Jodie Whittaker: Who-ray for her

Whovians across the country are eagerly awaiting the inauguration of the new Doctor next month. Jodie Whittaker gives us an idea of what to expect

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There aren’t many roles on UK television that garner the kind of media attention that Jodie Whittaker received last year, when it was announced that she would be replacing Peter Capaldi to play the time-travelling alien called the Doctor in BBC’s long running science fiction show Doctor Who.

“I’m playing an alien! To suggest I’m not qualified because of my gender is hilarious.”

It’s been more than a year since that announcement and during that time Whittaker has been on a nine-month shoot which has taken her from Sheffield to South Africa, and no doubt to all corners of time and space, shooting the ten-part series that starts, it’s finally been revealed, on Sunday 7 October, relocating from its traditional Saturday night slot.

Whittaker is looking forward to the unveiling of the show. “After putting all this hard work into something,” she says, speaking from London in the middle of a busy day promoting the series, “it feels really exciting to be able to now share it with fans and hopefully gain some new fans.”

Ah yes. The fans. Now approaching its 55th birthday, Doctor Who has amassed a number of hardcore fans over the years, many of whom are old enough to remember the show before it was cancelled in 1989 and brought back with much fanfare in 2005. ‘Whovians’, as they are known, are an opinionated bunch. Given the weight of their expectations, did Whittaker ever hesitate when offered the role?

“No,” she says. “There wasn’t a second when I didn’t want to do it, but it is a huge responsibility. The hard work of gaining a fan-base has already been done but now it’s the hard work of maintaining it.” She laughs, perhaps a little nervously. And Whittaker hopes she’ll attract some new fans too.

“I think sometimes the mystique of Doctor Who is that you need to have this previous knowledge about everything that has gone before to watch it, but that’s not the case. I’m a new Whovian and I’ve been welcomed and included. If episode one or episode four [of the new series] is the first one you have ever seen, it’s a starting off point, because the episodes will give you everything you need to know and hopefully be exciting enough for you to tune in again and again and again.”

Born in the village of Skelmanthorpe, near Huddersfield, Whittaker, 36, has retained her broad Yorkshire accent. She went to a local, well-respected high school, and later attended London’s Guildhall School of Music and Drama, from which she graduated in 2005. She’s had a number of TV and movie appearances, including a role in the revived St Trinian’s movie in 2007 and a lead role in the indie comedy drama Adult Life Skills in 2016, but her biggest role on television to date was playing distraught mum Beth Latimer in ITV’s Broadchurch crime drama. That was written by Chris Chibnall, who just happens to now be the head writer and executive producer for Doctor Who, replacing Steven Moffat as who has been the showrunner for the last eight years.

Whittaker sounds suitably impressed when she learns that in 2010, Big Issue North picked her as one of the stars to watch from the North of England, and she compliments us on our “Mystic Meg abilities”. Did she ever imagine back then that she would be taking on one of British television’s biggest roles?

“I’m an incredibly ambitious person,” she says. “I have always wanted to take on roles that are challenging and that went against the grain and which excited me. It’s the right place, right time, moment for me, in the sense that Chris Chibnall knew me and felt my energy was right to audition. If this had come to me younger, I might not have been at the right place in my mind to take it on, whereas now, I feel like it’s perfect. Episode to episode it’s like nothing I’ve ever done before and it feels like a huge roller-coaster ride to be a part of.”

One reason Doctor Who endures is undoubtedly its ability to change the lead actor when required, a tradition that began when the first person to play the Doctor (William Hartnell) retired from the show in 1966. Whittaker will be the thirteenth Doctor, and she will be the first woman to take on the role. When this was revealed there was a media storm in certain sections of the press declaring fans’ outrage at the change, but despite the headlines, many fans were pleased at the casting. That’s not to say there wasn’t any negative reaction to the news. The Amazon pre-order page for the DVD of the new series reveals a number of one star reviews from fans who have written Whittaker off despite not having seen her in action. “Doctor Who is dead thanks to feminazi” is an example of the calibre of such reviews.

“It doesn’t affect me turning up and working really hard,” she says. “As long as I do the work and honour what has gone before and take it a new direction, then I’m doing my job.”

And after all, she adds, “I’m playing an alien! To suggest that I’m not qualified to do that because of my gender is hilarious. I mean find me an actor who is qualified to play an alien out there. I challenge you!”

Does she hope her role will inspire the next generation of female actors to go for roles like this?

“What you hope, is that the young fans who start to watch it, boys and girls, see themselves in you regardless of their sex,” she says. “I remember when I was watching stuff, when I was a kid, I loved characters, it didn’t matter whether that character looked like me or not.”

As well as having a female lead, this year’s series will feature more women writers than the series has ever known. Three women, including author Malorie Blackman, will join the series meaning half the writer’s room will be female. Whittaker credits Chibnall for this.

“He created a writer’s room that reflected what he sees when he looks out of his window. You can only tell current, exciting stories that are from different points of view, if you create a room that has those different points of view in it.” She recognises that there is still inequality behind the camera as well as in front of it, however: “It’s obvious in the industry there is a huge difference between the percentage of male writers and directors, and female ones – and it’s certainly not due to lack of talent. There are extraordinary female writers and directors out there and that should be reflected in every writer’s room.”

When Whittaker made her debut as the Doctor, in the closing minutes of last year’s Christmas episode, Twice Upon a Time, the other thing that stood out was the Doctor’s dialect. Her first line as the new Doctor, “Oh brilliant!” was spoken in her native northern accent. Whittaker, who has played many roles not using her own accent, most notably in Dorest-set Broadchurch, says the use of her own accent doesn’t mean the Doctor is suddenly from Yorkshire, however.

