Jodie Whittakerâs final episode of Doctor Who was a mixed farewell to a tenure beset by challengesâbut as Doctor Who has barreled ahead since by mostly looking back, with its focus on the showâs 60th anniversary and the celebratory return of former showrunner Russell T. Davies and star David Tennantâit has felt in places like the show is trying to quickly move on from its experimental era.
How does Russell T. Davies feel about those concerns? Well… I think itâs fair to say he isnât taking them all that seriously. Writing in his regular column for the official Doctor Who Magazineâs October issue (via Radio Times), Davies cheekily touched on the sentiment while pondering footage from the new season of the show, which will star Ncuti Gatwa as the 15th Doctor. âOh my God, the TARDIS, the Jodie exterior, she has NOT been erased,â Davies jokes. âAnd yet by not erasing her, are we erasing the argument that sheâs been erased and therefore this is an act of erasure, IS IT?â
While this is a more tounge-in-cheek acknowledgement of some fanâs concerns, Davies already more prominently addressedone of the bigger âsnubsâ of an outgoing Doctorâs tenure shortly after âThe Power of the Doctorâ airedâthe fact that, in a move against tradition, Tennantâs 14th Doctor regenerated from Whittakerâs already complete with a new costume, instead of wearing his predecessors.
Davies, writing in a prior issue of DWM, defended the change as not an alleged snub on Whittaker, but to safeguard Doctor Who from faux-hysteria over drag and gender identity, given the tumultuous rise of transphobic and anti-drag movements in the UK and US. âI was very certain that I didnât want David to appear in Jodieâs costume. I think the notion of men dressing in âwomenâs clothesâ, the notion of drag, is very delicate. Iâm a huge fan of that culture and the dignity of that, itâs truly a valuable thing, but it has to be done with immense thought and respect,â Davies previously wrote. âWith respect to Jodie and her Doctor, I think it can look like mockery when a straight man wears her clothes. To put a great big six-foot Scotsman into them looks like weâre taking the mickey.â
âIf [the press] can play with gender in a sarcastic or critical way, they will,â Davies continued. âWe could have the Doctor dressed as a knight, or dressed as God, or dressed as William Hartnell, and the only photo theyâd print would be of David in what they considered to be womenâs clothes.â
So while his latest comment on fan concerns is perhaps more on the playfully mean sideâitâs safe to say the showrunner is thinking a lot about how to best safeguard and respect the tenure of Doctor Whoâs latest departing Time Lord. Doctor Who returns in November, for a trio of special episodes celebrating the seriesâ 60th anniversary.
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