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Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation

Simon Brew


Simon warms to a Doctor once voted best-ever in the role - and argues that his contribution to the show is under-regarded...

Published on Jul 6, 2008

They say that you always have a loyalty to the Doctor that you grew up with, and in my case, by the time I was seriously getting into Doctor Who, it was Sylvester McCoy.

Granted, I’d been watching the show for a good few years by this point, and was around six years old when I caught Logopolis, the first story I ever watched. But while I enjoyed the Davison era and tolerated Colin Baker, I really found myself warming to the Sylvester McCoy reign in the Tardis quite a lot. It used to puzzle me week in week out to see the show slagged off by reviewers, as it struggled to hold its own against Coronation Street on the other side. But retrospect shows, I think, that I wasn’t too far wide of the mark. Because the McCoy era of the show has more going for it than it’s ever given credit for.

The man himself is the first factor. McCoy wasn’t an obvious choice to play the Time Lord, and you can’t ever imagine him getting the part in the current era, where the poster in Toys R Us needs to be seriously considered. But I loved that little bit of eccentricity, and while it wasn’t too tricky to improve on the actor who preceded him, I felt that he had an identity in the role. He’s not the best Doctor Who ever, granted, but he proved to be a good choice, and his passion for the show since is no surprise. He also changed the tone of his performance a surprising degree over his run. The early McCoy episodes, where he was playing the role a lot lighter, were certainly his weakest, as his portrayal of the Time Lord got much darker towards the end of his run.

Furthermore, once he managed to rid himself of Bonnie Langford (surely the worst assistant for the good Doctor of all time) and got Sophie Aldred in as his companion, things improved considerably. Some of McCoy’s earlier stories were the wrong side of ropey (Time and the Rani, anyone?), but when he teamed up with Ace it gave the writers an interesting, almost parental dynamic between the Doctor and his assistant that harked back to genuine old-time Who. It would have been interesting to see how the duo of McCoy and Aldred would have developed had the show kept going, although John Nathan Turner was believed to be looking to phase Ace out in the following series that never came.

Then there were some of the stories. Detractors of the McCoy era - and I’m not blind to its problems – will quickly point to the Candyman in The Happiness Patrol and the likes of Dragonfire and Ghost Light as muddled episodes that did nothing but hammer a few more nails into the show’s grave. The tepid Cybermen outing Silver Nemesis didn’t help either, especially as it was designed to mark the programme’s 25th anniversary.

But what about Remembrance Of The Daleks? Get over the fearsome foes struggling to scale the cobblestones, and that’s as a good a Dalek story as we’d seen since Genesis Of The Daleks. The same writer, Ben Aaronovitch, also gave us the King Arthur-inspired Battlefield, which too was quite a piece of work, even if the piss-poor monster in the last episode left a lot to be desired.

And then there’s The Curse Of Fenric, the finest episode of the McCoy era, and a good shout for one of the best 20 stories in the show of all time. This put the Doctor to the side of the action for the most part, instead developing the character of Ace quite dramatically, in a strangely moving and brilliantly constructed story. It stands up particularly well, not least because the DVD release has edited the story – Nicholas Parsons and all – into one full story.

Even throughout the low points of his era, McCoy had a gusto, energy and quirkiness that served the show well, often at times when a story around him was sinking without trace. And yet when he did get good material to work with, he made the most of it, and helped deliver some stories that simply shouldn’t be overlooked in the world of classic Who.

The fact that he was my Doctor obviously slants things a little for me, but even putting that to one side, the Sylvester McCoy era was a healthy, needed improvement from the days of Colin Baker, and it really deserves some reassessment.

 

Check out the new and ever growing Doctor Who page at DoG, where we are marshalling all the Who content at the site, including interviews, DVD and episode reviews, lists, opinions and articles on our favourite time traveller...

 

 

Users Comments

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By Midnighter 1 July 7, 2008 10:45:07 AM

I'm a huge McCoy era fan (and it's the same for me that he was "my" Doctor). More than anything I want to see Ace return for a few episodes, or at least a special. Stuff Rose, Ace beat a Dalek up with a baseball bat!!!!!

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By picknmix 1 July 7, 2008 11:29:08 AM

The best assistants where always the aggressive ones, as such Ace and Leela would come at the top of mine, and Mel, Tegan and Jamie would come firmly near the bottom. I liked the McCoy era once Bonny had been exercised, although my Doctor was probably Baker.

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By Ladylexx 1 July 7, 2008 11:59:56 AM

I had high hopes for Sylvester McCoy as the Doctor, but the writing really let him down. The stories were too silly and clearly written to turn the show into childrens TV rather than the family show it had been in the past. It definitely improved with the introduction of Ace - but it was the only time when if I missed an episode of Doctor Who I wasnt particularly bothered. I'm glad Sylvester got to hand over the mantle though with his regeneration into Paul McGann - even if that film was a pile of American doodoo.

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By SebPatrick 1 July 7, 2008 12:06:52 PM

Couldn't agree more, frankly (although, get over the appalling low budget of the sets and I think there's a lot to commend The Happiness Patrol for). Like you, a lot of it is down to "era I discovered the show" loyalty, but I've always liked the McCoy era (or, to be more precise, seasons 25 and 26 - there's barely anything good to say about season 24). I've been watching a few of the stories recently, and quite a few stand up to scrutiny - Remembrance, Fenric and Ghost Light are all brilliant, and while Survival is flawed it's an intriguing story that finally made a great Master out of Anthony Ainley. And Battlefield, while it tails off, has a brilliant first couple of parts that actually feel like the sort of thing that inspired the pacing, structure and general feel of the new series... Silver Nemesis is absolutely rank, though ;-)

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By swordfishtrombones 1 July 7, 2008 01:03:18 PM

I've always considered McCoy to be the second-best Doctor, after Tom Baker, mainly because he WAS the man of mystery the character was supposed to be (at least, when Ace arrived and the writers finally realised they weren't writing for Colin Baker anymore). However, I was with you right up until you slagged off Ghost Light, definitely one of the best McCoy stories (up there with Remembrance and the Greatest Show in the Galaxy). Good article, though!

