Through twelve different incarnations, a move from black and white to colour and a new century, Doctor Who has become a great British institution, with successive generations of children and their parents brought together behind the nation's collective sofa.
In honour of the show's 50th anniversary, The Times has been doing some time-travelling of its own. We've scoured our archives and back issues to produce this Whovian's alternative to The Histories, encountering Daleks, Cybermen and unsympathetic BBC commissioning editors along the way.
The pieces inside this book range from short news articles from the Sixties to interviews with the cast to letters to the Editor – all of which are, we think, worthy of a permanent place in the show's history.
In honour of the show's 50th anniversary, The Times has been doing some time-travelling of its own. We've scoured our archives and back issues to produce this Whovian's alternative to The Histories, encountering Daleks, Cybermen and unsympathetic BBC commissioning editors along the way.
The pieces inside this book range from short news articles from the Sixties to interviews with the cast to letters to the Editor – all of which are, we think, worthy of a permanent place in the show's history.