Mila (Doctor Who)

Mila is a fictional character played by Jess Robinson and India Fisher in a series of audio plays produced by Big Finish Productions based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. A human prisoner of the Daleks, she becomes a companion of the Sixth Doctor while impersonating Charley Pollard.[1]

Mila
Doctor Who character
First appearancePatient Zero
Last appearanceBlue Forgotten Planet
Portrayed byJess Robinson (voice)
India Fisher (voice while impersonating Charley Pollard)
In-universe information
SpeciesHuman
AffiliationSixth Doctor

Character history

Mila first appeared in the play Patient Zero. She was a human prisoner of the Daleks, captured during one of their wars. The Daleks experimented on her with bio-engineered viruses to create a virus that turned the beings it infected into Daleks. Due to these experiments, she lost most of her memories and became invisible and non-corporeal, but also gained other unique abilities.

Mila later escaped from the Daleks and sneaked aboard the Doctor's TARDIS when he was being chased through time by the Daleks, implied to be during the events of the First Doctor serial The Chase. She remained in the TARDIS, unseen by anyone for centuries.

During the Sixth Doctor's life, she met Charley Pollard, the only companion unprotected by the TARDIS' biological defences. With the TARDIS failing to protect Charley, Mila infected her, making Charley invisible and non-corporeal, while Mila took on Charley's physical form.[2] Mila travelled with the Sixth Doctor for some time, pretending to be Charley (like in the audio drama Paper Cuts), while the real Charley was left invisible and alone.[3] In Blue Forgotten Planet, Charley is eventually cured by the Viyrans, while Mila chooses to sacrifice herself to save the Doctor and the Earth. Following Mila's death, the Viyrans and Charley altered the Doctor's memories, so that he remembered his adventures with Charley as being with Mila's name and face.[1][4]

List of appearances

Audio dramas

gollark: Have you considered learning TeX for writing maths on computers instead?
gollark: It apparently leads to higher lifetime earnings and lower unemployment even compensating for losing time in the workplace and smarter people going there in the first place.
gollark: Essay-heavy subjects = various bees.
gollark: Ah, so a different thing.
gollark: It's neat, I'm on their discord server.

References

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