The Master (Doctor Who)
The Master | |
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Doctor Who character | |
First appearance | Terror of the Autons (1971) |
Last appearance | "The Timeless Children" (2020) |
Portrayed by |
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Character biography | |
Species | Time Lord |
Home planet | Gallifrey |
The Master is a recurring character in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who and its associated spin-off works. He is a renegade alien Time Lord and the childhood friend, later archenemy of the title character, The Doctor.
Multiple actors have played The Master since the character's introduction in 1971. Within the show’s narrative, the change in actors and subsequent change of the character’s appearance is sometimes explained as The Master taking possession of other characters' bodies or as a consequence of regeneration, which is a biological attribute that allows Time Lords to survive fatal injuries.
The role was originally played by Roger Delgado in 1971 until his death in 1973.[1] From 1976 until the show's cancellation in 1989, The Master was portrayed by a succession of actors; Peter Pratt, Geoffrey Beevers, and Anthony Ainley. Eric Roberts took on the role for the 1996 Doctor Who TV film. Since the show's revival in 2005, The Master has been portrayed by Derek Jacobi, John Simm, Michelle Gomez, and Sacha Dhawan. Gomez portrayed the first female incarnation of The Master, known as Missy. The Master returned in 2020 in the two-part episode Spyfall, portrayed by Dhawan, who is the youngest actor to play the role.
Beevers, Roberts, Jacobi, Simm, and Gomez reprised the role for the Big Finish audio dramas. At the same time, Alex Macqueen, Gina McKee, Mark Gatiss, James Dreyfus, and Milo Parker portrayed incarnations unique to Big Finish.
Origins[]
The creative team conceived of The Master as a recurring villain, first appearing in Terror of the Autons (1971). The Master's title was deliberately chosen by producer Barry Letts and script editor Terrance Dicks because, like The Doctor, it was a title conferred by an academic degree. A sketch of three "new characters" for 1971 (the other two being Jo Grant and Mike Yates) suggested he was conceived to be of "equal, perhaps even superior rank, to The Doctor."[2]
Barry Letts had one man in mind for the role: Roger Delgado, who had a long history of playing villains and had already made three attempts to be cast in the series.[3] He had worked previously with Barry Letts and was a good friend of Jon Pertwee.
Malcolm Hulke spoke of the character and his relationship with The Doctor: "There was a peculiar relationship between The Master and The Doctor: one felt that The Master wouldn't really have liked to eliminate The Doctor...you see The Doctor was the only person like him at the time in the whole universe, a renegade Time Lord and in a funny sort of way they were partners in crime."[4]
An unrelated character known as The Master, who ruled over the Land of Fiction, had previously appeared in the 1968 Doctor Who serial The Mind Robber opposite the Second Doctor.[5]
Aims and character[]
A would-be universal conqueror, The Master wants to control the universe. In The Deadly Assassin (1976), his ambitions are described as becoming "the master of all matter".[6] He also had a secondary objective: to make The Doctor suffer. In The Sea Devils (1972), The Master mentions that the "pleasure" of seeing the destruction of the human race, of which The Doctor is fond, would be "a reward in itself."[7]
History within the show[]
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Encounters with the Third Doctor[]
The Master, as played by Roger Delgado, makes his first appearance in Terror of the Autons (1971), where he allies with the Nestene Consciousness to help them invade Earth. The Third Doctor (Jon Pertwee) convinces The Master to stop this plan at the last minute, and The Master subsequently escapes, albeit with his TARDIS left non-functioning after The Doctor confiscates the ship's dematerialization circuit.[8]
Having become a main character in the show's eighth season, The Master reappears in The Mind of Evil, where he regains his TARDIS' circuit from The Doctor after attempting to launch a nerve gas missile that would initiate World War III.[9] The Master is seen again in another incursion on Earth in The Claws of Axos,[10] and then fails to hold the galaxy to ransom using a doomsday weapon on the planet Uxarieus in the year 2472 in Colony in Space.[11] In The Dæmons, The Master is finally captured on Earth by the organization UNIT after Jo Grant (Katy Manning) prevents the alien Azal (Stephen Thorne) from giving The Master his powers.[12]
In The Sea Devils (1972), The Master is shown to be imprisoned on an island off the coast of England. He convinces the governor of the prison, Colonel Trenchard (Clive Morton), to help him steal electronics from HMS Seaspite, the nearby naval base. This allows The Master to contact the reptilian Sea Devils, the former rulers of Earth, so he can help them retake the planet from humanity. The Master convinces The Doctor to help him build machinery that would bring the Sea Devils out of their millions of years of hibernation. Still, The Doctor sabotages the device by overloading it, destroying the Sea Devil base, and preventing war between humanity and reptiles. The Master subsequently escapes in a hovercraft. The Doctor reveals in this serial that The Master was once a "very good friend" of his.[13]
Delgado's last appearance as The Master is in Frontier in Space (1973), where he works alongside the Dalek and Ogron races to provoke a war between the Human and Draconian Empires. The scheme fails, and The Master escapes after he shoots at The Doctor.[14]
Delgado was slated to return in a serial called The Final Game, which would have been the season 11 finale. However, he died in a car crash in June 1973, and the story was never produced.[citation needed]
Quest for new life[]
Played by Peter Pratt in his next appearance, The Master returns in The Deadly Assassin (1976). Special effects makeup was applied to Pratt to give The Master a corpse-like appearance. Found by Chancellor Goth (Bernard Horsfall) on planet Tersurus, The Master is revealed to be in his final regeneration and near the end of his final life. The Master attempts to gain a new regeneration cycle by using the artifacts of Rassilon, the symbols of the President of the Council of Time Lords, to manipulate Eye of Harmony at the cost of Gallifrey. But the Fourth Doctor (Tom Baker) stops The Master, who escapes after his assumed death.[6]
The Master later returns in The Keeper of Traken, the role taken over by Geoffrey Beevers.[15] Still dying, The Master came to the Traken Union to renew his life by using the empire's technological Source. Though the plot fails, The Master manages to cheat death by transferring his essence into the body of a Traken scientist named Tremas (Anthony Ainley) and overwriting his host's mind.[16] The Master then appeared on and off for the rest of the series, still seeking to extend his life – preferably with a new set of regenerations. Subsequently, in The Five Doctors, the Time Lords offer The Master a new regeneration cycle in exchange for his help.[17]
The Master's final appearance in the classic series is in Survival, trapped on the planet of the Cheetah People and under its influence, which drives its victims to savagery. Though The Master manages to escape the doomed planet, he ends up back on the planet prior to its destruction when he attempts to kill the Seventh Doctor (Sylvester McCoy).[18]
Dalek trial and 'execution'[]
The Master was the primary antagonist of the 1996 Doctor Who television movie. He was played by American actor Eric Roberts.
