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The Episodes

Here is a complete list of Doctor Who episodes, sorted by the Doctor appearing in them.
 

William Hartnell-
 
100,000 BC by Anthony Coburn, directed by Waris Hussein
Following their strange pupil, Susan Foreman, home one night, schoolteachers Ian Chesterton and Barbara Wright soon find
themselves flung off into time and space. Home turns out to be a time machine, the TARDIS, whose outer appearance of a
battered police box leads to a dizzyingly immense interior. The TARDIS is owned by Susan's grandfather, the Doctor, and the
two are really alien wanderers in the fourth dimension. The Doctor, Susan, Ian and Barbara find themselves back in the time of
the caveman. Captured by the natives, the four must find a way to escape back to the TARDIS before they are sacrificed by a
tribe which is trying to regain the secret of making fire.
Ian and Barbara join the Doctor and Susan in their travels during this story. (Working Title: The Tribe Of Gum. Also frequently
referred to as An Unearthly Child.)

The Daleks by Terry Nation, directed by Christopher Barry and Richard Martin
As the Doctor tries in vain to return Ian and Barbara to their own time, the companions find themselves on the planet Skaro
where they ally with the peaceful Thals against the genocidal Daleks, mutated creatures housed inside robotic travelling
machines. (Actual title is The Mutants, unused to avoid confusion with a later story of the same name. Working Titles: The
Survivors, Beyond The Sun. Also occasionally referred to as The Dead Planet.)

Inside The Spaceship by David Whitaker, directed by Richard Martin and Frank Cox
Something is very wrong with the TARDIS -- the doors open to reveal a white void, clock faces melt, and each of its
occupants behave in erratic and increasingly paranoid manners. Has some strange force invaded the TARDIS, or is one of the
time travellers actually sabotaging the Ship? (Frequently referred to as The Edge Of Destruction. Also occasionally referred to
as Beyond The Sun.)

Marco Polo by John Lucarotti, directed by Waris Hussein and John Crockett
The TARDIS lands in 1289 China, where it is seized by Marco Polo who intends to present it as a gift to Kublai Khan, in the
hope that it will win his freedom. The companions must accompany Polo as he travels to the court in Peking, and at the same
time unearth the malevolent plottings of Tegana, an agent of a rival warlord whose mission is to assassinate the Khan. (Working
Title: A Journey To Cathay. All seven episodes of this story are missing.)

The Keys Of Marinus by Terry Nation, directed by John Gorrie
On the planet Marinus, the scientist Arbitan locks the travellers out of the TARDIS in a desperate bid to convince them to
attempt a quest to find the lost keys which power the Conscience of Marinus, a powerful computer which is Marinus' last hope
against the onslaught of Yartek and his evil Voords.

The Aztecs by John Lucarotti, directed by John Crockett
In 1430 South America, Barbara is mistaken by the Aztecs as the reincarnation of the High Priest Yetaxa. Now regarded as a
living deity, Barbara wages a war with her own conscience as she tries to decide whether to change history and end the Aztec
practice of human sacrifice.

The Sensorites by Peter R. Newman, directed by Mervyn Pinfield and Frank Cox
The TARDIS lands on an Earth spaceship orbiting the Sense-Sphere in the 30th century. Having made contact with the
Sense-Sphere's reclusive inhabitants, the telepathic Sensorites, the Doctor must discover the source of a poison which has
debilitated both Ian and most of the Sensorite race, whilst avoiding the machinations of an opportunistic Sensorite who sees the
chaos as the chance to seize power for himself.

The Reign Of Terror by Dennis Spooner, directed by Henric Hirsch and John Gorrie
Susan and Barbara are captured during the dying days of France's infamous Reign of Terror, and sent to the Bastille to await
the guillotine. Meanwhile, Ian attempts to find British spy James Stirling, bearing the vital message of a dying man, and the
Doctor gets caught up in the intrigue of the French Revolution. (Episodes four and five are missing.)

Planet Of Giants by Louis Marks, directed by Mervyn Pinfield and Douglas Camfield
When the TARDIS' doors open in mid-flight, the companions emerge to find themselves reduced to just inches in height.
Barbara becomes poisoned by a new form of insecticide, while the others try to stop the murderous plans of an unscrupulous
businessman to sell the insecticide despite its harmful effects on the environment. (Working Title: The Miniscules.)

The Dalek Invasion Of Earth by Terry Nation, directed by Richard Martin
The time travellers find themselves on Earth in the mid-22nd century... and the Daleks have invaded. Allying themselves with a
small band of freedom fighters, the companions try to reclaim the planet for humankind, and discover the true purpose of the
Daleks' mining operations in Bedfordshire.
At the end of this story, Susan falls in love with rebel David Campbell. The Doctor, realizing Susan will never leave him unless
he makes her, locks her out of the TARDIS and dematerializes without her. (Working Titles: The Daleks, The Return Of The
Daleks.)

