The Green Death

069 The Green Death
Doctor Who serial

Professor Jones and Jo amidst some mutant maggots.
Cast
Others
Production
Directed by Michael E. Briant
Written by Robert Sloman
Barry Letts (uncredited)
Script editor Terrance Dicks
Produced by Barry Letts
Executive producer(s) None
Incidental music composer Dudley Simpson
Production code TTT
Series Season 10
Length 6 episodes, 25 minutes each
Originally broadcast 19 May23 June 1973
Chronology
← Preceded by Followed by →
Planet of the Daleks The Time Warrior

The Green Death is the fifth and final serial of the tenth season of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, first broadcast in six weekly parts from 19 May 1973 to 23 June 1973. It was the last to feature Katy Manning as companion Jo Grant in Doctor Who.

Plot

The Doctor is making adjustments to the TARDIS' coordinate programmer in preparation for a visit to Metebelis Three, when Jo reads in the paper about the mysterious death of a miner named Hughes in the abandoned coal mine in Llanfairfach in South Wales: The miner, doing a monthly inspection of the bottom of the mine shaft, emerged dead and glowing bright green. Jo takes this opportunity to meet the acclaimed local environmentalist and Nobel Prize winner Professor Clifford Jones; while Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart goes down to investigate the miner's death, taking Jo with him in his car. The Doctor agrees to follow the Brigadier, but is determined to go to Metebelis Three first.

The Brigadier's first port of call is the recently opened Global Chemicals oil plant, close to the abandoned mine. Its headman, Stevens, claims that the plant can "produce 25% more petrol and diesel fuel from a given quantity of crude oil"—but that the 'Stevens process' only produces a minimal amount of waste. Jones, in his environmentally friendly retreat the 'Wholeweal', (nicknamed the "Nuthutch" by the locals), is convinced that the oil-making process must create thousands of gallons of waste. He also believes that there is a link between Global Chemicals and Hughes' death—but his research is too demanding for him to go down the mine and investigate. Jo, who is on the environmentalist's side, heads for the mineshaft.

The Doctor reaches Metebelis Three, but it is far from the "blue paradise" he described: He is attacked by various unseen creatures, returning to the UNIT laboratory with only a small blue crystal to show for his misadventure. He then drives down to South Wales in his car, Bessie, and meets the Brigadier at Global Chemicals. The two then set off to go down the mine to investigate, despite Stevens' insistence that it should be sealed. Stevens summons his henchman, Hinks, and tells him in a strange emotionless voice "nobody must go down the mine". Hinks leaves and Stevens dons a pair of strange headphones.

Jo has arrived at the pithead ahead of the Doctor and the Brigadier, and gone down the shaft with a miner called Bert to help another man, Dai Evans, who has called for help at the bottom of the mine. When the Doctor and the Brigadier arrive, Dave, the man controlling the cage's descent, finds that the brake has been sabotaged. The Doctor manages to slow the cage's descent, but his efforts leave Jo and Bert trapped at the bottom of the shaft. There, they find Dai Evans, who is turning bright green and dying. Bert remembers there is an emergency shaft out of the mine, and he and Jo set off.

The Doctor suggests cutting the mineshaft cables linking the two cages together, which would enable him to use the second cage to get down the mine. The Brigadier goes to Global Chemicals to request some cutting equipment, but a man named Fell informs him that they do not have such equipment. The Doctor has Professor Jones and his Wholeweal friends create a demonstration at the Global Chemicals gate, while he slips in an attempt to steal the equipment from where it is stored in a large shed. However, he is captured, and Stevens shows him that the shed is empty. Fortunately, Dave and the Brigadier, while on their way to Newport to find some cutting equipment, have stopped at a petrol station and found a man using the required equipment to cut up an old car. They borrow this, free the secondary mine cage, and the Doctor goes down the shaft with Dave and two other miners. They find Dai Evans now dead and a note from Jo telling them that she and Bert have headed for the emergency shaft.

Jo and Bert have made good progress through the old mine tunnels, when they find a green slime trickling down the wall. When Bert touches this, he begins to grow weak, and his hand starts to turn bright green. At Bert's insistence, Jo goes on without him. Dave and the Doctor find Bert, and the Doctor goes on to find Jo. By the time they reunite, Jo has found a vast lake of bright green slime, filled with huge maggot creatures. When the tunnel collapses behind them, they use an old mining wagon to get across the green lake. They then climb a steep shaft, where the Doctor collects a huge egg to take back for experimentation. At the top of the natural shaft, they find a large pipe, with the insides covered with traces of crude oil waste—meaning that the pipe leads to the Global Chemicals plant.

In the plant, a worker named Elgin, an old friend of Fell, tells him about Dai Evans' death and the dying Bert. Elgin later follows Fell into a pumping control room, where Fell is pumping the oil waste from the main tank on level four into another tank. The security system then registers the Doctor and Jo's presence in the pipe. Fell, who has actually arranged for the waste to be pumped down the pipe into the abandoned mine workings, is initially reluctant to rescue the two in the pipe. Elgin convinces Fell to help him open the hatch, and the Doctor and Jo escape as the oil waste cascades down the pipe. Fell goes to see Stevens, complaining about a 'headache', and Stevens puts the strange headphones on Fell. A voice tells Stevens that 'Fell's 'processing' was a failure' and orders self-destruction. After Stevens presses a button on a small control panel, Fell leaves the room and jumps off a balcony to his death.