In the prologue, The Master (portrayed briefly by Gordon Tipple) is executed by the Daleks as a punishment for his "evil crimes". But before his apparent death, The Master requests his remains to be brought back to Gallifrey by the Seventh Doctor.[19] However, as posited in the novelization of the television movie by Gary Russell, The Master's self-alterations to extend his lifespan allow him to survive his execution by transferring his mind into a snake-like entity called a "morphant."[20] This interpretation is made explicit in the first of the Eighth Doctor Adventures novels, The Eight Doctors by Terrance Dicks,[21] and also used in the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip story The Fallen, which states that the morphant was a shape-shifting animal native to Skaro.[22]
Using his morphant body to break free from the container holding his remains, The Master sabotages the TARDIS console to force the vessel to crash land in San Francisco at the start of Earth's new millennium. From there, The Master has the morphant enter the body of a paramedic named Bruce to take control of him. However, The Master finds his human host to be unsustainable as the body slowly begins to degenerate, although The Master has the added abilities to spit an acid-like bile, both as a weapon and to mentally control victims as an alternative to his usual hypnotic abilities. The Master attempts to access the Eye of Harmony to steal the remaining regenerations of the Eighth Doctor (Paul McGann), but instead is sucked into it and supposedly killed.[19]
Professor Yana and Harold Saxon[]
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Following the revival of Doctor Who in 2005, the Ninth Doctor (Christopher Eccleston) believes the Time Lords all died on the final day of the Time War with the Daleks.[23][24]
During several episodes in the revival show's second and third series, a man known as "Saxon" or "Harold Saxon" is mentioned. In Love & Monsters (2006), Victor Kennedy (Peter Kay) is reading a newspaper with the headline "Saxon leads polls with 64 per cent."[25] In The Runaway Bride, the British Army are heard being given orders from "Mr. Saxon" to fire upon the Racnoss Webstar.[26] In "Smith and Jones" (2007), medical student Oliver Morgenstern (Ben Righton) tells the news that "Mr. Saxon" was proven right about there being life beyond Earth. A poster with the words "Vote Saxon" also appears in the episode.[27] In "The Lazarus Experiment", Francine Jones (Adjoa Andoh) leaves an answerphone message for her daughter Martha (Freema Agyeman), warning her that the Tenth Doctor (David Tennant) is "not safe" saying "this information comes from Harold Saxon himself."[28]
The Master's return is also foreshadowed in "Gridlock", when the Face of Boe (Struan Rodger) gives The Doctor a message before dying: "You are not alone".[29]
In "Utopia", a scientist called Professor Yana (Derek Jacobi) is revealed to be The Master, disguised in biological human form to hide from the Time War. Yana overhears a conversation between The Doctor and Jack Harkness about a time when The Doctor was in hiding. He used the Chameleon Arch to temporarily place his Time Lord identity within a fob watch. This makes Yana curious about his own fob watch and when he opens it he is reunited with The Master's consciousness. As this happens, The Doctor is talking Martha who recognised the watch as the same device. The Doctor realises that the Face of Boe's words had a double meaning, "You Are Not Alone" stood for "Yana".[30]
Yana is shot, regenerates into a new body (John Simm) and steals The Doctor's TARDIS.[15] In "The Sound of Drums," The Doctor makes his way back to Earth to find The Master has become Prime Minister of the UK under the alias of Harold Saxon. The Master kidnaps Martha's family and conquers Earth. In a phone conversation with The Doctor, it is revealed by The Master that "The Time Lords only resurrected me because they knew I'd be the perfect warrior for a time war". A flashback shows The Master at the age of eight, during a Time Lord initiation ceremony where he is taken before a gap in the fabric of space and time, known as the Untempered Schism, from which one can see into the time vortex. The Doctor says this ceremony causes some Time Lords to go mad, and that this event was where "some say" it all began for The Master.[31]
In "Last of the Time Lords", Martha spends a year working to save her family and to defeat The Master's plan to wage war against the universe. The Master himself mentions that looking into the vortex as a child made "the drumming" choose him as a "call to war" in his head. When fatally shot by his human wife, Lucy Saxon (Alexandra Moen), The Master refuses to regenerate, knowing it will haunt The Doctor.[32] The Doctor cremates the dead body on a funeral pyre, but after he leaves a female hand is seen picking up The Master's ring from the ashes and laughter is heard.
