The Daily Telegraph - Features

How Doctor Who went from paternalis­tic liberal to woke warrior

The Time Lord has always been progressiv­e but, in Russell T Davies’s hands, he is now hectoring and tiring. By Stephen Armstrong

-

What has happened to Doctor Who? Of late, there has been a flurry of reviews about Russell T Davies’s triumphant­ly expensive return to the Tardis, complainin­g about the show’s crowbarred-in references to genocide, refugees, gender pronouns and transgende­rism. What is with this barrage of political correctnes­s being hurled at our kids?

In some ways, it’s business as usual. Davies has played with gender and sexuality across his entire career, and definitely since resurrecti­ng Doctor Who in 2005. Captain Jack Harkness (played by John Barrowman), stormed into Davies’s first season as a bisexual troublemak­er who snogged Billie Piper’s Rose and Christophe­r Eccleston’s Doctor in the same episode.

After that, characters such as Bill Potts (gay), Madame Vastra and Jenny Flint (married Victorian lesbians), and Clara Oswald (bisexual) took the baton on. It all meshed smoothly, few people complained, and the nation got on with its Saturday evening teatime viewing largely unruffled.

But suddenly it has all started to feel a little clunky. In last year’s 60th anniversar­y special, a transgende­r character, Rose (played by Yasmin Finney), saved the day because she was nonbinary, and in the second of the weekend’s opening double-bill, The Devil’s Chord, US drag artist Jinkx Monsoon appeared from inside a piano and admonished a fusty music teacher to use the pronoun “them”.

It’s tempting to think that Davies is looking for an outraged reaction. At a preview screening for his 2023 comeback, he was asked about the possible press response to Finney, prompting him to rail against “newspapers of absolute hate and venom and destructio­n and violence who would rather see that sort of thing wiped off the screen and destroyed. Shame on you”.

This week, he gave an interview in which the journalist pointed out that one of the papers that Davies had in mind had given the episode a five-star review. Was he annoyed? “Very annoyed,” he said. “I’m sure it won’t last.”

Davies has claimed that “anti-queer thinking is on the rise”. Possibly – but not in Doctor Who. In the 1960s, Max Adrian’s King Priam and Derren Nesbitt’s leather-clad Tegana were clearly gay. There was a lesbian subtext to Ace and Karra in the late 1980s. A thinly disguised Alan Turing showed up in The Curse of Fenric (1989). Admittedly, Alpha Centauri, the hermaphrod­ite one-eyed alien from the Jon Pertwee era, looked a little too much like a giant green penis to make any kind of statement beyond “are you pleased to see me?”. There’s a reason why Doctor Who has a large LGBTQ+ following.

And there’s a reason why storylines about refugees, genocide, evil empires and all the other political topics from recent episodes fit neatly into Doctor Who

– it’s always had messages. Take the following statement from a piece published in The Spectator

that denounced the show’s “politics” and complained about “a growing tendency on the part of the Doctor to moralise tediously about peace, love, and brotherhoo­d”, and citing the Doctor’s “ludicrous enthusiasm for ecological cranks”. That was written in 1973.

As Tony Jordan, the 64-year-old co-ordinator of the Doctor Who Appreciati­on Society, explains: “People who complain that Doctor Who is too progressiv­e either haven’t seen it or else they haven’t watched it for a very long time, and they’ve forgotten what the show is like.

“Doctor Who has always been at the cutting edge of progressiv­e viewpoints,” he continues. “The very first episode in 1963 was produced by a Jewish woman in her late 20s and directed by a gay Asian man. Whenever the front pages get overexcite­d about, say, the Doctor becoming a woman, real fans just sigh.”

The Doctor’s first great baddies, the Daleks, were created by Terry Nation in imitation of the Nazis – violent, merciless, devoid of emotion other than hate, demanding the exterminat­ion of all inferior forms of life. The show has stayed solidly anti-Nazi ever since. Indeed, the Doctor Who team was just getting started. Environmen­talism. Antiimperi­alism. The death penalty. Racism. Strikes. Joining the EEC.

Happiness Patrol in 1988 was a blatant parody of Thatcheris­m with Sheila Hancock playing the Iron Lady. In every incarnatio­n, the Doctor wrestles with genocide. The Doctor causes it. The Doctor defeats it. The Doctor struggles with the power to commit it. The truth is, the Doctor is a One N ation Tory, bestowing his ideas of kindness across the universe by any means necessary. “Doctor Who has generally been both gently progressiv­e and vaguely establishm­ent in tone,” says Jonn Elledge, journalist, fan and author of A History of the World in 47 Borders. “As well as fighting monsters, the Doctor overthrows tyrants and fights evil empires, but historical­ly did so in the guise of a vaguely patrician man who went to a sort of space Oxbridge.” Elledge cites a handful of stories you could call right-wing such as The Dominators (1968) and The Sun Makers (1977), and points to Pertwee, a posh chap in a velvet smoking jacket whose best mate is a brigadier. Very patrician.

“And yet,” adds Elledge, “the stories are generally about the environmen­t or post-imperial angst or the need to fight Little Englanders, and many of Pertwee’s best stories were written by the self-professed communist Malcolm Hulke.” In certain respects,

Doctor Who is ideally suited for the world of cancel culture. The

‘He overthrows tyrants and evil empires, but historical­ly did so in the guise of a patrician man’

show’s progressiv­e attitude comes from a particular place – the idea that the Doctor is always right.

I recently interviewe­d former showrunner Steven Moffat, who said “if the Doctor were a real person, you’d be terrified. He’s running into the middle of every fight he can find and deciding who should win. The Doctor espouses all the hippy, dippy, liberal s--t, but basically says, you get one chance to do what I say and then I exterminat­e your entire species. I’m the Doctor – that’s what I do.”

And this is where the new show has come unstuck. In the 60th anniversar­y special, where Donna (Catherine Tate) survives total destructio­n thanks to her daughter, Rose, being transgende­r – something to do with combining both male and female energies; Davies has always been great on concepts but hazy on detail – Donna and Rose tell the Doctor (David Tennant) that he doesn’t understand letting go of power because he’s “male-presenting”.

This didn’t work. If you want to get technical, the Doctor has already transition­ed, and then transition­ed back. The Doctor is an alien being that doesn’t conform to gender, and knows how everything works. The issue felt tacked on, like somebody straining hard to be progressiv­e.

That is where Doctor Who’s clunky gender stuff struggles. And it shouldn’t. We are living in the TV world that Russell T Davies made. When Queer as Folk came out in the late 1990s, even The Guardian was offended. But the show began a revolution that led to other shows such as The Long Call, a recent primetime ITV detective show featuring a gay married cop whose biggest problem was the crime he was trying to solve.

“The polarising of the [transgende­r] argument is the problem: it’s shouting and screaming,” noted Davies in an interview last week. “The language is vile on both sides. And for intelligen­t people there’s got to be a middle ground.”

Doctor Who has always held that middle ground. But recent episodes have hinted that the show is in danger of joining in the shouting and screaming.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? David Tennant and Yasmin Finney as the Doctor and Rose in the 60th anniversar­y special, main
David Tennant and Yasmin Finney as the Doctor and Rose in the 60th anniversar­y special, main
 ?? ?? Time travel: Jon Pertwee in 1972, top; the new Doctor, Ncuti Gatwa, below
Time travel: Jon Pertwee in 1972, top; the new Doctor, Ncuti Gatwa, below
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom