Fugitive Doctor
The Fugitive Doctor | |
---|---|
Doctor Who character | |
First appearance | "Fugitive of the Judoon" (2020) |
Last appearance | "The Power of the Doctor" (2022) |
Introduced by | Chris Chibnall |
Portrayed by | Jo Martin |
Information | |
Appearances | 4 stories (4 episodes) |
Companions | |
Chronology |
The Fugitive Doctor[a] is an incarnation of the Doctor,[5][6][7][8] the protagonist of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. She is portrayed by the English actress Jo Martin, the first person of colour to play the role.[9]
Within the programme's narrative, the Doctor is a Time Lord, from the planet Gallifrey. The Doctor travels in a time-travelling space ship, the TARDIS. Possessing alien physiology, the Doctor, when critically injured, can regenerate into a new body, gaining a new physical appearance and personality. This plot device has allowed a number of actors, both male and female, to portray the Doctor through the decades. Each actor to play the Doctor offers a different take on the Doctor's essential personality.
It was initially unknown where this incarnation, who is encountered during the Thirteenth Doctor's (Jodie Whittaker) era, fit within the show's fictional chronology, although many commenters speculated that she was from the Doctor's past, prior to the First Doctor.[7][10][11] "Once, Upon Time" (2021) confirmed the Fugitive Doctor to be among the incarnations from the Doctor's past who worked for the "Division", a Time Lord black-ops organisation, and whose existence had been erased from their memory.
The Fugitive Doctor is a dark incarnation of the character, with an acerbic tongue and a short temper.[12] She is a battle-hardened figure who does not suffer fools gladly, with an authoritative and composed demeanour who will happily use weapons if necessary.
Appearances
[edit]The Fugitive Doctor first appears in "Fugitive of the Judoon", disguised as human tour guide Ruth Clayton by means of a Chameleon Arch. As Ruth, she lives alongside her "husband" Lee in 21st century Gloucester with no knowledge of her true nature. The Judoon locate her and invade the city, intending to present her to Galifreyan Commander Gat.[5] Lee, a fellow Time Lord and fugitive, directs Ruth to a lighthouse, where her previous identity is restored.[13] At the same time, the Thirteenth Doctor finds a police box buried in the grounds – Ruth's TARDIS. As they reveal their identities to one another it transpires that neither Doctor recognises the other, leading to confusion between the pair as they both assumed the other was a future version of themselves. After tricking Gat into accidentally killing herself with a malfunctioning gun, the Fugitive Doctor parts with her other self acrimoniously.[14]
She reappears in "The Timeless Children", when the Thirteenth Doctor is trapped in the Matrix by the Master. He informs her that she is the Timeless Child, and had lived many lives prior to what she believed to be her first incarnation. In trying to escape and reconcile this knowledge with her identity, she encounters a projection of the Fugitive Doctor.[15] The projection reminds her that she has never previously been defined by her past before disappearing.[16]
The Fugitive Doctor reappears in "Once, Upon Time".[17] In that episode, the Thirteenth Doctor has been cast back into her past timestream to her previous visit to the Temple of Atropos, where she last confronted the Ravagers known as Swarm and Azure. Thirteen finds she has no memory of the events, but upon spotting her reflection in a mirrored wall panel sees she is in her Fugitive Doctor incarnation. The Thirteenth Doctor learns that the Fugitive Doctor had led a team of Division operatives, including the Lupari officer Karvanista, to capture the two Ravagers and uses her past self's methods as an inspiration to fix the situation in the present.
In "The Vanquishers", Karvanista finally reveals to the Thirteenth Doctor that he was actually once the Fugitive Doctor's companion. However, she abandoned him at some point, which has made him bitter towards the Doctor. Karvanista is unable to tell the Thirteenth Doctor anything about her past as the Fugitive Doctor because the Division has implanted a device in his brain that will kill him if he tries. The Doctor later recovers a fob watch containing all of her lost memories, but she chooses to deposit it deeper into the TARDIS for safe-keeping until a time that she really needs it, rather than recovering those lost memories.
The Fugitive Doctor reappears in "The Power of the Doctor" as an AI hologram which is used to trick The Master after he has stolen the Doctor's body. The Fugitive Doctor assists Yaz and Vinder to bring the Doctor back.