The Master returns in "The End of Time" (2009–2010) when his disciples attempt a resurrection ritual using a surviving piece of The Master's body. However, Lucy sabotages the ritual, bringing The Master back as a manic undead creature, hungry for human flesh and leaking electrical energy. The Master proceeds with a plot to transform the entire human race into his own clones, and using their combined presence, triangulates the "drumbeat" in his head to its source: The Time Lord President Rassilon (Timothy Dalton). The Time Lord Chancellor (Joe Dixon) describes the drumming noise in The Master's head as something "[h]istory says [is] a torment that stayed with him for the rest of his life." The Time Lords set up the signal back in time in The Master's head as a child as a means to escape the last days of the Time War. They attempt to return to the universe. Confronted with Rassilon, whose drumbeat is the cause of The Master's insanity, The Master teams up with The Doctor to destroy them. He, too, is sent back to Gallifrey when the Time Lords are sealed away in the Time War, trapped once more.[33]
Missy []
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The Master returns in the eighth series as a new female incarnation called "Missy" (Michelle Gomez), which is short for "Mistress". The Master's return is seeded in the series 7 episode "The Bells of Saint John" (2013), when a "woman in the shop" brings Clara Oswald (Jenna Coleman) and the Eleventh Doctor (Matt Smith) together by giving Clara the telephone number to The Doctor's TARDIS.[34] This plot thread is picked up on again in "Deep Breath" (2014); the Twelfth Doctor (Peter Capaldi) and Clara realize that a woman has been scheming to keep the two together. Missy is shown observing the pair from a world she refers to as 'Heaven', speaking to recently deceased individuals The Doctor encountered throughout the series.[35][36][37][38]
In "Dark Water", Missy formally introduces herself to The Doctor. She reveals that she's created an "afterlife" from a Gallifreyan Matrix Data Slice, it stores the consciousness of dead people so they can eventually be made into Cybermen.[39]
In "Death in Heaven", Missy offers The Doctor control of her Cybermen army in the hopes of compromising his morality. She is defeated when her Cyber army is destroyed, and appears vaporized when shot by the posthumously cyber-converted Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart.[40]
Missy returns in "The Magician's Apprentice"/"The Witch's Familiar" (2015), revealed to have faked her demise using a teleporter powered by the energy of the Cyberman laser weapon that shot her. She contacts Clara when she believes The Doctor anticipates that he will die and travels to Skaro with the pair to confront Davros. She helps save The Doctor from Davros' scheme but fiendishly attempts to trick The Doctor into killing Clara as they escape the crumbling Dalek city. When The Doctor and Clara abandon Missy on Skaro, she encounters a room full of angry Daleks, but informs them that she has a clever plan.[41][42]
On 6 April 2017, the BBC confirmed that Simm would be returning as The Master in the tenth series, appearing alongside his successor in the role, Michelle Gomez, for the first multi-Master story in the program's history.[43] Previously, there have been multi-Master stories in audio dramas, books, and comics.[44] The series would also be Gomez' last.[45]
Early in the series, The Doctor explains to his companion Bill Potts (Pearl Mackie) that he is guarding a vault on Earth as a result of a promise,[46] which is revealed by a flashback in "Extremis" to be a promise to watch over Missy. She is captive in the vault after The Doctor spared her from execution on a faraway world, and Missy promised to become good.[47]
In "The Lie of the Land", The Doctor's crew visits Missy in the safe to gain intelligence on an enemy she had defeated in the past. Her demeanour seems little changed, and she has low regard for human life, but in the episode's coda, she sheds remorseful tears for all the millions of deaths she has caused.[48]
Missy's gradual reform is indicated in several more episodes. In "Empress of Mars," she returns The Doctor's TARDIS to Mars to rescue The Doctor and Bill. In "The Eaters of Light," she has been released from her cage by The Doctor to run repairs on his TARDIS, which is isomorphically locked so that she cannot pilot it.
The Doctor attempts to test Missy's reformation in the series finale "World Enough and Time"/"The Doctor Falls" by sending Missy, Bill, and Nardole (Matt Lucas) on a rescue mission aboard a spaceship experiencing time dilation near a black hole. However, they soon run into Missy's past incarnation aboard the ship, where The Master (John Simm) has initiated new cybermen's genesis. Trapped aboard the ship together, Missy finds her loyalties torn between her promise to The Doctor and the lure of her old self. After initially betraying The Doctor, she later chooses to stand alongside him against a Cyberman army, stabbing her past self and sending The Doctor back to his TARDIS to regenerate, concluding her life has led to her becoming The Doctor's ally. Enraged at the idea of ever becoming The Doctor's ally, The Master shoots Missy with his laser screwdriver, ostensibly disabling her ability to regenerate and killing her.
Disguised as O[]
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During the events of "Spyfall" the Thirteenth Doctor seeks out an old ally, a former MI6 agent known as 'O' (Sacha Dhawan) who is hiding in the Australian outback. In the closing minutes of the first part, O reveals himself as a new incarnation of The Master, having killed the real O on the way to his first day of work at MI6 and assumed his identity.[49] The Master reveals he manipulated tech mogul Daniel Barton and the inter-dimensional Kasaavin to attract The Doctor's attention. Gallifrey has been destroyed and he intends to betray the Kasaavin once they served their purpose in his plans. The Doctor foils his scheme, provoking the Kasaavin into taking The Master with them upon learning of his treacherous intent. The Doctor later finds a recorded confession of The Master's at Gallifrey's ruins admitting to having destroyed their planet after realizing that their entire identity and understanding of Time Lord history was a lie based on "the Timeless Child."
The Master is revealed to have escaped at the end of "Ascension of the Cybermen" after coming from Gallifrey, which has appeared in an unknown wormhole known as "The Boundary". In "The Timeless Children", The Master takes The Doctor into the ruins of Gallifrey, and she asks why he destroyed it, but he never responds.
He shows her records of how the Time Lords did not naturally develop the ability to regenerate. Rather they acquired it by harvesting the DNA of an extraordinary child from an unknown universe or dimension who had that power; that child is The Doctor. She lived throughout Gallifrey's civilization and had her memory wiped on at least one occasion.
He attempts to create an alliance with the Lone Cyberman but shrinks him and persuades the Cyberium to use his body as a host. Then, he proceeds to create a new race of Cybermen with regenerative abilities from the dead Time Lord bodies. The Doctor attempts to use the "Death Particle" to defeat The Master, which will wipe out all organic life on a planet but cannot bring herself to do so.
However, Ko Sharmus, the Boundary guardian, blames himself for the whole situation as it was his responsibility to hide the Cyberium and felt as if he did not do a good enough job. He chooses to sacrifice himself instead. As The Doctor escapes in a TARDIS, Ko Sharmus detonates the Death Particle, presumably killing The Master and his army of Cyber Masters.
Characteristics[]
Intelligence and attitude[]
The Master and The Doctor are shown to have similar levels of intelligence, and were classmates at the Time Lord Academy on Gallifrey, where The Master outperformed The Doctor.[8][17][50] A similar connection between the two was also referenced in "The End of Time" in which The Master reminisces with the Tenth Doctor about his father's estates on Gallifrey and his childhood with The Doctor before saying "look at us now".[51] In the 2007 episode "Utopia", the Tenth Doctor calls the transformed and disguised Master a genius and shows admiration for his intellect before discovering his true identity.[15] The Tenth Doctor further expresses admiration for The Master's intellect in "The End of Time" by calling him "stone cold brilliant" and yet states that The Master could be more if he would just give up his desire for domination.[52] The Twelfth Doctor states that Missy is "the one person almost as smart as me" ("The Lie of the Land").
Delgado's portrayal of The Master was that of a suave and charming sociopathic individual, able to be polite and murderous at almost the same time. His design is a homage to the classic Svengali character: a black Nehru outfit with a beard and moustache.
