Recorded Time and Other Stories
Recorded Time and Other Stories | |
---|---|
Big Finish Productions audio drama | |
Series | Doctor Who |
Release no. | 150 |
Featuring | Sixth Doctor Peri Brown |
Written by | Richard Dinnick |
Executive producer(s) | Nicholas Briggs Jason Haigh-Ellery |
Production code | 6Z/AA |
Release date | August 2011 |
Recorded Time and Other Stories is a Big Finish Productions audio drama based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. As the 150th release, it is made of four one-part stories, by different authors, rather than the usual multi-part serial. All episodes feature the Sixth Doctor as played by Colin Baker and Peri Brown played by Nicola Bryant.
Main cast[]
Recorded Time[]
By
1536, The Court of King Henry VIII Immortalis.
- Henry VIII — Paul Shearer
- Anne Boleyn —
- Scrivener — Philip Bretherton
- Marjorie — Rosanna Miles
Paradoxicide[]
The legendary lost world of Sendos was rumored to have the most powerful weapons in the universe. Now it is broadcasting across space in Peri's voice.
- Inquisa — Raquel Cassidy
- Centuria / Ship — Joan Walker
- Barond —
- Volsci — Laura Molyneux / Rosanna Miles
A Most Excellent Match[]
By
In Jane Austen's England, Peri was seen to be courting suitors, including the Doctor.
- Tilly — Rosanna Miles
- Darcy / D'Urberville / Heathcliff — Philip Bretherton
- Cranton — Paul Shearer
Question Marks[]
By
The mysterious man with the question mark collar saves the crew of a stricken vessel.
- Destiny Gray — Raquel Cassidy
- Greg Stone — James George
- Arnie McAllister —
Continuity[]
- The First Doctor also quarreled with Henry VIII, as he explained in The Sensorites.
- The Tenth Doctor was briefly married to the daughter of Henry and Anne Boleyn, Elizabeth I ("The End of Time", "The Day of the Doctor"), resulting in another quarrel ("The Shakespeare Code").
Cast notes[]
- Raquel Cassidy was in the 2011 Doctor Who television story "The Rebel Flesh" / "The Almost People".
Critical reception[]
Doctor Who Magazine reviewer Matt Michael called the collection "excellent", identifying "A Most Excellent Match" as the "most fun", and "Question Marks" as the "strongest".[1]
References[]
- ^ Michael, Matt (October 2011). "The DWM Review". Doctor Who Magazine. Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent: Panini Comics (439): 74.
External links[]
- 2011 audio plays
- Sixth Doctor audio plays
- Fiction set in the 1530s
- Fiction set in the 24th century