'Doctor Who' Writer Mark Gatiss: Who The Next Doctor Could Be, Plus The Enduring Appeal Of TV's Great Timelord

Mark Gatiss On Who The Next Doctor Who COULD Be...
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'Doctor Who' writer Mark Gatiss has added his voice to that of show runner Steven Moffat in saying the next Time Lord could definitely be a woman, with the caveat “only when the right person comes along”.

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Mark, who also pens ‘Sherlock’ with Moffat and has been writing for 'Doctor Who' since its return in 2005, tells HuffPostUK: “Black doctor, lady, gay? Absolutely - but I have zero time for anything like that which has a box to tick next to it. If someone is telling you the next Doctor HAS to be a woman, something’s gone wrong.

“I can think of dozens of people right now who would be brilliant Doctors once Peter (Capaldi)’s decided he’s had enough, who are Asian, are women, are black, you just have to choose the right one, but not because we have to, that would be a knee jerk, reductive and depressing.

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Mark Gatiss says there's no reason for Peter Capaldi's successor not to be a woman, or black, or Asian, but "not because we have to"

“I have forever been in favor of the Doctor being a woman, and anyone who tells you it can’t be done is obviously out of their minds, because Doctor Who’s central idea is of a transcendental telephone box that goes anywhere in space and time, with a character with two hearts who can change form… but it can’t be a woman? I see.”

Mark’s lifelong affection for the TV show he now pens means he understands all too well the demands of keeping the fans happy, however, from the perspective of the writing room, he now understands how important it is not to listen to them too closely, if he’s to stay creative.

“If you start listening to the really passionate fans, you’ll kill it, because they’ll want something specific, and you can’t give it,” is how he puts it.

“It’s not about pissing people off or alienating them, it’s just saying this is how we’re doing it.”

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Mark Gatiss also pens 'Sherlock', in which he stars as Mycroft Holmes alongside Benedict Cumberbatch

He also points out that anyone seeking to impose their own desires on the show, now in its 52nd year, soon falls foul of their own logic.

“The joy of the format is that it is so incredibly elastic, that anybody who says you can’t do that is immediately reductive and depressing, they become the sort of people the doctor wouldn’t like to hang out with. If someone very dictatorial says you can’t do that, then you must absolutely do it.”

'Doctor Who' remains one of the BBC’s most beloved offerings, and Mark has his own theories on why a children’s TV show conjured up in the basement of Television Centre has struck such a tireless chord with both them and their parents across the world.

“There’s the fact that the Doctor himself is different, and a champion of difference, otherness, some incarnations more than others. He would be confronted by a hideous creature and say, how do you do? - which, I believe, is a way of approaching the universe or world.

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The Doctor accidentally became engaged after sharing cocoa with Aztec lady Cameca

“He’s a champion of the underdog and the unloved, but he’s not a square-jawed hero, he doesn’t have a gun, he has a screwdriver and a magic box that takes him anywhere in space and time. And somewhere in all of that is the secret formula, but you can’t look at it too closely. “

We talk about the light and shade in the show, the hints at horror which Mark proves, with encyclopaedic flair has been in the show since its inception. “It was amazingly transgressive stuff happening at Saturday tea time in 1963,” he reflects now. “But I don’t believe in wrapping children in cotton woolThey love a good scare, and if it’s in the context of sitting on a sofa with people they love telling them it’s ok, then that’s great.”

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"The sentiment has been more explicit with, with Billie Piper’s character being in love with David Tennant’s Doctor"

He uses an upcoming episode – about which he’ll tell me nothing else – to prove his point. “I thought, I’ll write this as if for anyone, like a horror film, and then I’ll pull it back, and then it came to making it, and we haven’t pulled it back.”

And the other stuff, the kisses, the tears, the sentiments that some purists think have overbled into the show in recent years? Mark defends that too.

“Anybody who’s a real purist knows that nonsense because it’s been like that since the beginning,” he says, referring to an early episode when William Hartnell’s doctor encountered the Aztecs, and accidentally became engaged to an elderly lady. “He flees back to the Tardis, she’s given him a brooch and he comes out and puts it in his pocket, it’s so beautiful.

