It was from The Ghoul from 1975.
This StackExchange thread suggests Crime and Punishment. Which makes more sense, as it was a BBC production. Looking at photos of Hurt from
The Ghoul and
Crime and Punishment, I'm leaning a little more toward
C&P.
This would be the only case where I would be comfortable with a recast of The War Doctor, either in short term or long term.
Believe me, I don't suggest recasting the War Doctor lightly. Hurt's death hit me in the way that David Bowie's death hit many people I know last year. I burst into sobbing fits more times than I'd like to admit that weekend.
But we know the War Doctor had a
very long life -- personally, I think when he says he's 800 in "Day," he means that he's been
that incarnation for 800 years, restarting his count from "Doctor no more," and subsequent Doctors kept the new numbering because it reminded them (subconsciously) of what they'd done -- but every official project with him we've seen -- the War Doctor audios,
Four Doctors,
Eleventh Doctor Year Two,
Engines of War -- has been set near the end of his life. (I'm leaving out the charity anthology
Seasons of War since it's not official.) The writer in me says, "There's a lot of territory there to play with." What were his early years as "the Warrior" like?
Damn, any one of those ideas would be amazing. Too bad we didn't get to see them.
I know. *sigh*
I've found it weirdly easy to come up with War Doctor stories. It's not that he's a fundamentally different character -- the whole point of "Day of the Doctor" is that the War Doctor was
always the Doctor, even if he couldn't see it for himself. It's that he's the one that's a blank slate with the shape and voice of one of the finest actors who ever lived.
Like, literally, at this moment, the idea struck me -- The War Doctor, in Shakespeare's time, has to step in at the last moment and perform Shakespeare's Richard III on its premiere when Richard Burbage falls violently ill with dysentery caused by a Dalek agent. I could write that as a story. It would be fun! Heck, this morning, before I had my morning cup of coffee, I wrote a War Doctor drabble (a story of exactly 100 words).
Dayton Ward has said he could write War Doctor novels forever. When Timothy Zahn was a Farpoint a few years ago and said he wanted to write a
Doctor Who novel, I could
so easily imagine him writing a War Doctor novel.
He's not the Doctor gone bad. He's not the fallen Doctor. He's the lost Doctor. He's the Doctor who hurts. (Pun completely unintentional.) He's the Doctor who carries the weight of the universe on his shoulders. And there's something refreshing and different about that. It's an appealing characteristic.
The animosity against Briggs is one of the few things in the Big Finish forum I don't like, but I would be lying if such animosity didn't rub off on me a little. Especially in regards to his writing.
Let me state that the one and only cosplay I've ever done is the Nick Briggs Doctor from the Audio-Visuals. The hardest part was finding the jacket. Otherwise, it was stupidly simple to pull together.
As a writer, I think Briggs is, at worst, functional. I don't have any problems with him as an actor (though I think his Sherlock Holmes is a bit mannered and by-the-numbers). He has a very good radio voice, so for these boxed sets, which he's only performing, not writing (so far as we know), I'm absolutely confident he'll do a bang-up job.
Maybe he does assign himself work, maybe there is the perception that he assigns himself the high profile assignments, but in his position he has that right. More importantly, his work ethic is phenomenal and he's a safe pair of hands at the helm of an important license. I don't begrudge him the position he's in or the headaches he has from the work that he oversees. At the end of the day, he's keeping the BBC happy, he's keeping his company profitable, and people are buying his (and his company's) output. Gallifrey Base's "Oh no, not Briggs, not again" doesn't matter in the long run. Or even the short run. It's just the chirping of a small subset of fandom.