Fourth Doctor Tom Baker - Quotes & Biography
DoctorWho.tv has launched the tribute page up for the Fourth Doctor:

From witnessing the genesis of the Daleks to preventing the death of the universe at Logopolis, the Fourth Doctor was an adventurer on an epic scale. Armed with a gleeful smile, swashbuckling charm and righteous morality, he defeated Sontarans, ancient vampires and the Black Guardian. It was this incarnation of the Doctor that found and reassembled the Key to Time, that tried to reason with Davros at the birth of the Daleks, and was invested as Lord President of the High Council of Time Lords. Always selfless, his fourth body died saving the universe from the Master. But that moment had been prepared for…

Fourth Doctor Tom Baker - Quotes & Biography

DoctorWho.tv has launched the tribute page up for the Fourth Doctor:

From witnessing the genesis of the Daleks to preventing the death of the universe at Logopolis, the Fourth Doctor was an adventurer on an epic scale. Armed with a gleeful smile, swashbuckling charm and righteous morality, he defeated Sontarans, ancient vampires and the Black Guardian.
It was this incarnation of the Doctor that found and reassembled the Key to Time, that tried to reason with Davros at the birth of the Daleks, and was invested as Lord President of the High Council of Time Lords. Always selfless, his fourth body died saving the universe from the Master. But that moment had been prepared for…

Would you like a jelly baby?

Would you like a jelly baby?

(Source: starbuckara)

(Source: youre-standing-on-my-scarf)


Hello, my dear old thing.

Hello, my dear old thing.

(Source: youre-standing-on-my-scarf)

Excuse me, are you sure this planet’s meant to be here?

Doctor Who: The Pirate Planet

(via revychumso)

sappire-charizard:

image

image

Four.

Four.

(Source: elartedelapaciencia)

(Source: would-you-like-a-jelly-baby)

Four.

(Source: doctorwhogifs, via savethewailes)

Who gif fanart

incessantconfusion:

Been sitting in my folder for such a long time. 

Commission from Isidore.

Such a shame it was never completed due to stuffs happening.

Supposed to have all 11 doctors + Rose, Jack, Mickey, Donna, Martha,

Idris & the Ponds.

Terribly missing the other half! >w<)o!

 

Doctor Who at 50: BFI announces The Robots of Death UK screening for April


via Radio Times:


The first two events at the BFI Southbank, London, were a massive success: An Unearthly Child in January and The Tomb of the Cybermen last weekend. Tickets for the Jon Pertwee story The Mind of Evil (10 March) sold out in minutes. But – many were asking – which serial would be selected to represent Tom Baker from his diverse seven-year tenure? 
“Genesis, Talons, Zygons or Pyramids? How to choose just one story from the era of the fourth Doctor has to be the cruellest choice of all,” says BFI programmer Justin Johnson, contacting us between screenings at the “chilly” Berlin Film Festival. “In the end, we went for this fine story with Tom Baker at his sparkling best and four episodes of sheer joy&#8230; I just wish we had a venue with 20,000 seats!!”







First shown in 1977, The Robots of Death has long been a fan favourite. A suspenseful, beautifully designed four-parter, it features Tom Baker in his prime, with the always brilliant Louise Jameson as Leela, the Doctor’s leather-clad “noble savage” companion. The adventure unfolds aboard a gigantic mobile Sandminer, run by a small band of humans whose robot servants suddenly become homicidal…
The date and time of the event are now fixed: Saturday 20 April, 2.00pm. Guests are still to be finalised. 

Doctor Who at 50: BFI announces The Robots of Death UK screening for April

via Radio Times:

The first two events at the BFI Southbank, London, were a massive success: An Unearthly Child in January and The Tomb of the Cybermen last weekend. Tickets for the Jon Pertwee story The Mind of Evil (10 March) sold out in minutes. But – many were asking – which serial would be selected to represent Tom Baker from his diverse seven-year tenure? 

Genesis, Talons, Zygons or Pyramids? How to choose just one story from the era of the fourth Doctor has to be the cruellest choice of all,” says BFI programmer Justin Johnson, contacting us between screenings at the “chilly” Berlin Film Festival. “In the end, we went for this fine story with Tom Baker at his sparkling best and four episodes of sheer joy… I just wish we had a venue with 20,000 seats!!”

First shown in 1977, The Robots of Death has long been a fan favourite. A suspenseful, beautifully designed four-parter, it features Tom Baker in his prime, with the always brilliant Louise Jameson as Leela, the Doctor’s leather-clad “noble savage” companion. The adventure unfolds aboard a gigantic mobile Sandminer, run by a small band of humans whose robot servants suddenly become homicidal…

The date and time of the event are now fixed: Saturday 20 April, 2.00pm. Guests are still to be finalised. 

Doctor Who: Shada

(Source: astudyinawesome)

justicepirate:

Tom Baker (4th Doctor) &amp; Louise Jameson (Leela) Then &amp; Now. I adored all of their episodes together SO much! Leela’s one of my favorite companions &amp; Tom Baker is my favorite Doctor.photos from Louise Jameson’s blog

justicepirate:

Tom Baker (4th Doctor) & Louise Jameson (Leela) Then & Now. 
I adored all of their episodes together SO much! Leela’s one of my favorite companions & Tom Baker is my favorite Doctor.
photos from Louise Jameson’s blog

(via heartoftardis)

Four.

Four.

(Source: fourthface, via rainglobule)

&#8216;Doctor Who&#8217; On The Moon: A History
Well, fairly complete anyway. You can’t blame the writers of Doctor Who for seeking inspiration from the moon from time to time. Frankly, when the entire universe, now and always, is your playpen for making up dramas, you’re going to occasionally cast about you for inspiration, seizing upon anything you can see and starting from there. We’re just lucky no one has seriously pitched an alien race that looks like a laptop on a desk with a big empty white page on its screen, although it’s bound to happen sooner or later.
So, here is a reasonably concise list of the times the Doctor has gone to visit the moon, or referred to the moon, or being involved in a thing that is influenced heavily by the moon. I say reasonably because a) this only applies to TV stories and b) I might’ve missed one, or two.
Let’s see, shall we?
Click through to Anglophenia

‘Doctor Who’ On The Moon: A History

Well, fairly complete anyway. You can’t blame the writers of Doctor Who for seeking inspiration from the moon from time to time. Frankly, when the entire universe, now and always, is your playpen for making up dramas, you’re going to occasionally cast about you for inspiration, seizing upon anything you can see and starting from there. We’re just lucky no one has seriously pitched an alien race that looks like a laptop on a desk with a big empty white page on its screen, although it’s bound to happen sooner or later.

So, here is a reasonably concise list of the times the Doctor has gone to visit the moon, or referred to the moon, or being involved in a thing that is influenced heavily by the moon. I say reasonably because a) this only applies to TV stories and b) I might’ve missed one, or two.

Let’s see, shall we?

Click through to Anglophenia


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