This popped up in my Twitter feed today:
http://jgoverflow.blogspot.com/2014/02/a-november-2013-interview-with-peter.html
It's an extended interview with Peter Davison from late last year. He talks about the 50th, conventions, being the Doctor, and a few other things. I just thought people on here would like to check it out.
What do you think of Davison's thoughts on Classic vs. Nu Who? This is just a little taste of the conversation:
http://jgoverflow.blogspot.com/2014/02/a-november-2013-interview-with-peter.html
It's an extended interview with Peter Davison from late last year. He talks about the 50th, conventions, being the Doctor, and a few other things. I just thought people on here would like to check it out.
What do you think of Davison's thoughts on Classic vs. Nu Who? This is just a little taste of the conversation:
JG : Billie Piper [who played Rose Tyler opposite the Ninth and Tenth Doctors] once said that at its heart, “Doctor Who” is a love story in time and space. That’s very different from your day.
PD: Very, very different, yes. I don’t know, in a way, I get slightly envious of the fact that the Doctor seems to get romantically involved with all the companions. In my day, I wasn’t even allowed to put my arm around the female companions for fear that people might think there was hanky-panky going on in the TARDIS. That doesn’t seem to be a concern now.
I have mixed feelings about it really. I think it works very well. That after years of struggling to get companions right, the first companion I think they ever really got quite right was in fact Rose. You want to make a strong character, but also a passionate character, and I think it was a brilliantly written part. And there was this frisson with the Doctor, there’s no doubt about that. It was more of a kind of love story.