Irish Daily Mirror

About3 Time, Lord..

Broadchurc­h star Jodie is the 1st female doctor Who

- BY TOM BRYANT tom.bryant@ mirror. co.uk

BROADCHURC­H star Jodie Whittaker has made history after being unveiled as the first ever female Doctor Who.

The actress, 35, will take over from Peter Capaldi as the 13th incarnatio­n of the Time Lord. Bookies received a flurry of bets on Saturday and made Whittaker the 1-5 odds-on favourite before yesterday’s announceme­nt. She had been an 100-1 outsider. Capaldi, who has been the Doctor since 2013, will make his last appearance in a 2017 Christmas special. A clip posted on the official Doctor Who Twitter account and aired on BBC1 after the Wimbledon men’s final showed a cloaked Whittaker approachin­g the Tardis in a forest and opening her hand to reveal a key. The Huddersfie­ld-born actress stars as Beth Latimer in Bafta-winning Broadchurc­h and stripped off in 2006 film Venus, in which film legend Peter O’toole sets her up to become a life model. Whittaker said she told her husband, American actor Christian Contreras, about the role but they had to keep it top secret and even made up a codename for the role. She said: “It was The Clooney. Because to me and my husband, George is an iconic guy. And we thought: what’s a really famous iconic name? It was just fitting.” She also reassured fans “not to be scared by my gender”. She said: “This is a really exciting time, and Doctor Who represents everything that’s exciting about change. The fans have lived through so many changes, and this is only a new one, not a fearful one.” She joins Broadchurc­h creator Chris Chibnall, who is taking over as Doctor Who showrunner from Steven Moffat. He said: “I always knew I wanted the Thirteenth Doctor to be a woman and we’re thrilled to have our number one choice.” Outgoing Doctor Peter Capaldi added: “Jodie is a wonderful actress. She’s going to be a fantastic Doctor.” Capaldi and former Doctor Who stars Billie Piper and Karen Gillan had called for a female Time Lord. Piper, who played companion Rose Tyler, said the responsibi­lity would be “too enormous” for her.

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