Dodo Chaplet
Dorothea "Dodo" Chaplet is a fictional character played by Jackie Lane in the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. An Earth teenager from the year 1966, she was a companion of the First Doctor and a regular in the programme in its third season, from February to July 1966. Only three of the serials in which Dodo appeared as a regular are complete in the BBC archive (The Ark, The Gunfighters and The War Machines). Dodo's personality was an unsophisticated, bright and happy one.
Dodo | |
---|---|
Doctor Who character | |
Dorothea "Dodo" Chaplet | |
First appearance | The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve (1966) |
Last appearance | The War Machines (1966) |
Portrayed by | Jackie Lane |
In-universe information | |
Species | Human |
Affiliation | First Doctor |
Home | Earth |
Ultimately the character was not deemed a success by the programme's makers, and Lane's contract was not extended beyond episode two of The War Machines. To replace her, two new characters, Polly (Anneke Wills) and Ben (Michael Craze), the new faces of Doctor Who in the "swinging" mid-sixties, became companions. Dodo appeared in six stories (19 episodes, of which 11 currently exist in the BBC Archives).
Dodo has appeared in several spin-off productions, including Big Finish audio dramas and novels.
Appearances
Television
Dodo is introduced at the end of the serial The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve. In that story, the Doctor and Steven travel to 1572 Paris, where they witness the persecution of the city's Huguenot population. Despite befriending a young woman named Anne Chaplet, the Doctor knows he cannot prevent the coming massacre of 10,000 Huguenots, including Anne, by the Catholic French authorities. He therefore leaves in the TARDIS, taking Steven with him. When Steven finds out, he is furious and considers leaving the Doctor while the TARDIS is in 1960s[1] London.
Steven returns at the same time that a young woman wanders into the TARDIS thinking it was a real police box. The Doctor and Steven are taken aback when she introduces herself as Dodo Chaplet and reveals that her grandfather was French. The Doctor speculates that Dodo might be Anne's descendant.[2]
At the end of The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve she reveals she has no parents, explaining that she lives with her great-aunt "and she won't care if she never sees me again". She witnesses images of herself on the Celestial Toymaker's memory window from the day her mother died.
In her travels with the Doctor, Dodo travels to the far future, unfortunately bringing the common cold with her to infect humanity's descendants; faces the mad games of the Celestial Toymaker; witnesses the gunfight at the O.K. Corral; says goodbye to Steven in The Savages; and is hypnotised by the rogue artificial intelligence WOTAN in The War Machines.[3]
Halfway through that last adventure, she abruptly departs for a rest in the country after being hypnotised, and never reappears. At the story's conclusion, Polly (who, with Ben Jackson, took Dodo's place as a companion) explains to the departing Doctor that Dodo has decided to remain in the 20th century.
Webcast
In the 2020 webcast Farewell, Sarah Jane, written by Russell T Davies, Dodo is mentioned as being present at the funeral of Sarah Jane Smith. For Dodo to survive into the 21st century would contradict the varying accounts of her death (see below).
Other media
Dodo's life prior to joining the Doctor and the circumstances under which she joined him in the TARDIS were elaborated on in the Past Doctor Adventures novel Salvation, in which the TARDIS, departing after she has entered it, travels to New York City in Dodo's present, resulting in Dodo working with the Doctor and Steven to investigate mysterious beings who appear to be gods. In the Virgin Missing Adventures novel The Man in the Velvet Mask, Dodo has sex and is infected with an alien virus which slowly corrupts her.[4]
Dodo's life after she left the Doctor was not dealt with in the programme. The spin-off novel Who Killed Kennedy by David Bishop reveals that Dodo suffered a nervous breakdown and was unable to remember her adventures with the Doctor, drifting in and out of psychiatric institutions. Becoming involved with a journalist who was investigating the truth behind UNIT, Dodo is murdered by a pawn of the Master. Her funeral is attended only by her lover James Stevens and an unidentified man who, based on the limited description provided, may be either the Second or Seventh Doctor. However, in the 20th-anniversary version of the novel, a new timeline is created where the assassin is stopped by her lover when he travels back in time from the future after an intervention by the Doctor, implied to be the Twelfth such incarnation. James Stevens passes away in 2015, by which time Dodo is also deceased. However, the canonicity of the novels in relation to the television series is open to question.
Dodo also appears in the Past Doctor Adventures novel Bunker Soldiers, four short stories in the Virgin Decalog and BBC Short Trips, and the Big Finish Productions audio dramas Mother Russia, Tales from the Vault, Return of the Rocket Men, and The War to End All Wars (which reveals that Steven named his favorite daughter after Dodo, although she died in an attempted coup caused by her sisters).
Conception and casting
Dodo was originally intended to have a "common" accent, and is portrayed this way at the end of The Massacre. However, starting with the next story, The Ark, it was declared that Doctor Who regulars were required to speak in "BBC English", and so Dodo's accent was changed.[5]
References
- Dodo joins the TARDIS. In the later story The War Machines, on noticing the Post Office Tower she exclaims "it's finished". Construction of the Tower commenced in June 1961 and it was officially opened on 8 October 1965.
- Chapman (2006) p.35
- https://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/warmachine/detail.shtml
- Sandifer, Phillip (8 April 2011). "Time Can Be Rewritten 4: The Man in the Velvet Mask (Daniel O'Mahoney, Virgin Books, 1996)". TARDIS Eruditorum. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
- Mulkern, Patrick (7 March 2009). "Doctor Who: The Ark". Radio Times. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
- James Chapman, Inside the Tardis: the worlds of Doctor Who: a cultural history, I.B.Tauris, 2006, ISBN 1-84511-162-1
- R. H. Langley, The Doctor Who error finder: plot, continuity, and production mistakes in the television series and films, McFarland & Co., 2005, ISBN 0-7864-1990-3
- John Kenneth Muir, A critical history of Doctor Who on television, McFarland & Co., 1999, ISBN 0-7864-0442-6