Aspects of Simm's portrayal of The Master parallel David Tennant's Doctor, primarily in his ability to make light of tense situations and his rather quirky and hyperactive personality. According to the producers, this was done to make The Master more threatening to The Doctor by having him take one of his opponent's greatest strengths,[53] as well as making the parallels between the two characters more distinctive.[54] This rationale is written into dialogue by The Master in "Utopia," in which he explicitly states, as he is regenerating, that if The Doctor can be young and strong, then so can he.[15] In an episode of Doctor Who Confidential, "Lords and Masters," Russell T Davies also classifies The Master as both a sociopath and a psychopath.[citation needed]
Michelle Gomez maintained Simm's portrayal of the character, specifically the psychopathic behaviour and inappropriate emotional responses to certain situations. She also portrayed the original traditions of ruthless, murderous behaviour and grandiose, Machiavellian criminal intelligence that have been consistent throughout all incarnations. However, she also displayed a much more coquettish manner, with her new female identity allowing her to fully express aspects of The Master's ambiguous bond with The Doctor (as previously explored by Simm's incarnation in "The Sound of Drums").[citation needed] While determined to torment and corrupt The Doctor with moral temptation while inflicting pain and death to humanity, she frequently referred to him as her "boyfriend" or "friend" and appeared to desire his acquiescence and company ultimately. She is also well aware that she is even more dangerously psychopathic than before, describing herself as "Bananas" to UNIT agent Osgood right before killing her ("Death in Heaven"). However, when circumstances result in Missy being kept in a vault and monitored by The Doctor after an averted execution, Missy actually comes to show signs of remorse for what she had done in the past, to the point that she prepares to side with The Doctor over her own past self ("The Doctor Falls").
Dhawan's Master returns to The Master's love of evil for the sake of being evil, proclaiming at one point that he kills because he's good at it and asking why he should ever stop. While expanded media at least suggests that he is the incarnation after Missy, he often acts more like a dark counterpart to the Eleventh Doctor, talking rapidly about his plans but appearing genuinely dangerous when pushed.[citation needed] Where Missy's actions were based around a twisted attraction to The Doctor, Dhawan's Master destroys Gallifrey simply because he cannot bring himself to accept a discovery that suggests Time Lord society owes regeneration and other secrets of its past to the child that became The Doctor. He perceives this as creating a twisted link between The Doctor and himself.
Mental abilities[]
Both The Doctor and The Master have been shown to be skilled hypnotists, although The Master's capacity to dominate – even by stare and voice alone – has been shown to be far more pronounced. In Logopolis, The Doctor said of The Master, "He's a Time Lord. In many ways, we have the same mind." The Master is often able to anticipate The Doctor's moves, as seen in stories such as Castrovalva, The Keeper of Traken, Time-Flight, and The King's Demons, where he plans elaborate traps for The Doctor, only revealing his presence at the key moment.[16][55][56][57] In The Deadly Assassin, The Master was able to send a false premonition as a telepathic message to The Doctor, but it is unclear whether he performed this through innate psychic ability, or was aided technologically.[6]
In "The End of Time," The Master uses a kind of psychic technique, previously used by The Doctor to read the minds of others, allowing The Doctor to hear the constant 'drumming' inside The Master's mind.[51]
TARDIS[]
In the original Doctor Who series, The Master's TARDISes have had fully functioning chameleon circuits, having appeared as various things, including a horsebox,[8] a spaceship,[11] a fir tree,[58] a computer bank,[59] a grandfather clock,[6][16] a fluted architectural column,[55][56][58] an iron maiden,[57] a fireplace,[55] a British Airways jet,[56] a cottage[60] and a triangular column.[61] Of The Master's TARDISes seen in The Keeper of Traken, one appears as the calcified, statue-like Melkur, able to move and even walk; the other appears as a grandfather clock. The Melkur TARDIS is destroyed.[16] At one point in Logopolis, The Master's TARDIS even appears as a police box, like The Doctor's.[58]
Missy uses a Vortex Manipulator rather than a TARDIS in series 9. She used a pair of them which were linked to one another, to transport herself and Clara Oswald to The Doctor's 'farewell party' in medieval Essex ("The Magician's Apprentice"). They are destroyed in "The Witch's Familiar" when, to avoid being killed by Daleks, they channel energy from the Daleks' weapons to teleport them away, looking as if they were exterminated.
In The Doctor Falls, The Master acquired a TARDIS before leaving Gallifrey but burnt out its dematerialization circuit while attempting to get away from a black hole too fast. His future incarnation Missy provides him with a spare, and The Master can fix his TARDIS and depart.
In "Spyfall, Part 1", the disguised Master lives in a barn which he later reveals to be his TARDIS. In Part 2, he is shown flying this TARDIS to London in 1834 and Paris in 1943. The Doctor later steals it from him to return to the present after being trapped in the past without her TARDIS. This is the first time since the show's revival that The Master's TARDIS interior is shown on screen and is noted to be the same size on the inside (albeit when he was trying to deflect suspicion from himself).
Handheld weaponry[]
The Master's weapon of choice in the original show's run was the "tissue compression eliminator," which shrinks its target to doll-like proportions, killing them in the process. Its appearance is similar to that of The Doctor's tool, the sonic screwdriver.
Despite his own fondness for the weapon, Russell T Davies decided against bringing it back for The Master's reappearance in "The Sound of Drums" because The Master had too many new "tricks" to use against The Doctor.[62]
In some audios, The Master has used a staser pistol rather than the TCE.
During the course of "The Sound of Drums," The Master unveils a new handheld weapon: a laser screwdriver. The device functions as a powerful laser weapon, capable of killing with a single shot. It also carries the ability to age victims rapidly using a miniaturized version of the genetic manipulator developed by Professor Lazarus ("The Lazarus Experiment"). The screwdriver is biometrically secured so that only The Master can use it.[31] In "The Doctor Falls," The Master uses a laser screwdriver again to battle the Cybermen. After being stabbed by Missy, The Master shoots her with the laser screwdriver at "full blast," which will prevent her regeneration and kill her permanently.
In "Dark Water"/"Death in Heaven," Missy uses a small hand-held device, about the size of a large mobile phone, which allows her to control her technology and scan her surroundings remotely. It also contains a weapon that she uses to disintegrate Dr. Chang, Osgood, and Seb.[40][39] In "The Magician's Apprentice," Missy uses a newer, upgraded version of this device which appears to be more powerful. It allowed her to control airborne planes after she had frozen them in time and simultaneously disintegrate several UNIT guards.
Missy's parasol is revealed to be a disguised sonic/laser device in "The Doctor Falls." She uses it to defend against an attacking Cyberman. A more unusual feature, demonstrated in "Death in Heaven," allows her to travel through the air like Mary Poppins.
Missy says her brooch contains a Gallifreyan Dark Star alloy pin, given to her by The Doctor "when my daughter...", which she uses to pierce a Dalek's armoured shell. In "The Doctor Falls," Missy uses a small blade concealed in her sleeve to stab her own past self, triggering his off-screen regeneration.