“Chris [Chibnall] just said use your own voice when I started to audition. It didn’t feel wrong in any way. And I think if I used a different accent, then you’ve got to discover why, why is that the choice? When it’s just using your own voice, it’s not a statement of any kind, you know, why not?”

Plus, she adds, what with playing a verbose alien who has a penchant for talking ten to the dozen about time travel, she has plenty to do in the role already, without having to speak in a different accent.

“As acting jobs go, it’s not the hardest job to do in every case, it just the amount of lines you have to learn because the Doctor speaks more than anyone, and in a way that I have never had to do in any other show, and that’s challenging,” she says. “But it’s so much fun. I’m doing the job that I dreamed about doing when I was a kid. I’m playing the ultimate game of pretend and wonder and childlike dreams. And yeah – it’s a bit tiring but, you know, it’s not a proper job. There are times when I ring one of my mates and they will be like, ‘I can’t just have a chat in the middle of the day, I have an actual grown up job.’ I’m like, ‘Oh sorry, I’m on a tea break’. And someone else has gone and got my tea. I didn’t even have to go and get it myself.”

Everything is changing in the series this year. New Doctor, new showrunner, there’s even a new composer taking over from Murray Gold who has been the musical director since the series was first reborn. And there are new people joining the Doctor aboard her Tardis. Three, in fact. Actor, comedian and quiz show host Bradley Walsh will join relative newcomers Mandip Gill and Tosin Cole who both have stints in teen-soap Hollyoaks stamped on their CVs (though, fan fact, Cole did also land a small part in Star Wars: Force Awakens).

Whittaker clearly loves having them on board. “I have made three of the best friends I could have ever have dreamed of,” she says. “I am so excited for the world to meet their characters. It’s a wonderful dynamic.”

As the weeks count down towards the new series, Whittaker is as excited as any Whovian to see the show. She hasn’t seen any of the episodes herself in their finished form, once the CGI and other special effects have been added, for example, but she’s already “really proud” of the show.

“I feel like for Whovians that this is the show that they love, but it’s also not regurgitating the stuff that’s gone before, because why keep making it if you’re not going to use what’s happening day-to-day around you? It’s got to be current.

“It’s a show for any age,” she says. “It’s scary, it’s funny, it’s epic, it’s emotional and it’s all the things that I want from something. And all the things that I know that my niece, who is 14, would want from something.”

And with on demand viewing and so many big budget TV shows out there, Whittaker recognises that this has to be something special. “You can watch any kind of show, at any time of day, so you’ve got to make sure that this earns its place as being a show that you want people to stop and sit down to… I remember with Broadchurch, people wanted to watch it week to week. It is so wonderful that you can get an entire TV show and watch it at your own pace, but it is exciting to have to wait, to have that build up over the week to get to the next moment.”

Doctor Who remains for many then, a slice of event television, much discussed, much dissected, and certainly eagerly awaited. Whittaker laughs. “No pressure then!”

“Tinged with a dollop of darkness, there’s genuine peril here,” A spoiler-free guide to the first episode


Time travel

“I’m so excited for the world to meet them,” says Whittaker of her Tardis team. (BBC pictures)

Doctor Who was first broadcast on 23 November 1963 and was initially intended to be a family show with an educational emphasis on both scientific ideas and famous people and civilizations from history, such as Marco Polo and the Aztecs. It was no coincidence that two of the first companions to join the Doctor, Ian Chesterton and Barbara Wright, were teachers. The first real monsters to appear on the show however, the pepper pot-shaped Daleks, became the real stars and ensured the programme’s survival after the first series.

The Doctor’s space and time-travelling machine is called the Tardis, an acronym that stands for time and relative dimension in space. The fact that it looks like a police telephone box is because the ship is supposed to blend in with its surroundings, but its “chameleon circuit” got stuck and it’s never been able to change. It’s also because the tight budgets of the BBC in 1963 meant the producers wanted something cheap to use for the Doctor’s ship.

The first Doctor is a pretty unlikeable character. He’s patronising and cantankerous, and he effectively kidnaps teachers Ian and Barbara, whisking them away against their will to the Stone Age and immediately putting them in mortal danger. His character mellows over the course of the series, however, and he soon becomes the kindly heroic figure that we know and love today.

The longest ever serving Doctor is Tom Baker, who played the fourth incarnation of the character from 1974 until 1981. He’s still regarded as one of the best Doctors and made a cameo appearance in the 50th anniversary episode of the show. The award for shortest-lived Doctor goes to Paul McGann. He played the Doctor in the (frankly, a bit rubbish) 1996 TV film, a co-production between BBC and American studios. It was hoped this would lead to a new series, but it never materialised. McGann did revive his Doctor in both a number of Big Finish audio plays and in a couple of mini-episodes shown as part of the 50th celebrations.

After an unbroken run of 26 years, Doctor Who was effectively cancelled in 1989 due to dwindling viewing figures. Michael Grade, BBC director general at the time, defended his decision, calling the show “ghastly” and “pathetic”.  The show lived on in numerous books, comics and audio plays however while avid Doctor Who fan Russell T Davies, whose previous credits included the controversial Queer as Folk, whose central character is himself a Whovian, spent years campaigning to get the show back on the TV. He was rewarded for his efforts in 2005 when he was made executive producer and head writer of the newly revived series.

Steven Moffat won a BAFTA for episode Blink in 2007. The story barely features the Doctor and instead focuses on a woman called Sally Sparrow (Carey Mulligan) who investigates the disappearance of a friend in a creepy abandoned house. The show introduces new monsters, the Weeping Angels, stone statue-like creatures that can only move when you’re not looking at them and it’s regarded as one of the best episodes of the series.

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