The Rescue by David Whitaker, directed by Christopher Barry
On the planet Dido in the year 2493, the Doctor, Ian and Barbara discover the indigenous civilization has been eradicated.
Furthermore, the entire crew of a crashed Earth spaceship has been murdered, with the exception of the crippled Bennett and
the orphan Vicki, who are being terrorized by the monstrous Koquillion.
At the story's conclusion, Vicki joins the TARDIS crew. (Working Title: Doctor Who And Tanni.)

The Romans by Dennis Spooner, directed by Christopher Barry
Whilst vacationing in 64 AD Rome, Ian and Barbara are kidnapped and sold as slaves. Ian ends up on a galley ship, Barbara
becomes a handmaiden in Nero's palace pursued by the lusty Caesar himself, and the Doctor and Vicki become caught up in
the events leading to the Great Fire of Rome.

The Web Planet by Bill Strutton, directed by Richard Martin
The TARDIS is lured to the planet Vortis, where the time travellers find themselves aiding the exiled, butterfly-like Menoptra
regain their planet from the evil Animus, a strange alien force which has turned the ant-like Zarbi into its minions.

The Crusade by David Whitaker, directed by Douglas Camfield
In 12th-century Palestine, Barbara is kidnapped by the evil Emir El Akir while Ian is knighted for helping save the life of King
Richard. The Doctor and Vicki are entangled in Richard's attempts to force his sister Joanna to marry Saphadin, brother of the
Saracen leader Saladin, in order to end the Crusade, whilst Ian goes in search of their lost companion. (Working Titles: The
Saracen Hordes, The Lionheart. Episodes two and four of this story are missing.)

The Space Museum by Glyn Jones, directed by Mervyn Pinfield
When the TARDIS jumps a time track, the travellers discover they are destined to become exhibits in a museum on Xeros run
by the warlike Moroks. Teaming with the native Xerons, the companions try to overthrow the dictators and avert their horrible
destiny.

The Chase by Terry Nation, directed by Richard Martin
The Daleks manage to construct their own time machine and begin pursuing the TARDIS across time and space. The chase
brings the time travellers to a dying desert planet, the Empire State Building, the Marie Celeste, a haunted house, and finally
Mechanus, a planet dominated by robotic Mechanoids from which they may never escape.
At the end of the story, Barbara and Ian return to their own time in the Dalek time machine, while Steven Taylor, a captive on
Mechanus, joins the Doctor and Vicki. (Working Titles: The Daleks (III), The Pursuers.)

The Time Meddler by Dennis Spooner, directed by Douglas Camfield
The TARDIS brings the Doctor, Steven and Vicki to 1066 England, just prior to the Battle of Hastings. There, they discover
the Meddling Monk, a time travelling member of the Doctor's own race, has been interfering with history, attempting to use
modern technology to change the outcome of the Battle and hence irrevocably alter the future of the planet. (Working Title: The
Monk.)

Galaxy 4 by William Emms, directed by Derek Martinus
The TARDIS lands on a planet which will explode in mere hours. The time travellers discover that two alien species -- the
beautiful Drahvins and hideous Rills -- have crashlanded on the planet after a battle in space. The Doctor races against the
clock to determine which of the two are their enemies and which their friends, before the destruction of the planet kills them all.
(Working Title: The Chumblies. All four episodes of this story are missing.)

Mission To The Unknown by Terry Nation, directed by Derek Martinus
Space Special Security agent Marc Cory arrives covertly on the planet Kembel. Cory is on a doomed mission to uncover the
secret plans of the Daleks and their allies who are secretly meeting on the planet. But Kembel is a world of many dangers, and
as his friends slowly transmute into deadly Varga plants, Cory soon realizes that for him, there is no escape. (Frequently
referred to as Dalek Cutaway. This episode is missing.)

The Myth Makers by Donald Cotton, directed by Michael Leeston-Smith
The TARDIS takes its occupants to ancient Greece, during the time of the fall of Troy. The Doctor is mistaken for the god
Zeus, while Vicki is captured and taken inside the walls of Troy. The Doctor must match wits with the suspicious Odysseus,
while Vicki tries to escape the fate that history has decreed for the Trojans.
At the story's conclusion, Vicki decides to stay with the Trojan warrior Troilus, with whom she has fallen in love. A Trojan
handmaiden named Katarina takes a wounded to Steven to the TARDIS at Vicki's request and joins the Doctor on his
journies. (Working Titles: The Mythmakers, The Trojans, The Trojan War. All four episodes of this story are missing.)

The Daleks' Master Plan by Terry Nation and Dennis Spooner, directed by Douglas Camfield
On Kembel, the Doctor finds a message from Marc Cory, detailing the Daleks' plan to use a time destructor to take over the
universe. The Doctor steals the taranium core needed to fuel the destructor, and is then pursued across time and space by the
Daleks, aided only by SSS agent Bret Vyon. But when Vyon is killed by his own sister, Sara Kingdom, at the orders of Mavic
Chen, the traitorous Guardian of the Solar System, it is up to the Doctor to convince Sara of the error of her ways, and avoid a
triple threat in the form of Chen, the Daleks, and the now-active time destructor.
Katarina dies in this story, saving the Doctor and Steven from a violent criminal. After realizing Chen has used her, Sara
Kingdom also becomes a passenger in the TARDIS, but perishes under the influence of the time destructor at the story'
conclusion. (Working Title: The Daleks (IV). Also frequently referred to as The Daleks' Masterplan. Episodes one through
four, six through nine, eleven and twelve of this story are missing.)

