Lost Doctor Who episodes found in 'eclectic' collection
Lost Doctor Who episodes found in 'eclectic' collection 6 hours ago Isaac Asheand Simon Ward ,East Midlands A cardboard box found in a collector's "ramshackle" collection of vintage films contained two episodes of Doctor Who that have not been viewed since airing in the 1960s. The episodes feature the first incarnation of the Doctor, played by William Hartnell, tackling a Dalek plan to take over Earth, the solar system and the galaxy in a storyline only ever shown in the UK.
Restored versions of the episodes will be released on BBC iPlayer this Easter.
The second recovered episode, Devil's Planet, was broadcast two weeks later.
Written by the creator of the Daleks, Terry Nation, the serial starred Hartnell and Purves alongside an early appearance by Nicholas Courtney as Bret Vyon, Adrienne Hill as Katarina, and Kevin Stoney as Mavic Chen.
Courtney would go on to play recurring character, The Brigadier.
So how did they become the first lost Doctor Who episodes to be announced to the world since 2013?
The work of Leicester charitable trust Film is Fabulous!
(FIF) is behind what had become the longest gap between lost episodes being uncovered coming to an end. Many previous lost episodes had been found in archives of TV stations overseas, including the last episodes found, which had been recovered from a Nigerian TV station.
But with The Daleks' Master Plan, the story was not sold overseas.
It was these versions that made their way to an amateur collection.
He said: "We travel all over the country to recover film collections from private hands.
"A lot of the films had suffered water damage and the cans had corroded. "These are gems in what was an eclectic and ramshackle collection, a lot of which hadn't been looked after as well as the Doctor Who had. "The collector did recognise what he had, but how he acquired them has been lost to time. "
Learning the real reason he had been lured to the venue with "a perfect lie", he said: "I'm speechless, knocked out. "
"I didn't remember the first one when I was still almost comatose following the injury I received fighting in Troy in the wonderful Mythmakers - which of course is missing. "
Recalling the industry in the pioneering days of TV sci-fi, Purves said: "It was just a job.
It sounds silly but we did an episode of the programme each week, in the year I did 46 episodes. "It was great fun and was great to be doing a series that was hugely popular. "But it was a difficult time, I won't pretend it was easy, the cast kept changing and it seemed a bit of a time of flux. "In the two episodes we've seen there was a great performance by Nick Courtney playing Bret Vyon. "I was concerned very much that he was there as a replacement for me. "As it happens, he got killed in episode four or five. "
"The fans of Doctor Who are legion, and they seriously love the classic times.
"I'm astonished these two wonderful episodes have finally turned up - so many of my episodes are missing - it's heartbreaking to me. "I'm absolutely thrilled and maybe I'll [get] quite a few invites to conventions and various things. "
He said: "It was really touching, and what a privilege.
"We never thought we'd see these episodes again. It was a real factory process, no time for post-production or anything like that, never repeated, never sold abroad. "People will be thrilled. The thing about Doctor Who is it's a connection to your childhood. "I'm a grown man and I've been wishing I could see The Nightmare Begins since I saw the name on a list of missing episodes of Doctor Who 30 years ago.
By episode three, the Doctor has stolen a vital component needed for the conquest, but after leaving Kembel they are forced to land on penal planet Desperus - pursued by the Daleks. Listen to BBC Radio Leicester on Sounds and follow BBC Leicester on Facebook, on X, or on Instagram. Send your story ideas to eastmidsnews@bbc. uk or via WhatsApp on 0808 100 2210
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