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By michaelklouda 1 July 7, 2008 01:04:11 PM

There were so many problems with the McCoy era that it is difficult to separate the actor from the shows. I do not look back fondly on this time and consider him my least favorite doctor. I disliked the sillyness of him and Bonnie Langford really killed the show for me. Ace was great and once the show started turning more adult and darker I started enjoying it, but the production never caught up to the potential that was starting. By the end of the run it became pretty clear why they canceled the show. It's a shame really. Both Colin Baker and McCoy were not able to prove themselves during their initial run, but have done so since.

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By wanderjahre 1 July 7, 2008 01:34:18 PM

Sylvester was a great choice for the Doctor, but as other have written hamstrung by some seriously awful scripts, but when it worked it worked well. Remembrance of the Daleks is probably his best work. The trouble seem to be they ignored the potential of a combination of Ace and 'the prof' seen in Remembrance in favour of plots which suggested at times that the scriptwriters had overdone the liquid lunch. Towards the end, you got the feeling that frankly no one really cared about the production but in nearly every episode there was something worth watching, even 'The Happiness Patrol' has some interesting dialogue between the Doctor and Errol(?) but did that compensate for the Candyman or the bizarre costumes of the Happiness Patrol themselves. Sylvester performed well in a show that was on its last legs, out of ideas, scrappy special effects and by modern standards well past its sell by date, but I'll remember the good bits of 'Last Battlefield' 'Remembrance' 'Fenric' and the very last few seconds of 'Survival' in which he said goodbye....

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By Davros 1 July 7, 2008 02:31:21 PM

Sylvester was good fun & it was so sad to see the show improving but to still be axed. It was all over so quick back in those days, twice a week, up against Corrie, a full season would be done & dusted in 6 weeks :-( As we all no now the show was doomed but Sylvester once he got past his 1st season portrayed a very enjoyable Doctor, but then I was also a Colin fan, never enjoyed Davisons portrayal, too namby pamby, wishy washy. Of course just have to add with the other comments here, Tom was the man, the definitive Doctor, there is just something about Tom & his portrayal of the role that you can just believe him to be zooming around time & space in a rickety old Tardis having fun & poking his beedy nose in!

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By Zokko 1 July 7, 2008 03:16:41 PM

'Rembrance Of The Daleks' aside, the McCoy Era sucked. Thank God we have proper 'Dr.Who' on our screens again, thanks to Russ and Dave.

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By besbvesdy 1 July 8, 2008 04:09:06 PM

as a big fan of sylvester and his era myself, i enjoyed your article and agreed with most of it, apart from the description of battlefield as 'quite a piece of work' that was let down by a 'piss poor' monster... this smacks to me of the kind of careless third-hand fuzzy-vision slagging that tabloids now routinely apply to the entire 'classic' era of the show. anyone given even the breifest glimpse of the 'destroyer' costume from this story must concede that it's one of the series' finest realised monsters ever, and a testament to the production team's increasing ambition and panache. plus! i don't really know of anyone who would consider battlefield 'quite a piece of work' - much as i love it, it's widely seen as embarrassing false start to what otherwise would prove to be one of doctor who's best seasons. i think your article was great but it seemed to me like you were just picking a story at random to make a point.

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By gingeryoda 1 July 9, 2008 08:04:16 AM

He wasn't my Doctor but I enjoyed McCoy.Think the Cartmel Masterplan was interesting,and felt it was always a bit tragic that the show got cancelled just as it was starting to improve.

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By simonbrew 1 July 9, 2008 12:53:55 PM

Nothing random, I assure you. I *really* liked Battlefield a lot (Ben Aaronovitch was a top Who writer), but the monster just didn't work as an ending to it. I thought it was the least sinister thing about it. Looking forward to the DVD release at the end of the year :-)

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By besbvesdy 1 July 9, 2008 02:07:07 PM

aaronovitch is great indeed. the book was a lot better i thought...and the destroyer would have been better if he'd have started off as a guy in a suit...but look at him for pete's sake! he's got a dribbly animatronic mouth!

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By simonbrew 1 July 9, 2008 07:24:46 PM

Heh, that's a fair point :-) Battlefield, Remembrance and Fenric are my three favourite McCoy stories, and I'll check the book out for the former. Thanks for the tip!

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By fireandforget 1 January 27, 2009 03:37:33 PM

All the Target novelisations for that era are top-notch - they're packed with background character stuff which elevate them above the Terrance Dicks "Suddenly - disaster!" brand of kid-friendly writing of earlier books (not that there's anything wrong with that)

Re: Sylvester McCoy as Doctor Who: an appreciation
Posted By sylko 1 July 14, 2009 05:51:49 PM

Sylvester McCoy was my favorite, hands down. In fact, as much as I love the Ninth and Tenth doctors, McCoy holds a place in my heart. I just rewatched Remembrence, and he is so good in it, especially at the end. And Curse of Fenric was the first Doctor Who that I bought the novelization of because I loved the episode so much. Ace has been, and always will be, my favorite companion. I thought Rose was great, but Ace was tougher and cooler, and as a teenaged girl in America, I wanted to BE Ace back then. I loved the relationship between the Doctor and Ace, and wished it could have continued. In my imaginations, the Doctor and Ace are still traveling in an alternate universe (in fact, I wrote a story in my head that Rose in the alternate universe met up with the alternate Doctor, but it was still McCoy).
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