In "Spyfall," the Tissue Compression Eliminator returns as The Master, having regained his manic state, reveals he used it to steal the identity of an ally of The Doctor's. He also used it to bring The Doctor to his mercy by threatening to use it on people in 1834. In "The Timeless Children," The Master threatens The Doctor's human friends with it to get her to return to Gallifrey with him and later kills Ashad, the Lone Cyberman, with the Tissue Compression Eliminator.
In other media[]
The Master has featured in numerous Doctor Who spin-offs. One of the most notable of these other appearances is David A. McIntee's "Master trilogy" of novels comprising The Dark Path and First Frontier in the Virgin Publishing lines and The Face of the Enemy for BBC Books, and the Doctor Who audio dramas produced by Big Finish Productions, in which Geoffrey Beevers has reprised the role, with new incarnations being portrayed by Alex Macqueen, Milo Parker, Gina McKee and Mark Gatiss.
Novels[]
The Master's past with the Doctor is explored somewhat in The Dark Path, which reveals that his name before taking the alias of the Master is Koschei, when he encounters the Second Doctor during their travels. Although initially a somewhat anti-heroic version of the Doctor, willing to murder the first option to save the day but generally still trying to do the right, Koschei turns to evil and becomes the Master after he discovers that his companion and lover, Ailla, is an undercover agent of the Celestial Intervention Agency sent to spy on him. During the course of the novel, Ailla is shot and killed, with Koschei not knowing that she is a Time Lord and will simply regenerate, completing a time-based weapon to benefit the anti-alien efforts of soldiers from Earth's Empire in an attempt to bring her back. The weapon is used to destroy the planet Teriliptus and its inhabitants. Still, when Ailla turns up alive, the knowledge that he has destroyed a planet for nothing, coupled with the revelation of Ailla's betrayal, proves too much. Koschei resolves to bring his own order to the universe at the expense of free will and becoming its Master. Thanks to the Doctor reprogramming his weapon, Koschei is trapped in a black hole at the end of the novel, with it being left uncertain how he will escape.[63] Although it is generally implied[by whom?][original research?] that it takes him most of his remaining lives to do so (hence why the Master is on his last life while the Doctor, intended to be his contemporary, is only on his third), the cover art of The Dark Path depicts Koschei as being already the same regeneration as the Delgado-era Master.
The Face of the Enemy centres around the Delgado-era Master, but includes a cameo by a Koschei from an alternate timeline (specifically, the timeline the Third Doctor visited in Inferno) who never became the Master. This version of Koschei is still a loyal Time Lord who becomes stranded on the alternate Earth after that universe's version of The Web of Fear destroyed his TARDIS. He is subsequently captured and forced to work for the fascist rulers, who keep him alive, in agony, using life support systems. When the Master, crossing over from the other universe, learns of this, he ends his counterpart's life in a rare moment of compassion.[64]
Last of the Gaderene by Mark Gatiss and Deadly Reunion by Terrance Dicks and Barry Letts are both close homages to the Delgado/Pertwee stories. In Last of the Gaderene, the Master, disguised as Police Inspector Lemaitre, assists an alien race called the Gaderene to invade Earth, starting with a small village.[65] In Deadly Reunion, he attempts to control powerful forces through a cult, but finds himself at the mercy of a godlike alien.[66] The Delgado Master also appears in Verdigris by Paul Magrs, a more parodic take on the Pertwee era. The eponymous genie spends much of the novel impersonating the Master, who is in fact controlling him: the real Master appears in the novel's epilogue, buying a Chinese takeaway.[67]
The reason the Master is so emaciated when he appears in The Deadly Assassin is explored in John Peel's novel Legacy of the Daleks, in which he attempts to capture the Doctor's granddaughter Susan Foreman, resulting in an out-of-sequence encounter with the Eighth Doctor when the Doctor receives a telepathic cry of distress from Susan and attempts to trace it back to before its origin. The Master is badly burned when she attacks him in self-defence and takes possession of his TARDIS. After Susan escapes, the dying Master is eventually found by Chancellor Goth on the planet Tersurus, which leads directly into the events of The Deadly Assassin.[68]
The Ainley-era Master appears in the novel The Quantum Archangel by Craig Hinton, a direct sequel to The Time Monster. In this novel, he poses as a Serbian businessman called Gospodar- prompting the Sixth Doctor to wonder if he's "running out of languages"- while attempting to subvert the power of the higher dimensions to turn himself into a god. However, it to be revealed that this plan was actually the result of the machinations of the Chronovore/Eternal hybrid Kronos trying to trick the Master into punishing the Chronovores for his lifetime of imprisonment, with one of the Master's pawns being transformed into the titular Quantum Archangel when she absorbs the higher-dimensional energy as the Master tests his equipment. As the novel concludes, the Master briefly regresses to his crippled and burned form while the Doctor absorbs more of the excess energy to delay the Quantum Archangel on her level, but the story ends with the Master having restored himself to physical health with a boost of the last dregs of higher-dimensional power (although he is apparently subsequently attacked by a group of chronovores).[69]
First Frontier shows the Master (apparently the Ainley version) finally acquiring a new body,[70] who according to McIntee is based on the cinema persona of Basil Rathbone[citation needed], using nanites provided by the alien race known as the Tzun in exchange for his help in setting up their 'invasion' of Earth. This incarnation reappears in Happy Endings by Paul Cornell, Virgin Publishing's celebratory fiftieth Virgin New Adventures novel, once again trying to restore his ability to regenerate, suggesting that the Tzun nanites failed to sustain him long-term. After the broadcast of the television movie, some fans[vague][who?][original research?] suggested that this is the incarnation briefly played by Gordon Tipple in the prologue, eventually succumbing once again to the cheetah virus in the first Eighth Doctor novel The Eight Doctors.[clarification needed][original research?]
Before the end of the Virgin Missing Adventures series, the Delgado version of The Master appeared in the novel Who Killed Kennedy, depicting him setting up a complex plan to manipulate a journalist to bother UNIT by convincing him that they are part of a corrupt conspiracy, which, while published by Virgin, was not considered part of the Missing Adventures series.
