Time and the Rani
stars Sylvester McCoy as the Doctor and Bonnie Langford as Melanie with Kate O’Mara
as the Rani. It was written by: Pip and
Jane Baker and directed by: Andrew Morgan with Andrew Cartmel as Script Editor
and John Nathan-Turner as Producer. It
was originally broadcast on Mondays from 7 to 28 September 1987 on BBC1.
There are many points Doctor Who fans like to
point to as the beginning of the end of the show. Today, most point to Warriors of the Deep
as the story that gave Michael Grade the idea to cancel the show, but of course
that failed. Some say The Twin
Dilemma at the end of that season led to the low viewership necessary to
put the show on hiatus, however Season 22 did not have significant drops in
viewership, at least not when compared to Seasons 19 to 21. Then by the time the 1987 season was put into
production, the BBC had enacted their move which would lead ultimately to
cancellation, albeit after three more years of production before the plug was
pulled. That move wasn’t allowing John
Nathan-Turner to move on to another show to see what a new producer would do,
nor was it even the firing of Colin Baker forcing a recast, nor was it the
hiring of Sylvester McCoy as the Doctor.
No, what gave them the final push to cancel the show was moving Doctor
Who once again outside of its Saturday evening slot, something that was
successful when done under Peter Davison due to the twice weekly airing and slightly
earlier than the timeslot Season 24 was given.
The Season 24 timeslot was generally aired closer to 7:30-8:00 pm,
directly up against ITV’s long running soap opera, Coronation Street
which killed the ratings, peaking with the first episode at 5.1 million viewers,
the full season peaking at 5.5 million for the first episode of Dragonfire. Viewing figures peaking in the low 5 millions
would only occasionally be broken, but would steadily decline until Season 26
gave the BBC all it needed to cut the show completely.
It is lucky, however, that Season 24 even made it to
air, as John Nathan-Turner, promised he would no longer be in the role of
producer at the end of Season 23 was dragged back and told to fire Colin Baker,
cast a new actor, and get scripts and a new script editor ready for production
to start and airing to happen in the fall of 1987. Time and the Rani was commissioned as Strange
Matter by Nathan-Turner, who approached Pip and Jane Baker knowing that they
could work quickly and within budget.
Luckily, Bonnie Langford had already signed on for a second year as companion
Melanie, Kate O’Mara wished to return as the Rani, and Nathan-Turner was able
to negotiate with the BBC to at least use Colin Baker in at least the first
serial to give him a proper sendoff and regeneration, all before production began. Baker, rightfully unhappy with how he was
treated by the BBC in an unjust firing from his dream role, declined the offer
to appear in the serial so the regeneration scene would become the opening of
the story which the BBC then vetoed so it was decided the regeneration would be
filmed with the new actor as the Doctor, face blurred with special effects as a
pre-title sequence. Nathan-Turner was
successful in hiring Andrew Cartmel as script editor for the Season, a role he
would fulfill until the cancellation in 1989.
Sadly, Cartmel had little input into Time and the Rani as Pip and
Jane Baker had little respect for the new script editor due to his
inexperience, forcing Cartmel to use Nathan-Turner’s influence as leverage to
cut certain sequences before production began.
This absence of influence is felt in the finished version of Time and
the Rani, as it’s a serial that suffers from a meandering plot. The Rani’s plan isn’t fully explained until
the final episode while the first episode has the Doctor as an amnesiac while
Mel spends much of it running around the planet with a character who isn’t even
named until the second episode. The plan
itself also makes little sense with the strange matter she is attempting to
harvest will give her power, somehow.
Pip and Jane Baker’s script is one where the characterization
is all over the place. The Lakertyan’s
while under some really good makeup from Lesley Rawstorne and performances from
stalwart actors like Donald Pickering and Wanda Ventham, don’t actually have
much characterization outside of being a race enslaved by the Rani. The Rani’s Tetraps again have an interesting enough
design, but they don’t have any motivation outside of servitude and eventual
rebellion, although the rebellion doesn’t come.
There also seems to be a statement against outside help with the Lakertyan’s
dumping the Doctor’s solution to their bee problem so they can be
self-sufficient, but that really doesn’t work at anything.
Nathan-Turner had Sylvester McCoy in mind for the role
of the Seventh Doctor, after seeing him in a production of The Pied Piper
and being suggested to him by both McCoy’s agent Brian Wheeler and BBC producer
Clive Doig. The BBC requested screen
tests with some other candidates which were written by Andrew Cartmel (and one later
integrated into Dragonfire) opposite Janet Fielding which landed McCoy
the part. While the script is doing
McCoy no favors, he manages to hold his own throughout the production. There isn’t even a characterization down yet,
just some traits but there is a charm to McCoy in every scene except a few
early on where he is just getting into the groove of things. The scenes in Colin Baker’s coat feel out of
place, for good reason the costuming just doesn’t fit with McCoy as an actor or
as a person (it’s far too big of a coat).
He and Kate O’Mara are shining off one another, both realizing that this
script is one that must be taken with some elements of camp to make it
work. This is a story where the Rani disguises
herself as Mel and claims Mel is the Rani after all, a plot point that only
works with campy performances and that’s something that O’Mara delivers on. The fandom at large is often harsh on Bonnie
Langford, but like McCoy and O’Mara she is working admirably with the material
she is given. There is a sense of
independence in her subplot, although not explored, as the first half of the
story has her attempting to find and save the Doctor from the Rani and her first
scene with the Doctor is one of the shining moments of the serial.
The serial’s direction was given to Andrew Morgan who clearly
has talents that aren’t really being used here due to the location filming
consisting of a standard Doctor Who quarry although the effects to the
sky and early use of computer-generated imagery on a large scale while aged, is
admirable. Morgan also manages to make a
lot of the studio sessions work well enough, but where he really shines is
whenever there is a need for pyrotechnics, something that he will repeat and
improve greatly upon the next year when he was contracted to direct Remembrance
of the Daleks. The music by Keff
McCulloch is far too synth heavy, although his rendition of the Doctor Who
theme and the new titles that accompany it is excellent.
Overall, the fascinating story of the troubled
production of Time and the Rani goes a long way to explain why the story
is so weak, mainly due to a weak script, the lack of a script editor, and a
generally rushed production, it does not forgive it. There are still some things to enjoy here, with
Kate O’Mara dominating every scene she is in, McCoy developing the way he is
going to play the Doctor as the story progresses, and Bonnie Langford holding
her own in a script that really is doing her no favors, and of course the
direction, but it is still a very weak start to a season that already had
little support. 3/10.
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