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Black Orchid (TV story)

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"Why do I always let my curiosity get the better of me?"
The Doctor
Black Orchid
Series: Doctor Who -
TV Stories
Season Number: Season 19
Story Number: 121
Doctor: Fifth Doctor
Companions: Adric, Tegan, Nyssa
Enemy: (none, not in the conventional sense)
Setting: 11th June 1925; Oxfordshire, England, Earth
Writer: Terence Dudley
Director: Ron Jones
Producer: John Nathan-Turner
Broadcast: 1st March - 2nd March 1982
Format: 2 25-minute episodes
Prod. Code: 6A
Previous Story: The Visitation
Following Story: Earthshock

For other uses of Black Orchid see: Black Orchid

A series of murders take place and the Doctor is blamed...

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

The TARDIS arrives on Earth in 1925 where, due to a case of mistaken identity, the Doctor ends up playing in a local cricket match. The travellers then accept an invitation to a masked fancy dress ball, but events take on a more sinister tone as a number of murders are perpetrated at the country home of their host, Lord Charles Cranleigh.

The Doctor comes under suspicion, but the murderer is eventually revealed to be Lord Cranleigh's brother George, who has been kept locked up in the house ever since returning in a deranged and disfigured state from an expedition up the Amazon to find the legendary black orchid. George mistakes Nyssa for his former fiancée Ann Talbot, who looks exactly like her, and takes her up to the roof of the house. He is persuaded by the Doctor to let her go, but then falls from the roof to his death.

[edit] Plot

[edit] Part One

The TARDIS lands in 1925 at Cranleigh Halt, a small railway station in rural England. The Doctor is surprised to find himself addressed by a policeman, who tells him he's expected at Cranleigh Hall for a cricket match. Though the invitation is unexpected, the Doctor is keen to play; soon he, Adric, Nyssa and Tegan have arrived at Cranleigh Hall, home of the Cranleigh family. The Doctor is immediately put into the game, and does superbly--bringing the team back from defeat to a win and delighting Lord Charles Cranleigh, who invites the travellers to a fancy dress party to be held that evening.

After the match, the cricketers and bystanders retreat to Cranleigh Hall for introductions. In an opulent sitting room that houses a magnificent black orchid, Lady Cranleigh laments the loss of her botanist son, George, who was killed during an expedition to find the rare bloom. Her surviving son, Charles, introduces his fiancée Ann Talbot--who could be Nyssa's double. The travellers then set off to rooms they had been given and prepare for the upcoming fancy dress ball.

The titular Black Orchid, a rare specimen from the Amazon.
The titular Black Orchid, a rare specimen from the Amazon.

The Doctor hears a sound and investigates, against his better judgment--only to find himself trapped in a corridor. Meanwhile, an unseen person has stolen his harlequin costume.

Upstairs, Nyssa, Tegan, and Ann Talbot prepare for the party. Nyssa and Ann decide to dress in identical costumes in order to prank the guests; Tegan demonstrates the Charleston, a dance popular in 1925, for her alien friend.

The Doctor finds his way out of the corridor. He finds a body in a cupboard; and, when he finds Lady Cranleigh and her servant Latoni, shows them the body. The Doctor agrees to not tell the guests, in order to avoid causing panic, and continues towards his room.

At the party, someone wearing the Doctor's costume arrives and dances with Ann. He takes her indoors and begins to attack her. James, a servant, attacks the figure and is killed. The figure closes in on Ann...

[edit] Part Two

The Doctor's impostor carefully returns Ann to her bed and covers her with a blanket; when she unexpectedly wakes, the mysterious figure hides under her bed. Ann runs out the room and into the arms of Lady Cranleigh, who is there with Latoni. Latoni enters the room and ties up the figure--revealed to be a horribly disfigured man with dead drooping skin on his face, and no tongue.

The Doctor arrives back at his room and dresses in the costume set out for him, unaware that it has just been worn by a killer. As he descends the stairs, Ann identifies him as her assailant. Despite the Doctor's protests, he is soon taken away by the police, along with Nyssa, Tegan, and Adric.

They stop at the railway station after the Doctor declares evidence is there, but the TARDIS is missing and they have little choice but to head on to the police station. There, coincidentally, a policeman declares they have found a police box which no key can open. The Doctor opens it, proving that he is an alien and that his story is true.

Back at the house, Lady Cranleigh tells Sir Robert Muir that the scarred figure is her son George, not killed during the course of his search for the black orchid, but disfigured by a tribe that considered the bloom sacred and themselves its guardians. After George's maiming, Latoni's tribe looked after him and brought him home, where his family preferred that he stay out of sight and pretend to be dead. Chafing under the restrictions, he only wanted to speak to Ann, his former fiancée--which was why he was stalking her.

The Doctor and companions, cleared of suspicion, are returned to Cranleigh Hall. There, Nyssa is captured by George, who mistakes her for Ann, and forcibly taken to the roof. The Doctor attempts to get to him through the house while Charles climbs up the side. They confront George on the roof. George realises that the woman he is holding is not Ann, and returns her. Charles thanks him--but at that moment George trips and falls from the roof to his death.

[edit] Cast

[edit] Crew

[edit] References

[edit] Story Notes

  • This story has characters who not evil or bad people, but have a vested interest in maintaining appearances to avoid the embarrassment of a disfigured relative.
  • This is the first story since The Highlanders not to feature any science fiction elements (except the TARDIS) in the story.
  • While other stories have featured incidental indications that the Doctor likes cricket (DW: The Ribos Operation, Castrovalva, Four to Doomsday, Human Nature), this is the only televised story to depict the Doctor playing in an actual match. (Peter Davison, a keen cricketer, actually did play cricket in the Doctor's cricket match, and did quite well--he bowled out his opponent.) The Fifth Doctor's particular love of the game would be later developed in other media. It has, for instance, significantly figured in a number of audio stories. (BFA: Phantasmagoria, The Roof of the World, Circular Time)

[edit] Ratings

  • Part 1 - 9.9 million viewers
  • Part 2 - 10.1 million viewers

[edit] Myths

  • Black Orchid is sometimes referred to as the first historical Doctor Who serial since The Highlanders. Although it takes place in an earlier era, it is not explicitly a history-based adventure, unlike The Highlanders. It is correctly the first non-science fictional serial (disregarding the TARDIS and the presence of the Doctor and two non-Earthling individuals) since the earlier story (and, to date, the last).

[edit] Filming Locations

  • Buckinghamshire Railway Centre, Quainton, Buckinghamshire
  • Buckhurst House, Withyham, East Sussex
  • Bewdley (Steam Railway), Worcestershire
  • Quainton Road, Quainton, Buckinghamshire
  • Withyham Cricket Club, Withyham, East Sussex
  • BBC Television Centre (Studio 3), Shepherd's Bush, London

[edit] Discontinuity, Plot Holes, Errors

  • Police boxes did not exist in the 1920s (yet the policemen recognise the TARDIS for one). (The police box was introduced in Britain in 1891. Besides the police maybe didn't know what it was, but it said police box on the outside so he called it police box.)

[edit] Continuity

Released in April 2008

[edit] DVD and Video Releases

Black Orchid was released on DVD in April 2008. It was originally scheduled for May but changed at the last moment, and The Invasion of Time was moved to May.

PAL -
PAL -
NTSC -

[edit] Novelisation

Main article: Black Orchid (novelisation)

[edit] See also

People meeting their doubles

[edit] External Links

Season 19
Castrovalva  • Four to Doomsday  • Kinda  • The Visitation  • Black Orchid  • Earthshock  • Time-Flight
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