The short story "Stop The Pigeon" by Robert Perry and Mike Tucker, and the Past Doctor Adventure Prime Time, by Tucker, are probably[original research?][disputed ] set before First Frontier and feature the Ainley Master looking for a cure for the Cheetah virus.[71][72]
Gallifrey and the Time Lords are destroyed in the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel The Ancestor Cell,[73] but in The Adventuress of Henrietta Street a mysterious stranger wearing a rosette appears[74] who could have been the Master,[citation needed] somehow surviving the cataclysm. In Lance Parkin's The Gallifrey Chronicles, a surviving Time Lord named Marnal appears, and it is implied that he may have been the Master's father, as he mentions being visited by his Time Lord son in the 70s, which matches up with the Delgado Master.[75] In the same novel (and earlier, in Sometime Never...), the Doctor talks with a malign entity within the TARDIS' Eye of Harmony,[75][76] which could have been[according to whom?][original research?] the Roberts Master, throwing the true identity of the Man with the Rosette into doubt. The entity within the Eye refers to itself as an "echo",[citation needed] thus leaving scope for the real Master to be elsewhere. (In his Doctor Who chronology book AHistory, Parkin suggests that Lawrence Miles intended the Man with the Rosette to be the Master, even if it was not explicitly stated.)
Another version of the Master appears in The Infinity Doctors (also by Parkin), where he is known as the Magistrate and is, once again, the Doctor's friend, although when this takes place in continuity is unclear.[77] Parkin has stated[citation needed] that the novel can fit into continuity and that its incarnation of the Master is based on Richard E. Grant.
During the Faction Paradox arc that runs through the Eighth Doctor Adventures, a character known as the War King is featured, which is implied to be a future incarnation of the Master.[citation needed] The character is also referenced in The Book of the War, published by Mad Norwegian Press when the Faction Paradox stories spun off into their own continuity.[78] Later Faction Paradox stories confirm the Magistrate is the younger version of the War King, which had been implied in The Taking of Planet 5.
Alastair Reynolds' novel Harvest of Time published in 2013 features the Roger Delgado incarnation, set after his capture at the end of The Dæmons and before he escapes from prison in The Sea Devils.[79] In the course of the novel, the Master is nearly erased from history by an ancient race known as the Sild, who have captured multiple incarnations of the Master to create a complex temporal manipulator by linking the Masters in a neural network, but the Doctor and the Master track the Sild to their origin, allowing the Master to take control of the Sild's network and turn it against them before his other selves rebel against his control, forcing him to allow the other Masters to escape.
Comic strips[]
The Doctor Who Magazine (DWM) 1992 Winter Special comic Flashback shows a young Master (here called "Magnus") and Doctor on Gallifrey. The Master plans to use a living entity to harness Arton Energy, only for the Doctor to thwart his plans.
The Master returns in a new body and guise, that of a street preacher, in the previously mentioned the DWM comic strip story The Fallen, although the Doctor does not recognize him.[22] The Master reveals himself a few stories later, in The Glorious Dead. The Master had survived the events of the television movie by encountering a cosmic being named Esterath in the time vortex. Esterath controls the Glory, the focal point of the Omniversal spectrum which underlies all existence. The Master's scheme to take control of the Glory fails, and he is banished to parts unknown (see Kroton).[80]
In Character Assassin in DWM #311, the Delgado Master visits the Land of Fiction and steals part of the technology behind it, wiping out several nineteenth century fictional villains as he goes.[81] He can also be seen in the following comic strips set during the Pertwee era:
- "The Glen of Sleeping" by Gerry Haylock and Dick O'Neill (TV Action 107–111)
- "Fogbound" by Frank Langford (Doctor Who Holiday Special 1973)
- "The Time Thief" by Steve Livesey (Doctor Who Annual 1974)
- "The Man in the Ion Mask" by Brian Williamson and Dan Abnett (Doctor Who Magazine Winter Special 1991)
In the IDW publication Prisoners of Time, a 12-issue series to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who, the Master (drawn based on Ainley's portrayal) plays a major part. He is the villain in #6 and #7, meeting the Sixth and Seventh Doctors, attempting to trap the Sixth Doctor in an Auton-staffed asylum and encountering the Seventh as he attempts to drain the energy from a pair of higher-dimensional beings. The Ainley Master is revealed to have teamed up with the Ninth Doctor's disgraced ex-companion Adam Mitchell, who is travelling through time kidnapping the Doctor's companions as revenge, the Master having presented himself as another 'victim' of the Doctor rather than the villain he truly is. His role in the plan after Adam abducts Clara Oswald culminates in an out-of-sequence encounter with the Eleventh Doctor, the Doctor observing that it has been a pleasantly long time since he saw this version of the Master. However, when the Eleventh Doctor manages to summon his previous ten selves to Adam's fortress to rescue their companions when Adam threatens to kill them all, the Master reveals that his true plan is to channel his stolen chronal energies through the Doctors' combined TARDISes, thus destroying the Universe. Horrified at the Master's evil scale and encouraged to take action by Rose and the Ninth, Tenth, and Eleventh Doctors, Adam stands up to the Master, sacrificing himself to disable the Master's equipment. The Master escapes, noting that he enjoyed the chance to cause further chaos, but his plan has been thwarted. This is the only story in any medium as of April 2015 in which the Ninth and Eleventh Doctors encounter the Master.[82]
2017 sees the return of Delgado's incarnation in Doorway to Hell, a Doctor Who Magazine comic strip printed in DWM #508–511, set after the events of Frontier in Space from the Master's perspective.[a] This depicts an out-of-sequence encounter between Delgado's Master and the Twelfth Doctor in the year 1973, with the Master initially assuming that the Twelfth Doctor is the Fourth who regenerated after an explosion in the TARDIS that left the Doctor trapped on Earth in this time, until the Doctor informs his foe that he is from far in the Master's future. At the story's conclusion the critically wounded Master regenerates inside his TARDIS after the Doctor and the human family he has been living with deflects an attack with the "artron energy" the family absorbed while the Doctor's TARDIS was healing in their garden.[84]
Titan Comics published a series of comics which included a Master who was a contemporary of the War Doctor. This Master has the appearance of a young boy. In his final appearance, he regenerated into the Derek Jacobi incarnation seen in "Utopia".
Audio plays[]
The Master has made regular appearances in various audio plays produced by Big Finish. Geoffrey Beevers, Derek Jacobi, Michelle Gomez, Eric Roberts and John Simm have all reprised the role from the television series. While Mark Gatiss, Alex Macqueen, Gina McKee and Milo Parker[85] portray versions of the Master original to Big Finish. Jon Culshaw has performed as the Roger Delgado and Anthony Ainley incarnations of the Master.