“It’s been more explicit, with Billie Piper’s character being in love with David Tennant’s Doctor, but it’s always been there, and it’s a really big part of the show,” says Mark.

“As well as the big scary moments, it’s the stuff you remember, when the Doctor dies, or when a companion leaves.

“When Jo Grant leaves Jon Pertwee’s Doctor,” he beams. “I’ve never recovered from that.”

The Doctor Who Festival is at ExCel from the 13th-15th November. Click here for info.

Best Celebrity Appearances On 'Doctor Who'
Anne Robinson(01 of11)
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Anne voiced a robot version of herself, the hillarious Anne Droid, in the episode 'Bad Wolf'. The Anne Droid fronts a dystopian version of 'The Weakest Link', who obliterates contestants with a laser, rather than the 21st century Anne's acidic putdowns.The episode also saw Davina McCall playing a Davinadroid, who hosted a futuristic version of 'Big Brother' (we suppose that would be an Emmadroid now...). (credit:BBC)
Peter Kay(02 of11)
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Beneath those alarming prosthetics sits Peter Kay, who went all out for his appearance in the episode 'Love & Monsters'.The Northern comedian played The Abzorbaloff, who masqueraded as a human being, in an episode in which The Doctor and his companion featured only briefly.We suppose if you'd splashed out on that costume you'd want it to be seen as much as possible... (credit:BBC)
Kylie Minogue(03 of11)
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Kylie played Astrid Peth, companion to David Tennant's Doctor in the 2007 Christmas special, 'Voyage Of The Damned'.She received a mixed reception for the part, which was created especially for her by producer Russell T Davies, with most of the action taking place on a re-imagined futuristic Titanic.Good boots, too. (credit:WENN)
David Walliams(04 of11)
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Another British comedian who underwent quite the makeover for his 'Who' role.David played the Gibbis in the episode 'The God Complex', a rodent-like alien who encounters Matt Smith's Doctor when he crash-lands in what appears to be an 80s hotel.And you thought 'The Shining' was weird... (credit:BBC)
Suranne Jones(05 of11)
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Suranne had the honour of playing a new incarnation of a 'Doctor Who' staple in 2011, when she took on the role of a humanoid version of the TARDIS.In 'The Doctor's Wife', Surrane plays Idris, a human who takes on the personality of the TARDIS, with Michael Sheen also making a voice appearance in the episode. (credit:BBC)
James Corden(06 of11)
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James played The Doctor's temporary housemate, Craig Owens, in the episode 'The Lodger', which sees The Doctor stranded on Earth, and forced to fit in with everyday humans.He reprised the role in the following series, during which he's married to Sophie (Daisy Haggard), who Matt Smith's Doctor helped him get together with, and they have a baby son. (credit:BBC)
Olivia Colman(07 of11)
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Olivia's 'Doctor Who' role was a fairly ordinary one... oh, unless you count those terrifying gnashers, that is. (credit:BBC)
Keeley Hawes(08 of11)
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Like several guest stars before her, Keeley's appearance in the last series of 'Doctor Who' was only meant to be a one-off stint.However, her appearance as the villainous Ms Delphox was so well-received by Whovians that they can look forward to her reprising the role in the latest series. (credit:BBC)
Derek Acorah(09 of11)
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In a rare moment of self-awareness from Derek Acorah, he appeared in a brief cameo role during the episode 'Army Of Ghosts', joking that he'd no longer be of use once ghosts began to roam the earth.It was a blink-and-you'll-miss-it appearance on a TV screen, but we enjoyed it nontheless. (credit:BBC)
Catherine Tate(10 of11)
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Viewers were so taken with Catherine Tate's portrayal of Donna Noble that she eventually wound up as the Doctor's companion, and went on to become one of the most popular characters of the modern era of 'Doctor Who'. (credit:BBC)
Peter Capaldi(11 of11)
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Does he look a bit familiar to you?Long before he was cast as the Twelfth Doctor himself, Peter Capaldi made an appearance during David Tennant's time as Time Lord, playing Caecillius in an episode set in ancient Pompeii. (credit:BBC)