Doctor Who: The Monthly Adventures

Peter Davison, the Fifth Doctor
Colin Baker, the Sixth Doctor
Sylvester McCoy, the Seventh Doctor
Paul McGann, the Eighth Doctor
Four actors played the Doctor, from the fifth to the eighth, multiple times, in The Monthly Adventures. Top: Peter Davison, Colin Baker. Bottom: Sylvester McCoy, Paul McGann.

Doctor Who: The Monthly Adventures, formerly subtitled as the Main Range, is a series that consists of full-cast audio dramas based on the British science fiction television programme Doctor Who. They are produced by Big Finish Productions and star one or more of the original actors to play the Doctor on television in the classic era of the programme.

Doctor Who revolves around the adventures of an alien called the Doctor, whose people are called the Time Lords. He travels in space and time using a spaceship called the TARDIS, which can travel in time as well as space. While travelling, the Doctor works to save lives and liberate oppressed peoples by combating foes. The Doctor often travels with companions. The programme has a concept of regeneration, in which, when a Time Lord is fatally injured, their cells regenerate and they are reincarnated into a different body with a different personality, but the same memories. The series originally ran from 1963 to 1989. In 1999, Big Finish obtained a non-exclusive licence to produce official Doctor Who audio plays.

Big Finish Productions began producing audio dramas featuring the Fifth Doctor, Sixth Doctor, and Seventh Doctors, under the "Main Range" banner, starting with the multi-Doctor story The Sirens of Time in July 1999. They gradually developed a pattern of thirteen releases per year, one every month with two in September or December. From 2001 to 2007, the main range also included releases featuring the Eighth Doctor; future releases with the Eighth Doctor were more sporadic, coincident with the beginning of the Eighth Doctor Adventures. Various companions appeared throughout the adventures in main and guest roles, mostly originating from television, though some originated from various spin-offs such as novels and comics, and some debuted in the Big Finish audios themselves.

In May 2020, Big Finish announced that The Monthly Adventures (which had recently changed its subtitle) would conclude with its 275th release, to be replaced with regular releases of each Doctor in their own boxsets throughout the year from January 2022, as part of a revamp. The number of these boxsets for each Doctor was announced in May 2022, with the first, second and fifth getting one boxset, and the other five, including the third and fourth, receiving two. With 275 releases over 22 years, the series holds the Guinness World Record for longest running science fiction audio play series.

History

Though the programme had been put on indefinite hiatus in 1989 (and despite the failed revival attempt with the 1996 TV movie), the BBC still published, as well as gave non-exclusive licenses to other companies, Doctor Who stories through various mediums such as novels and comics. Big Finish Productions, which mostly consisted of fans who started out recording fan audio plays, were given the license to record some of the New Adventures, a series of novels from Virgin Books which had originally been licensed Doctor Who stories, into audio plays. This eventually transitioned into a license to produce original audio dramas featuring the past Doctors, with The Sirens of Time being the first story to be released in July 1999.

A number of Doctor Who spin-off writers formed the group of original writers, including Gary Russell, Nicholas Briggs, Justin Richards and Mark Gatiss. Future Doctor Who showrunner Steven Moffat also joined, but left after it became clear that the license did not extend to the then-incumbent Eighth Doctor. The still alive actors of the Fourth to Eighth Doctors were approached for the role, but Tom Baker, the Fourth Doctor, declined. The releases therefore alternated between the Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Doctors, with the license extended to include the Eighth Doctor in 2001. Doctor Who was revived in 2005, returning to television, and the next few years saw the introduction of new spin-offs, including The Eighth Doctor Adventures, and the Eighth Doctor mostly moved away from the Main Range.

Various companions from the television show returned across the next few years. March 2000 saw the first time a companion originated in Big Finish itself, with the introduction of Evelyn Smythe, played by Maggie Stables; October 2000 saw Lisa Bowerman reprise her role of Bernice Summerfield from Big Finish's spin-off of the same name, a character who originated in the Virgin novels; and November 2000 saw the introduction of Frobisher, who originated in the comics, with Robert Jezek playing the role. Since then, every televised companion has reprised their role in Big Finish (with the exception of Jackie Lane's Dodo Chaplet).

Big Finish has been characterised as "augmenting the canon" by utilising "fan experiences and memories of fans" from TV, steeping itself in "fan nostalgia", even using the serial format of the original series and the corresponding theme tunes; it has also been derogatorily referred to as being full of 'fanwank' for emphasising "fan pleasure" through references to continuity, over plot. The releases have also been compared to fanfiction, in the way they try to "correct perceived transgressions", focus on and deepen the characterisation and emotions of characters, and revitalise the earlier dynamics of some villains while also recontexualising their motivations. On a more neutral level, they have been characterised as focusing more on the 'interpersonal' than the 'epic'; that instead of homages, they serve as supplements to the story, improving and emphasising other parts of the plot.

Though the BBC has not echoed the sentiment, executive producer Nicholas Briggs considers the audios to be completely canonical.

Cast

The following table includes characters who have appeared in at least one year as a main character. Main cast refers to those who appeared multiple times across unrelated stories in a given year, while those marked guest only appeared across one set of stories in a given year.

1999–2010

2011–2021

Notable guests

The following list mentions the guest actors who have never appeared as a main character in any year, but have appeared as allies or enemies of the Doctor various times in the Main Range, or were allied multiple times in other mediums. They are listed alphabetically by character's last name (or only names when the last name is unknown or does not exist):

Companions in the show

Source:

Others

Releases

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

2021

Continuation

In May 2020, Big Finish announced that the Main Range would conclude with its 275th release, to be replaced with regular releases of each Doctor in their own boxsets throughout the year from January 2022. With 275 releases over 22 years, the series achieved the Guinness World Record for longest running science fiction audio play series in 2021.

The revamp was stated by Big Finish to be an effort to be more accessible to newcomers, by allowing for "a natural 'stepping on point'" for them; they also stated that it would also allow for more "exciting new possibilities and creative freedom" in the cast combinations and story lengths and arcs. The number of new boxsets for each Doctor, and some of the details, were announced in May 2021.

Appearances

Notes

References

Books

Big Finish Productions

Doctor Who Magazine

Uses material from the Wikipedia article Doctor Who: The Monthly Adventures, released under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.