The Master appears in the Big Finish Productions Dust Breeding, where Geoffrey Beevers reprised the role. The story reveals that at some point after Survival, the Master's Trakenite body is damaged when he attempts to take control of a psychic weapon trapped in the painting The Scream, which returns him to his walking corpse state once again. He is presented using the alias Mr Seta, another anagram of Master.[86]
In Master, the origin of the Master and the Doctor's enmity is explored. As children, a school bully attempted to drown the Master but was killed by the Doctor in defence. Unable to cope with the guilt and grief, the young Doctor made a deal with Death to take away his pain, inadvertently transferring the memories and guilt of the murder to the Master. In the main plot, the Seventh Doctor (Sylvester McCoy) has made another deal with Death to remove the Master's memory and let him live in peace for ten years, in exchange for the Master then becoming Death's Champion. Upon learning this, the Master absolves the Doctor of his actions as a child before having his memories restored and becoming Death's servant once again.[87]
An alternate-universe Master appears in the Big Finish audio play Sympathy for the Devil, voiced by Mark Gatiss, as part of the Doctor Who Unbound series. In this version of events, an alternate Third Doctor — now voiced by David Warner — does not arrive for his exile on Earth until 1997. Without the Doctor's help, UNIT was unable to cope with a series of extraterrestrial disasters, and the political landscape of the planet changed drastically. Stranded on Earth, the Master worked as an advisor to the United Nations.[88] This version of the Master later appears in Big Finish's The New Adventures of Bernice Summerfield range, opposite Warner's Doctor, when Bernice Summerfield is temporarily pulled into the Unbound universe. He later escapes to Benny's universe and is recruited by the Daleks to stop a plan by the War Master that threatens to destroy the universe.
The Master was set to appear in the television story The Hollows of Time, proposed for the show's 23rd season but ultimately never produced. When Big Finish adapted the story for their Lost Stories range, while Colin Baker and Nicola Bryant voiced their original roles as the Sixth Doctor and Peri, rights to the Master could not be obtained (and Anthony Ainley had died), so the role of Professor Stream (originally meant as the Master's alias—another anagram) was played by David Garfield and left ambiguous as to his true identity, the story presented as a semi-flashback with the Doctor and Peri's memories distorted so that they cannot clearly recall certain key details.[89]
The Master, played by Geoffrey Beevers, returns in the Fourth Doctor audio plays Trail of the White Worm,[90] The Oseidon Adventure,[91] The Evil One,[92] Requiem for the Rocket Men[93] and Death Match.[94] Beevers also appears in the fiftieth anniversary story The Light at the End,[95] where he attempts to erase the Doctor's travels by using an advanced weapon to erase the TARDIS from existence, and in the Companion Chronicle Mastermind,[96] which looks at how he stole a new body in the early twentieth century after his essence escaped from the Eighth Doctor's TARDIS, and survived by possessing a series of human hosts until he tricked UNIT into helping him regain access to his TARDIS.
Alex Macqueen plays a new incarnation of the Master - existing after Eric Roberts' incarnation (and the subsequent corpse form played by Beevers) - in the Seventh Doctor release UNIT: Dominion pretending to be a future version of the Doctor before his true identity is revealed.[97] He goes on to become a recurring antagonist in the Eighth Doctor's Dark Eyes series where it is explained that the Time Lords resurrected the Master to fight in an approaching conflict, implied to be the Time War.[98] The events surrounding the Master's resurrection were depicted in the Ravenous series five years later.
Chris Finney plays a character named 'Keith Potter' in the story The End of the Line from the audio anthology The Sixth Doctor: The Last Adventure, later revealed to be an avatar under the control of the Master.
The Master, played by Geoffrey Beevers, makes a cameo appearance in series 10 of the Doctor Who spin-off Jago & Litefoot, and later featured as the main villain for the 11th series.[99]
To mark forty-five years since the Master's first appearance, Big Finish released a trilogy of stories featuring the Geoffrey Beevers and Alex Macqueen incarnations of the Master in 2016. And You Will Obey Me features the Beevers Master encountering the Fifth Doctor, while Vampire of the Mind pits the Sixth Doctor against Macqueen's Master. In both stories, the two Masters are characterized very differently from their previous appearances. In the final story of the trilogy - The Two Masters - it is explained that the two Masters swapped bodies after the Macqueen Master went back in time and caused the event that gave the Beevers Master his emaciated corpse form. This results in a universe-destroying paradox fixed by the Seventh Doctor, returning the two Masters to their rightful bodies and erasing their memories of the events.[100]
In December 2017, Derek Jacobi reprised his role as the Master for The War Master, an ongoing series of audios set during the Time War, having originally appeared in the 2007 episode "Utopia".[101] The first series ends with the Master using a chameleon arch to turn himself into an infant human, setting up the events of "Utopia". Subsequent series occur earlier in the War Master's life and depict him getting involved with various battles in the Time War, sometimes at the behest of the Time Lords and sometimes for his own ends. Mark Gatiss made a guest appearance as the alternate-universe Master in series four. Paul McGann briefly plays the Master in series five. Jacobi has also appeared as the War Master in several other Big Finish ranges, including UNIT: Cyber-Reality and the first volume of Gallifrey: Time War.
James Dreyfus portrays an early incarnation of the Master opposite David Bradley as the First Doctor in Doctor Who: The First Doctor Adventures.[102] Dreyfus also appears in the Second Doctor audio The Home Guard and the Seventh Doctor audio The Psychic Circus.
In May 2018, it was announced that the fifth series of The Diary of River Song would feature the title character, River Song, encountering four incarnations of the Master. As well as Beevers and Jacobi returning, this release saw Eric Roberts and Michelle Gomez make their Big Finish debuts as their incarnations of the Master.[103] This release explains how the Master (Roberts) was able to escape the Eye of Harmony, stuck in the time vortex until River's intervention enables him to escape back into the universe.
Like Jacobi, Michelle Gomez also performs her incarnation of the Master (renamed Missy) for an ongoing audio series. Missy premiered in February 2019 and featured The Monk played by Rufus Hound.[104] The second series introduced a character known as The Lumiat - revealed to be the next incarnation of The Master, the immediate successor to Missy - played by Gina McKee. It is explained that, after her "poetic" death at the hands of her predecessor, Missy used an Elysian field to transfer her consciousness into a duplicate body created from her own dying cells and trigger regeneration. Motivated by her recent attempt at redemption, she edited the duplicate to remove all the negative aspects of her personality and became a benevolent force in the universe, adopting the title Lumiat. Missy encounters the Lumiat trying to undo some of her earlier incarnation's evil deeds. Sickened by her future self, Missy kills the Lumiat with a TCE and abandons her to regenerate, implying the process might cause them to return to evil. In the third volume, due for release in September 2021, Gomez and Hound will be joined by Gemma Whelan as the Meddling Nun - another incarnation of the Monk.
