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Capaldi and Eccleston turned down role of the 8th Doctor in 1996

That also starred Paterson Joseph which is why I mentioned him, because watching it at the time Capaldi never leapt off the screen as a potential Who the way Paterson did.
Interviewed Patterson Joseph at the launch of the Survivors remake: in person he is rather like Tom Baker - totally his own, slightly mad, person, and I wish we'd seen his Doctor...
 
^I love him in Peep Show and enjoyed him recently in The Leftovers but I'm still not 100% sold on the idea of him as The Doctor. But I'd keep an open mind.
 
That also starred Paterson Joseph which is why I mentioned him, because watching it at the time Capaldi never leapt off the screen as a potential Who the way Paterson did.
Interviewed Patterson Joseph at the launch of the Survivors remake: in person he is rather like Tom Baker - totally his own, slightly mad, person, and I wish we'd seen his Doctor...

Yeah, he has had some ropey roles at times, but I loved him in Neverwhere, he's hilarious in Peep Show and I actually thought he was really good in Survivors, a better lead than Max Beesley was IMO.

^I love him in Peep Show and enjoyed him recently in The Leftovers but I'm still not 100% sold on the idea of him as The Doctor. But I'd keep an open mind.

I do wonder if whether you can see Paterson Joseph as the Doctor comes down to whether you saw Neverwhere back in the day (though I could be horribly mistaken about this.)
 
^That occurred to me too. Most people who enthuse about him as the Doctor mention Neverwhere.

To me, he's mostly boss-from-hell Johnson from Peep Show.
 
I've actually only seen Paterson Joseph in Survivors, myself, and that performance alone had me nodding my head in agreement the first time I saw someone suggest him, so, not just folks who've seen him Neverwhere.
 
^ I haven't seen it either. But now you mention it, after Tennant left, I did hear some people mention Joseph as a possible replacement and some of them referred to Survivors, which I think was airing around that time.
 
Russell T. Davies specifically said that while he liked McGann's Doctor, his portrayal wouldn't have been right for RTD's depiction of the character.

I disagree. I don't think there's a single kind of Doctor that McGann couldn't pull off if asked. Although, I suppose McGann might have brought a bit too much of a natural likability that wouldn't have quite fit with Eccleston's occasional jerk tendencies. (But then, that was my least favorite part of Eccleston's Doctor anyway.)

And I agree - with you, that is, not with RTD.

I think part of his argument (and I'm at best paraphrasing, quite possibly misremembering) was that McGann's Doctor was envisaged as a sort of Byron-esque-looking romantic lead whereas he wanted a haunted sort like Nine.

Of course, we only saw Eight once onscreen, in the telemovie, in his debut adventure and a Doctor's first post-regeneration isn't always entirely representative of how the character is going to be. Paul, like Chris, is a northerner from a working-class city and could well have played Eight as a brash and scarred post-Time War veteran.

Really, I think what it comes down to is that RTD didn't want any association with the telefilm and wanted to cast his own Doctor. As with Tennant, with whom he'd worked on in Casanova, I think he also wanted to cast someone with whom he'd worked before. So I think the explanation about why Paul wasn't suitable is neither entirely true nor is it accurate.
 
Your title is misleading. They didn't turn down the role, they turned down the chance to audition for the role. That's very different.

Mr Awe

Agreed. The thread title is misleading.

A wide range of people auditioned for the role, and both Eccleston and Capaldi were on a (long) list of candidates that got assembled by the UK based casting agency, but IIRC only a small handful of that list actually went on to audition.

The first choice for Number Eight was Michael Crawford, who was actually offered the role outright (without an audition) by the TVM's producers, but who turned it down.

(Incidentally, speaking of Capaldi, I was watching the 1997 Mister Bean movie the other night, and was surprised to see an astonishingly fresh faced young Capaldi in an early scene. Definitely one of those weird 'retroactive recognition' moments.)
 
There were a large number of actors considered for the role.

