La Plante prison drama series The Governor (1995-96), and won both an Olivier and a Tony award for the 1996-97 stage production of Ibsen’s A Doll’s House. She was then cast in the film Tumbleweeds (1999) as a single mother who roams from town to town with her young daughter. It was this role that earned her an Oscar nomination for best actress (alongside Meryl Streep, Julianne Moore, Annette Bening, and eventual winner Hilary Swank), and led to Janet getting a lot more noticeable roles. I really enjoyed her performances as a dreadlocked crazy woman in Terry Gilliam’s Tideland (2007), and as a well-spoken yet sadistic assassin in Cat Run (2011). She earned a second Oscar nomination for the 2011 film Albert Nobbs, which saw her and Glenn Close play women who had to pass as men to work and survive in 19th century Ireland. It was her androgynous look in this that made me first think how great she could be as the Doctor. She could be an older, maternal incarnation (very like Mary Poppins, or her performances as strong mother characters in Parade’s End and The White Queen), and her height of 6’1 means she’d be as tall as David Tennant’s incarnation, two inches shorter than Jon Pertwee and Tom Baker. I also love her big blue expressive eyes, one of her best features.

2)       Helena Bonham Carter

 
If there is any actress who could deliver a kooky, eccentric, but dark performance as the Doctor, it is Helena Bonham Carter. As we have seen in the Harry Potter films and her collaborations with partner Tim Burton, we know she has a knack at playing strange, dark, eccentric characters. Add in the fact she won a BAFTA for The King’s Speech, and her kooky fashion sense seen at premieres and awards ceremonies, and you know you have someone the role of the Doctor is built for. I think she could give a very similar performance to the way Tom Baker did it. She could switch from the sweetness and odd way that the Doctor observes the world, the sensitive way that ‘he’ helps those in need, and the sometimes scary way the Doctor can turn on his enemies in a fight. If not the Doctor, she would be perfect as a female member of the Doctor’s people – perhaps Romana or The Rani.

3)       Ellie Kendrick


A personal favourite choice for me, Ellie Kendrick is a young actress I have admired ever since I saw her in the title role in the 2009 BBC adaptation of The Diary of Anne Frank, one of the best debuts from an actress I’ve seen in years. Since then, she has made appearances in shows such as Being Human, Misfits, and Chickens, and she currently stars as Meera Reed in Game of Thrones. It is her performance in Being Human that I think gives us a good clue to how she could play the Doctor. She plays Allison, a young woman who is very geeky, likes fossils, and is a school debating champion. Oh, and a werewolf. The scene where she is down by the docks trying to reason with a vampire who she thinks is trying to reveal the existence of werewolves to the world shows that she would be able to stand up to the Daleks or Cybermen. Later on, she shows great skill at retort against a vampire who is obsessed with 80’s action movie-style puns. These and other adorable quirks of hers - her glasses, her fashion style, the odd way she runs, and the fact she says things like ‘paxis’ (Latin for ‘peace’) and ‘takk’ (‘thanks’ in Norwegian) also give her an eccentric quality, something that the Doctor needs to have. Her youth and her height may hider her chances though. At the very least, her appearances in other sci-fi/fantasy shows mean it’s only a matter of time before the ‘Whoniverse’ comes a ’calling. If she were to play any other role, I think she’d be great as the Doctor’s granddaughter Susan.

4)       Sue Perkins
 

Returning to the androgynous Doctor idea I discussed with Janet McTeer, Sue Perkins is another who fits well in that category. Mostly know as a comedienne and co-host of The Great British Bake Off, Sue has always had a unique appearance (I believe it’s known as lesbian chic) with her short quiffed hair, specs, and designer suits, and I think that would work to make you believe she is an eccentric alien. She’s quite thin, so you just see her behind the controls of the TARDIS, like a female Tennant-esque incarnation. She is also very quirky, and hopefully can also bring a serious edge to the role as well. I think she could play it as a mix of Tennant and Matt Smith’s incarnations, as well as adding a few quirks of her own. The Doctor could also develop a love of carrot cake as an in-joke. Perkins herself has said she is delighted that several fans set up petitions for her to become the first female Doctor. Maybe one day, she will fulfil the fan’s wishes.
5)       Adelayo Adedayo


Along with the debate on whether the Doctor should become female or not, there is also the discussion as to why the Doctor has not yet been played by a black actor. So, to kill two birds with one stone as it were, I present to you Ms. Adelayo Adedayo. Viewers of BBC Three will recognise her from her role as Viva, the sensible one in teen sitcom Some Girls. In that role, she portrays someone wise beyond their years, and that is another thing essential for whoever gets cast as the Doctor. The fact that the Doctor would be black and a woman means that she would have to adjust to both thingsbe stories where the character could face prejudice in time periods such as 1950’s America, or the Deep South. As a young actress still at the start of her career, I can’t predict how Adelayo would play the role. I think she should make the character her own and see how it fits her, but put in some of the wit she uses as Viva.

6)       Katherine Kastin

 
Another personal choice, and not just because she happens to be a friend of mine, Katherine Kastin is a born performer. Born in the States, she moved to London as a baby with her mother, who would later marry Dan Crawford, founder of the King’s Head pub/theatre in Islington. Katey grew up around the stage, going on to appear in several of the theatre’s productions, as well as achieving minor fame when she was cast as the scheming head prefect Rose Carter in the 1995-96 BBC adaptation of Gillian Cross’ Demon Headmaster books. It was a re-run of this series on the CBBC channel in 2008 that reminded me of how fantastic she was as Rose, and inspired me to write a letter to her, saying how much I admired her, and asking for advice on acting. She wrote back to me the most beautifully written letter saying thanks, passing on advice, and inviting me to see her in a play at the King’s Head that summer. So, I went to see her in her mother’s adaptation of J.M. Barrie’s The Shadowmaster (in which she played Mabel Purdey, a young married woman who discovers that her husband is having an affair with her best friend Joanna), and she was amazing. After the show, we met properly for the first time, and we have been friends ever since. She now lives in New Zealand with her husband Fraser Wyeth, their daughter Arielle, and their hound Pan. Still acting in independent productions, I think Katherine would make a perfect Doctor because her maturity yet childish playfulness suits the character, and she can also flip from kookiness to darkness and anger, which is essential for the role. Also, her unique features would make her believable as a humanoid alien older than her years. If I was ever in charge of the series, she would be my first choice.

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