Audio
[edit]On 23 April 2022, Big Finish Productions announced that Jo Martin would reprise her role for The Fugitive Doctor Adventures, a series of Doctor Who audio dramas following her incarnation of the Doctor after the events of "Fugitive of the Judoon".[18]
Characterisation
[edit]Unlike all other incarnations of the character, Martin's Doctor will readily make use of available weaponry to decisively end conflict. She exhibited this violent streak when she attacked a Judoon, before manipulating a foe into unknowingly killing themselves with it.[14]
The character is intended to hark back to earlier Doctors, to suggest that she is from the Thirteenth Doctor's past. She declines to use a sonic screwdriver and refers to the TARDIS as her "ship", much like the First Doctor.[13] An infographic published in the official Doctor Who Magazine explicitly places her before the First Doctor but prior to the Doctors seen in The Brain of Morbius.[19] The interior of her TARDIS is also modelled after the set used in the 1960s, with white walls and an identical central console.[12][20]
Her costume was designed by Ray Holman to reflect her sterner nature. Black combat trousers and boots both hint at a Doctor accustomed to fighting and call back to the costume of the Twelfth Doctor. A dark-coloured Scottish tweed waistcoat and frock coat, with a period cut after the classic Doctors, add to the suggestion of a fiercer incarnation.[21] A brightly coloured shirt with a stand collar and frilled cuffs provide a contrast to hint at the Doctor's eccentricity[15] and were made from African Kente cloth as a tribute to the actor's heritage and the significance of her casting. This Doctor has also occasionally worn a pair of yellow sunglasses with this outfit.[21]
Casting
[edit]Jo Martin was cast as the programme's first black Doctor, a milestone which met with much praise from commentators.[22][23]
It was not announced prior to the broadcast of the character's first appearance in "Fugitive of the Judoon" that a new Doctor would be debuting. Promotional materials credited Jo Martin only as playing Ruth, while she herself was not told that she would be playing the Doctor until she was offered the part after her audition. She was then only able to tell her husband the character she was playing.[12]
Reception
[edit]Martin's performance as the Fugitive Doctor has been lauded by critics,[2][24] with some expressing their desire to see more of the character on screen.[16][25] However, the retcon of the character as a previous incarnation was criticised by fans. Merryana Salem of Junkee criticised the reveal that the Doctor had previously been a woman as undermining Whittaker’s significance as the first female incarnation and felt the Fugitive Doctor invoked “harmful stereotypes”.[26] Screen Rant's Ray Alvarez criticised the Fugitive Doctor as a previous incarnation, feeling that the character became "a cheap plot device rather than a nuanced character with agency".[27] Bleeding Cool's Adi Tantimedh felt Chibnall had "robbed Jo Martin and the show of the fanfare of the first woman of colour to play The Doctor, reducing it to a throwaway gag".[28]
Russell T Davies has commented on the expansion of the series' canon encouraged by the Fugitive Doctor's introduction, stating that "the Thirteenth Doctor['s era] has shown us Doctors galore, with infinite possibilities. All Doctors exist. All stories are true".[29]
Notes
[edit]- ^ In her first two appearances, the character is credited only as "the Doctor" and is only ever referred to as such within the show. No specific designation was given by the programme's makers. As such, various names are used in other sources, including "Fugitive Doctor",[30][31] "Ruth Doctor",[32] "Doctor Ruth",[16] "Doctor Martin"[5] and the "Impossible Doctor".[33] She was later credited as the "Fugitive Doctor".[17]
References
[edit]- ^ Blumberg, Arnold T. (29 January 2020). "Doctor Who: Jo Martin's Character and That Surprise Cameo Explained". IGN. Retrieved 2 March 2020.
- ^ a b Mulkern, Patrick (26 January 2020). "Doctor Who: Fugitive of the Judoon". Radio Times. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
Ruth and Lee, are in fact another Doctor and her companion
- ^ Hogan, Michael (26 January 2020). "Doctor Who: Fugitive of the Judoon, recap: the best episode of the series, with surprise returns and killer twists". The Telegraph. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
Lee had been her companion
- ^ Jeffrey, Morgan (5 December 2021). "Doctor Who's Craige Els has hopes for a Karvanista spin-off: "I'm waiting for the call"". Radio Times. Retrieved 5 December 2021.
- ^ a b c Zalben, Alex (26 January 2020). "'Doctor Who': History Making Twist Reveals Jo Martin Is Playing [SPOILER]". Decider. Retrieved 2 March 2020.
- ^ Fullerton, Huw (28 January 2020). "Doctor Who boss denies fan theory that Jo Martin is "parallel Doctor"". Radio Times. Retrieved 2 March 2020.
she is definitively the Doctor
- ^ a b Britt, Ryan (1 March 2020). "DOCTOR WHO SEASON 12 FINALE ANSWERS THE OLDEST QUESTION: WHO IS THE DOCTOR?". Syfy Wire. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
- ^ "Jo Martin is the Doctor". Doctor Who Magazine. No. 549. Tunbridge Wells, Kent: Panini Comics. March 2020. p. 1.
