A column of light rises before ripping and swirling, as if to suggest a journey through time. The pilot title sequence was created by Bernard Lodge, who filmed and manipulated the "howlaround" feedback of a TV camera pointing at its own monitor. The TV series was quickly identified with a startling theme tune, composed by Ron Grainer – who also wrote the music for Steptoe and Son, Tales of the Unexpected and Man In A Suitcase (AKA TFI Friday) – and a spine-tingling title sequence, of which a complete history follows below. Over forty years, the Doctor has been played by ten different actors on TV, with others on film, stage, radio and audio media. He eventually turns out to be a benevolent alien from Gallifrey, the planet of the Time Lords, with the ability to transform or 'regenerate' his appearance 12 times. Viewers were introduced to a mysterious elderly scientist, known only as the Doctor, who travels through time and space in a ship known as the TARDIS. Her team, under Director Waris Hussein, recorded the first episode, “An Unearthly Child”, by Anthony Coburn, first as a pilot in September 1963 and then again a few weeks later, for the launch transmission on 23rd November. It was created at the BBC in 1963 by Canadian film and television producer Sydney Newman and writer and producer Donald Wilson, and launched by producer Verity Lambert, who was then 27 years old. Writer Marcus Bernard from TVARK, the authoritative website on television presentation and graphics, discusses the history of the Doctor Who opening titles.ĭoctor Who is the longest-running sci-fi fantasy series in the world.
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