Beevers, Jacobi, Roberts, and Gomez appeared in the fourth volume of the Eighth Doctor series Ravenous in October 2019. In Planet of Dust, the Doctor and his companions encounter the Burnt Master (Beevers) on the planet Parrak, where it is explained that he has once again returned to his emaciated corpse form following his time in the body of Bruce (Roberts) before being killed by the Ravenous. In Day of the Master, the Eighth Doctor encounters the Bruce Master. At the same time, his companions Liv Chenka and Helen Sinclair are confronted by the War Master (Jacobi) and Missy (Gomez), respectively. By the end of the story, the War Master, Missy, and the Bruce Master are sent by the Time Lords to the tomb where the Burnt Master is buried, using technology acquired earlier in the story to grant him a new regeneration cycle and, it is implied, turning him into the Alex Macqueen incarnation of the Master. The story also suggests the Bruce Master has his memory wiped and is flung into the time vortex by his future selves, ultimately leading him back to Parrax in his Burnt Master form to preserve the timeline.
As part of the Time Lord Victorious multi-platform storyline, a pair of Short Trips stories introduced the Roger Delgado and Anthony Ainley incarnations of the Master to Big Finish - Master Thief by Sophie Iles and Lesser Evils by Simon Guerrier were released in October 2020 with Jon Culshaw serving as narrator and voicing both incarnations of the Master.
In January 2021, to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the Master's first television appearance, Big Finish released Masterful, a three-part special written by James Goss uniting every living television and audio incarnation of the Master (other than Sacha Dhawan due to licensing). It saw John Simm reprise his role as the Harold Saxon version of the Master and introduced Milo Parker as a young incarnation of the Master. Beevers, Gatiss, Jacobi, Macqueen, Roberts, and Gomez all reprised their roles. Gina McKee makes a cameo appearance as the Lumiat and Jon Culshaw voices Kamelion impersonating the Ainley Master. In the story, the Saxon Master has killed the Doctor and taken control of the universe using an entropy wave that has destabilized his body and threatens to destroy the universe. He summons his previous selves in an attempt to steal their lives and heal himself. The intervention of Missy, the alternate-universe Master and Jo Grant thwarts Saxon's plans and, after discovering that the entropy wave is a sentient manifestation of the Master from the future - their final incarnation, a being of pure rage and insanity - the War Master kills his other incarnations (including himself) to cause a paradox and return the universe to normal. The special edition release included an original audiobook Terror of the Master written by Trevor Baxendale, narrated by Jon Culshaw, featuring the Delgado Master.
Roberts returned as the Master once again in March 2021 for a three-part special release entitled Master!, featuring Chase Masterson as Vienna Salvatore. Following the events of Ravenous, the Master is rescued from the vortex by a scientist named Lila Kreeg (Laura Aikman) - whom the Master had manipulated using a psychic link into freeing him - and steals the identity of a business magnate on twenty-third century Earth. Vienna is hired by the Daleks to assassinate the Master but, with Kreeg's help, succeeds only in sending the Master back into the time vortex.
Short stories[]
Eric Saward included Anthony Ainley's incarnation of the Master in his short story, "Birth of a Renegade," in the Doctor Who 20th Anniversary Special one-off magazine, published by Radio Times (and in the United States by Starlog Press) in 1983.
In "The Feast of the Stone," a short story by Cavan Scott and Mark Wright that follows on from the Scream of the Shalka, the story pivots around the nature of the android version of the Master, his reality as an extension of the reality of the TARDIS, and his relationship with the Doctor.[105]
The Master is seen to escape the Eye of Harmony in the short story "Forgotten" by Joseph Lidster, published in Short Trips: The Centenarian. The story ends with him left in 1906 in possession of a human male's body.[106]
Martha Jones' year long journey across a Master-controlled planet Earth is detailed in the short story collection The Story of Martha, which was released on 26 December 2008.[107]
In the Doctor Who short eBook The Spear of Destiny by Marcus Sedgwick, featuring the Third Doctor, the Master disguises himself as a Viking called Frey (Old Norse for Master) and tries to take the Spear of Destiny.[108]
Webcasts[]
In 2003, an android version of the character (resembling the Delgado version of the Master and voiced by Derek Jacobi) appeared in the animated webcast Scream of the Shalka. This version of the Master exists as a companion to the Doctor, albeit a slightly sinister one. Exactly why the Doctor created an android duplicate of the Master is not stated, but it is revealed the Master was faced with the choice of permanent death or one last chance at life on a leash to make amends for the harm he had caused over the years. Able to pilot the Doctor's TARDIS but physically unable to leave the ship, this version's Master may have has some psychic abilities but if so they are far weaker than those he once possessed.[109]
To promote the audio series Master!, Eric Roberts reprised the role of the Master onscreen for the first time since 1996 in a series of video prequels posted to social media by Big Finish Productions; starting with a Halloween-themed video in November 2020 and subsequent Christmas and Valentine's Day messages.[110] In the final message, the Master is heard calling out to "Lila," a character from the audio series that the Master manipulates into granting his freedom from the vortex.[111]
Audio book[]
- The Killing Stone (BBV Audio, read by Richard Franklin)
Computer game[]
- Doctor Who: Destiny of the Doctors, played by Ainley. This was his last performance as the Master before his death.[112]
- Lego Dimensions, featuring a Lego version of Missy voiced by Gomez.[113]
Role playing game[]
The Doctor Who role-playing game published by FASA in 1985 has two modules outlining the Master's personal history, a timeline of his activities, and an inventory of much of the equipment he has obtained during his travels. Most notably, the modules identify the Meddling Monk as an alias the Master has used in his early attempts to alter the history of Earth.[114]
Board Game[]
The 1980 board game Doctor Who: The Game of Time & Space features information on the characters within the game. Of note, it states that "The Monk," The War Chief and the Master are all the same person.[citation needed]
Parody[]
In the Comic Relief sketch Doctor Who: The Curse of Fatal Death, the Master was played by Jonathan Pryce.[115]
Notes[]
See also[]
- List of Doctor Who villains
- List of television programs where multiple actors played one character
References[]
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External links[]
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- Television characters introduced in 1971
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