The Massacre Of St. Bartholomew's Eve by John Lucarotti and Donald Tosh, directed by Paddy Russell
The Doctor and Steven find themselves in 1572 France, just prior to the mass slaughter of the Protestant Huguenots by
Catherine de Medici. While the Doctor goes to visit apothecary Charles Preslin, Steven becomes embroiled in the lives of
several prominent Huguenots, and must come to terms with the Doctor's unwillingness to alter history to stop the imminent
massacre.
At the end of this story, set on Wimbledon Common in 1966, a young schoolgirl named Dodo Chaplet accidentally stumbles
into the TARDIS and joins the Doctor and Steven. (Working Titles: The Massacre (by which the story is commonly referred
as a shorthand), The War Of God. All four episodes of this story are missing.)

The Ark by Paul Erickson and Lesley Scott, directed by Michael Imison
The TARDIS takes the three companions to a space ark in the far future, carrying humanity from the doomed Earth to their
new home, the planet Refusis. Dodo has a cold, however, for which the humans and the subservient Monoids have no
immunity. The Doctor must find a cure for the common cold, and, centuries later, stop a revolution by the Monoids resulting
from the plague.

The Celestial Toymaker by Brian Hayles, directed by Bill Sellars
The TARDIS is taken to the surreal Celestial Toyroom by the nefarious Toymaker, an old foe of the Doctor's. Steven and
Dodo are forced to play a series of games against increasingly deceitful opponents in order to regain the TARDIS, while the
Doctor must solve the complex Trilogic Game in a battle of wits against the Toymaker. If any of them fail, they will be destined
to remain in the Toyroom forever, transformed into dolls under the Toymaker's control. (Working Titles: The Toymaker, The
Trilogic Game. Episodes one through three of this story are missing.)

The Gunfighters by Donald Cotton, directed by Rex Tucker
The Doctor has a toothache, so when the TARDIS materializes in 1881 Tombstone, Arizona his first priority is to find a dentist.
But the dentist turns out to be the infamous Doc Holliday, on the run from the Clanton brothers and their hired gunman, Johnny
Ringo. The companions must ally themselves with Holliday and sheriff Wyatt Earp against the Clantons, or else they, too, will
be singing the Ballad of the Last Chance Saloon. (Working Title: The Gunslingers.)

The Savages by Ian Stuart Black, directed by Christopher Barry
The TARDIS lands on an apparently idyllic planet inhabited by the advanced Elders and the barbaric Savages. Dodo and
Steven discover that something is wrong in this paradise -- the Elders are fuelling their wondrous culture by draining the life
energy from the Savages. Worse still, the Elder leader, Jano, is eager to gain the life energy of one person in particular: the
Doctor.
At the end of this story, Steven leaves to mediate between the Elders and the Savages. (Working Title: The White Savages. All
four episodes of this story are missing.)

The War Machines by Ian Stuart Black, directed by Michael Ferguson
Arriving in 1966 London, the Doctor and Dodo are excited to see that the Post Office Tower has reached completion. Visiting
the building, they are introduced to WOTAN, an incredible new computer designed to link up with other computers worldwide.
But little does anyone suspect, WOTAN has become sentient, and is using its abilities to take hypnotic control of its creators.
Its mission is not to serve mankind, but rather to eradicate it, so that artificial life can be the new dominant race on the planet.
After being hypnotized by WOTAN, Dodo leaves the Doctor midway through the story to recover from her ordeal. Seaman
Ben Jackson and secretary Polly Wright stumble into the TARDIS at the end of the adventure when they try to return the
Doctor's spare key, and the Doctor accidentally dematerializes with them on board. (Working Title: The Computers.)

The Smugglers by Brian Hayles, directed by Julia Smith
The Doctor, Ben and Polly find themselves on the Cornish coast in the 17th century. The Doctor is the lone witness to the dying words of a former pirate, who wishes to pass on the location of a buried treasure. Soon, however, the time travellers are
pursued by the vicious Captain Pike, who is also in search of the treasure, and become embroiled in the covert smuggling
operations of the era. (All four episodes of this story are missing.)

The Tenth Planet by Kit Pedler and Gerry Davis, directed by Derek Martinus
The TARDIS lands near an international tracking station in Antarctica. The year is 1986, and the companions are just in time to
witness the arrival of Mondas, a planet which is the mirror image of Earth. Soon, Mondas' natives, the Cybermen -- humans
who have replaced many of their bodily functions with cybernetic attachments -- invade the tracking station as Mondas begins
to drain the Earth of its energy. The time travellers must stop the process before the Cybermen begin to convert all humanity
into creatures like themselves... but something is very wrong with the Doctor.
At the story's conclusion, the increasingly frail Doctor stumbles into the TARDIS, and regenerates into his second incarnation.
(Episode four of this story is lost.)
 

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