Meanwhile, Segal and Wagg began the gruelling process of finding an actor to play the Doctor. To this end, they secured the services of British casting agents John and Ros Hubbard. In January and February, enormous lists of actors (most -- but not all -- of them British) were compiled; amongst the names were pop singer Adam Ant, Rowan Atkinson (Mr Bean; he also played a future incarnation of the Doctor in the 1999 Doctor Who spoof Curse Of The Fatal Death), Chris Barrie (Red Dwarf), Sean Bean (Goldeneye), Jeremy Brett (The Adventures Of Sherlock Holmes), Jim Broadbent (Moulin Rouge; another future Doctor from Curse Of The Fatal Death), Pierce Brosnan (the fifth James Bond), Simon Callow (Four Weddings And A Funeral), Martin Clunes (the British version of Men Behaving Badly), Robbie Coltrane (the British version of Cracker), Michael Crawford (the musical version of The Phantom Of The Opera), Tim Curry (The Rocky Horror Picture Show), Timothy Dalton (the fourth James Bond), Rupert Everett (My Best Friend's Wedding), Ralph Fiennes (Schindler's List), Hugh Grant (Four Weddings And A Funeral; yet another future Doctor from Curse Of The Fatal Death), Robert Hardy (All Creatures Great And Small), Anthony Stewart Head (the television version of Buffy The Vampire Slayer), John Hurt (Midnight Express), Eric Idle (Monty Python's Flying Circus), Derek Jacobi (I, Claudius), Ben Kingsley (Gandhi), Rob Lowe (St Elmo's Fire), Malcolm McDowell (Star Trek: Generations), Ian McKellen (X-Men), Sam Neill (Jurassic Park), Peter O'Toole (Lawrence Of Arabia), Michael Palin (Monty Python's Flying Circus), Jonathan Pryce (Tomorrow Never Dies; he would also play the Master in Curse Of The Fatal Death), Aidan Quinn (Legends Of The Fall), Tony Slattery (Whose Line Is It Anyway), Patrick Stewart (Star Trek: The Next Generation), and Peter Ustinov (Death On The Nile). Around mid-March, an effort was also made to approach Paul McGann (Alien 3), but the actor was unavailable; his brother Mark had in fact auditioned for the role some days earlier, on March 1st. The early favourite was Irish actor Liam Cunningham, but by the start of April, it was discovered that other commitments would prevent him from agreeing to the role.

:eek:

And even more actors as filming drew near.

More actors were being considered for the title role, as casting the Doctor became more and more of a priority. New suggestions included Jason Connery (son of Sean), Alexis Denisoff (Angel), Matt Frewer (Max Headroom), Jeff Goldblum (Jurassic Park), Rutger Hauer (the film version of Buffy The Vampire Slayer), singer Chris Isaak, Kyle MacLachlan (Twin Peaks), and Gary Sinise (Forrest Gump). By the end of August, though, a frontrunner was emerging: Paul McGann. McGann had starred in a number of feature films, including Withnail And I, Alien 3 and The Three Musketeers, and had also been prominent on television in programmes such as The Monocled Mutineer and The Hanging Gale.
 
There were a large number of actors considered for the role.

But as I said, a much smaller number of those who were actually in contention for the role. ;) The front-runners were Michael Crawford (who was offered the role without an audition, but rejected it), Liam Cunningham, Paul McGann and Harry Van Gorkum (as an outsider). The thread title is still somewhat misleading though, because neither Eccleston nor Capaldi ever actually went to audition. That isn't so much being offered a job and turning it down, as it is being offered the chance to go to a job interview and turning that down. :p :D

There were some intriguing possibilities on the actual audition lists though -- Stephan Hartley (latterly Superintendent Chandler in The Bill), Trevor Eve (Waking The Dead), Robert Lindsay (Hornblower, My Family), Paul Venables (May To December, Skyfall), Neil Morressey (Men Behaving Badly), John Sessions (the UK Whose Line Is It Anyway), Tony Slattery (ditto), Hugh Laurie (House), Peter Richardson (The Comic Strip Presents)...

The list of the great and the good who actually did audition for it goes on and on. But neither Eccleston nor Capaldi are among them. :)
 
Wasn't Tim Curry the one they chose, but he turned it down due to a scheduling conflict and recommended McGann?
 
It seems an appropriate time to repost this!

00who.jpg

That's hilarious. What project was this??
 
Our Friends in the (lots of planets have a) North.

That list of names seems ridiculous. Why would Brosnan be interested in playing the Doctor when he was playing 007 (Dalton would have made more sense).

Michael Crawford would have been interesting, though in a lot of people's mind he'd always be Frank Spencer in Some Mothers Do 'Ave Em!

Iy really is shocking how long Capaldi's been knocking around. This weekend's pointless fact, courtesy of the show 'Pointless', is that Capaldi was in Dangerous Liaisons!
 
Wasn't Tim Curry the one they chose, but he turned it down due to a scheduling conflict and recommended McGann?

Nah. The official making of book, co-written by the producer himself, says that Liam Cunningham and Paul McGann became the two clear front-runners after Michael Crawford (who was the first choice) turned it down.
 
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