DOCTOR WHO Fourth Doctor (Tom Baker) Shorter Scarf - Official BBC Licensed Scarf by LOVARZI

£9.9
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DOCTOR WHO Fourth Doctor (Tom Baker) Shorter Scarf - Official BBC Licensed Scarf by LOVARZI

DOCTOR WHO Fourth Doctor (Tom Baker) Shorter Scarf - Official BBC Licensed Scarf by LOVARZI

RRP: £99
Price: £9.9
£9.9 FREE Shipping

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Has any Time Lord faced a more daunting debut than Matt Smith? In 2010 David Tennant was a beloved household name, more the Doctor to millions of viewers than any actor since Tom Baker. In the weeks his last episodes aired – and Smith took over – he was the star of the BBC's Christmas idents, for Gallifrey's sake. Since Doctor Whobegan nearly 60 years ago (how is it nearly 60?), there's been a lot of Time Lords take over the coveted position in the Tardis. From the OG Doctor played by William Hartnell, to the fourth Doctor Tom Barker who remained in the role the longest, to Jodie Whittaker who recently departed the role, there's been a lot Time Lords in our lives destined to save the universe. There's something special about the way the Thirteenth Doctor managed to feel alien yet like our best friend at the same time. She could name-drop Elvis Presley or Amelia Earhart, eat grass as a location indicator or forget her current "gender", and still feel like someone who always made sense, someone that you could lean on. However, given we are now about to meet the Fifteenth Doctor (hi Ncuti Gatwa!), you could be forgiven for forgetting a few names and when they took over the Tardis. And so this is your official timeline of every single Doctor in Doctor Who and the actors who played them. How many Doctors in Doctor Who have there been? Until the modern era, the unofficial rule of Doctor Who had been "no hanky-panky in the Tardis". Yet it was precisely the Tenth Doctor's dashing romanticism that set him apart from his predecessors. Just take The Girl in the Fireplace, a tragic love story between the Doctor and Madame de Pompadour, which unfolds like a fairy tale. Or the long, winding arc of the Doctor's will-they-won't-they romance with Billie Piper's companion Rose, which gave the show an emotional punch it never quite had before.

No incarnation of The Doctor has had as startling a character arc as Sylvester McCoy's Seventh Doctor. His umbrella-toting professor type was initially eccentric to the point of bumbling, giving apparently rambling speeches before his clever solutions became apparent. But over time his character darkened and sharpened, and he ended his run as perhaps the more ruthless Doctor of all.Best of all, the children's show that adults loved now had a star who delighted in being something of a big kid himself. At the end of his first story, Robot, the Fourth Doctor treats companion Sarah Jane Smith (herself a GOAT) to his code for living: "There's no point in being grown-up if you can't be childish sometimes." Isn't that the joy of the show in a nutshell? Time, space, the endless battle of good against evil… and Jelly Babies. Facing all that, and only in his mid-20s, Smith still formed what might be the most considered take on the Doctor in decades. The Eleventh Doctor seemed young, but also impossibly old; clever, but scatty; handsome, but strangely alien; hopeful, but world-weary; cool, but somehow stuffy. In other words, he was every contradiction that forms the Time Lord we all know and love – and he managed to embody it all from his triumphant, never-bettered debut episode The Eleventh Hour. She wasn't afraid to call it out when something was wrong. She faced off with King James I in 2018's The Witchfinders, reprimanding him for his treatment of women. There was her total disgust at Gallifreyan explorer Tecteun and their imperialistic attitude towards the rest of the universe in 2021's Flux. For a man who abhorred guns and disdained violence generally, the Seventh Doctor proved a sometimes terrifying adversary to all evil-doers. His great weapon was his voice, with McCoy's natural Scottish burr and musical tones employed mercilessly to talk more than one opponent into suicide, in episodes like Ghost Light and the outstanding Remembrance of the Daleks.

Another licensed scarf is also being manufactured by Elope (found at Hot Topic and many places online). It's not garter stitch, but has pretty good colors. Brown has been omitted (only 6 colors). It's easy to forget the level of hostility his casting inspired from certain quarters – he was too young, too unknown, too odd-looking to follow the handsome, heroic Tennant. Audiences responded to this handsome, younger, more vulnerable Doctor, whose creative pairing with Russell T Davies led to some of the greatest Doctor Who ever made. Episodes like Blink, Midnight, Human Nature and The Family of Blood; Silence in the Library, Forest of the Dead, and Turn Left. Doctor Who fans may argue – as they like to do – whether classics such as these represent a creative golden age of Doctor Who, but they cannot argue with the numbers. Her ability to stand up for the people who needed it most during her run solidified her as one of the best Doctors to board the Tardis – proving that the Doctor's gender could change with no detriment to the character. And that sometimes, significant changes to an age-old franchise like Doctor Who can be a true blessing.

Tom Baker wore several scarves during his seven series as the Doctor. Each one had its own unique characteristics. Select the links above for detailed information about each scarf including patterns, knitting specifications and yarn suggestions. There are also sections featuring the history of the design, tips for scarf construction, a gallery of scarves knitted by fans (and me) plus some fun ephemera. But then he drifted. He smiled and got a faraway look in his eyes. He said he did watch it when he was a wee lad. Tea with mum and dad then the TV on a Saturday night. He remembered how scared he was, one week, when a woman simply walked into the sea. I said: ‘That’s Fury from the Deep! From 1968! That was Maggie Harris, possessed by a Weed Monster from under the North Sea, walking to her death.” I told him he could go and watch it again, on the iPlayer, 55 years later. He laughed and said he might, and then we talked about everything – TV and family and life and love and loss. All because of an old TV show.

I think that spark burns quietly inside so many of us. Smouldering since those days when everyone watched. A few weeks ago, I went to have my hair cut. The new barber glared at me, a tough, gnarly, squinting Scotsman. I was a bit terrified. Far too scared to turn round and walk out. He sat me down and asked me what I do. I said that I work on Doctor Who. “Never watch it,” he barked. OK. Over four years (minus a week), three (ish) series and a 50th anniversary special, Smith made the role his own, and took the series to new heights. For most, the Tenth Doctor will always be the Doctor of the revived series – but to find the best, you've got to turn it up to Eleven.Ok so technically there are 14 Doctors starting from William Hartnell in 1963, to David Tennant's second iteration of the Doctor in the upcoming 60th anniversary special.



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