- ^ Belam, Martin (28 January 2020). "Doctor Who: Jo Martin becomes first BAME actor to play the Doctor". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 March 2020.
- ^ Anderson, Kyle (1 March 2020). "DOCTOR WHO Series 12 Finale Explained". Nerdist. Retrieved 2 March 2020.
The Timeless Child became an agent for "The Division," the Time Lord C.I.A. basically, and it was during this period of time that the Doctor was Ruth and hid on Earth and all that.
- ^ Fullerton, Huw (28 January 2020). "Doctor Who boss denies fan theory that Jo Martin is "parallel Doctor"". Radio Times. Retrieved 2 March 2020.
she had a past regeneration she couldn't remember
- ^ a b c Cook, Emily (March 2020). "Ruthless". Doctor Who Magazine. No. 549. Tunbridge Wells, Kent: Panini Comics. pp. 14–17.
- ^ a b Bacon, Thomas (26 January 2020). "Doctor Who: Ruth Origin, Timeline & Future Explained". Radio Times. Retrieved 2 March 2020.
Ruth and Lee Clayton are two Time Lords
- ^ a b Hogan, Michael (26 January 2020). "Doctor Who: Fugitive of the Judoon, recap: the best episode of the series, with surprise returns and killer twists". The Telegraph. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
- ^ a b Cardona, Ian (3 March 2020). "Doctor Who Reveals the Truth About That OTHER Doctor". CBR. Retrieved 3 March 2020.
- ^ a b c Mulkern, Patrick (2 March 2020). "Doctor Who The Timeless Children review: the much-vaunted finale is an overblown gush of nonsense". Radio Times. Retrieved 2 March 2020.
- ^ a b Fullerton, Huw (14 November 2021). "Doctor Who brought back another Doctor, and it's about time". RadioTimes. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ "Jo Martin brings the Fugitive Doctor to audio". 23 April 2022. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
- ^ Simon Guerrier (December, 2022). "Sufficient Data". Doctor Who Magazine. Panini Comics.
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(help) - ^ Mulkern, Patrick (26 January 2020). "Doctor Who: Fugitive of the Judoon". Radio Times. Retrieved 7 March 2020.
- ^ a b Cook, Emily (March 2020). "Cutting Remarks". Doctor Who Magazine. No. 549. Tunbridge Wells, Kent: Panini Comics. pp. 18–19.
- ^ Bundel, Ani (28 January 2020). "DOCTOR WHO'S NEWEST DOCTOR IS CANON, FOREVER, AND IT CAN'T BE CHANGED". Syfy Wire. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
- ^ Ikharia, Ronx (28 January 2020). "As soon as I saw Jo Martin as The Doctor, I fell in love". Metro. Retrieved 4 March 2020.
- ^ Siede, Caroline (15 November 2021). "A trippy Doctor Who travels up its own timestream". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ Belam, Martin (14 November 2021). "Doctor Who recap: Flux chapter three – Once, Upon Time". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
- ^ "Tokenism, Racism, and Unfunny Jokes: How 'Doctor Who' Failed Its First Female Doctor". Junkee. 15 November 2022. Retrieved 6 December 2023.
- ^ "Doctor Who: Jo Martin's Fugitive Doctor Deserved So Much More". Screenrant.com. 10 November 2022. Retrieved 25 October 2024.
- ^ "Doctor Who: Jo Martin's Doctor Was Missed Opportunity Deserving Better". Bleeding Cool. 30 April 2022.
- ^ Davies, Russell T (26 March 2020). "Doctor Who and the Time War". BBC. Retrieved 4 October 2024.
- ^ Fullerton, Huw (29 January 2020). "Doctor Who: Where does the new "Fugitive Doctor" fit into the timeline?". Radio Times. Retrieved 2 March 2020.
- ^ @bbcdoctorwho (26 January 2021). "One year ago today since we first met the Fugitive Doctor!" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ Plainview, Max (16 November 2021). "Doctor Who Reveals Where Ruth Doctor Fits Into The Timeline". Screen Rant. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
- ^ Allcock, Chris (26 January 2020). "Doctor Who series 12 episode 5 review: Fugitive Of The Judoon". Den of Geek. Retrieved 2 March 2020.
I'll refrain from delving too deeply into what Jo Martin's "Impossible Doctor" means