The Doctor, Jo and the Brigadier end the day with a meal of fungus at the Nuthutch, but the frivolity is cut short when they hear Bert too has died. After everyone retires to bed the egg the Doctor brought back from the mine hatches out into a giant maggot. Escaping from the lab where the egg was left, the maggot first heads for Jo, but then jumps on and bites Hinks, sent to the Nuthutch by Stevens to steal the egg. The maggot escapes from the house into the dark, and Hinks quickly weakens as the poisonous "green death" infection spreads through his body. The next morning, the Brigadier has the UNIT troops lay explosives and detonate the whole mine pithead, to the Doctor's fury. This fails to trap the maggots in the mine, as they begin to emerge; first, attempting to escape up the Global Chemicals waste disposal pipe, then burrowing through the slagheap near the mine.

At Global Chemicals, Mike Yates has been sent in undercover by the Brigadier, and is contacted by the Doctor, who dons some improbable disguises to get through the gates and move freely. Having liaised with Yates, the Doctor learns that Stevens take his instructions from someone on the top floor of the complex, and heads up there in the special lift to find out who is in charge. He finds that this is the home of the BOSS, Bimorphic Organisational Systems Supervisor, a supercomputer with its own megalomaniac personality. It runs the company, controls Stevens and other key staff members, and is responsible for the polluting chemical process. The Doctor rejects the brainwashing technique that Stevens and the BOSS subject him to – but Yates is more susceptible and is converted into one of the computer’s slaves. After the Doctor escapes, Yates is sent to the Nuthutch to kill the Doctor. His conditioning is deep and only broken by the Doctor’s use of the blue crystal he brought from Metebelis Three.

Jo has alienated Jones, with whom she is falling in love, by ruining one of his experimenting slides of green slime. Determined to make amends, she heads to the slagheap in search of a maggot to run some tests on. Meanwhile, Jones finds that the fungus powder Jo spilt on the slides is actually a cure for the 'green death' infection. He races to the slag heap to find Jo surrounded by giant maggots, and they are both caught in an RAF bombing raid on the maggots. Jones is infected with the 'green death' and begins to turn green — and all before he was able to share his knowledge of the cure. Jo contacts her UNIT friends with her radio, and the Doctor and Sergeant Benton rescue the two from the maggots in Bessie. Hearing Jones utter the word "Serendipity", the Doctor realises that Jones might have stumbled upon something that could combat the maggots and their infection. Benton arrives with a maggot chrysalis—proof that the maggots are beginning to transform into mature giant insects. Then, the maggot that escaped from the laboratory is found on the table—dead. Realising that the creature died from eating some of the fungus, the Doctor also discovers the cure for Jones. The Doctor and Benton drive around the slag heaps, liberally scattering the fungus, which proves deadly to the maggots. They are then attacked by a giant fly creature—the mature adult form of the maggots—which the Doctor kills by throwing his cloak over it when it is in mid-air, causing it to fall to the ground.

The Doctor returns to Global Chemicals to confront the BOSS. The computer plans to link up with others and effect a corporate takeover of the human race. By now, Stevens is completely under the mad computer's control. The Doctor tells Stevens that the BOSS' "efficiency" will result in greater pollution, brainless brainwashed humans, and more death and disease. The Doctor then uses his blue crystal to break Stevens' hypnotic state, and Stevens, infuriated at what the BOSS has done to him, cross-feeds the generator circuits, causing the whole plant to explode, apparently destroying Stevens and the mad computer.

The menace defeated, UNIT troops and environmentalists gather at the Nuthutch for a celebration made all the more special when Jo and Jones announce they are getting married. The Doctor gives his blessing and gives Jo the blue crystal as a wedding present, but since this means the end of Jo's travels with the Doctor, he is evidently upset by the situation and quietly slips away while the party is in full swing.

As Jo and Jones dance, the Doctor drives Bessie off into the sunset...

Continuity

This story marked the final appearance of Katy Manning as Jo Grant on Doctor Who. She returned to the role in the 2008 audio story The Doll of Death and in the 2010 series of The Sarah Jane Adventures. She also voices the character Iris Wildthyme in several audio stories. Manning's departure, coupled with the death of Roger Delgado (who played the Master) and the announced departure of producer Barry Letts, was a major motivation in Jon Pertwee's decision to leave the series the following year.[1]

The Doctor's desire to journey to Metebelis Three was a recurring theme throughout the season. The Prime Minister is addressed as "Jeremy," which was a production joke referring to the then Liberal Party leader Jeremy Thorpe.[2]

Jo eventually sends the blue crystal back to the Doctor, part of the chain of events which leads to his regeneration in Planet of the Spiders. The blue crystal reappeared in the Eleventh Doctor story "Hide".

The DVD release of this story features a fictitious documentary, Global Conspiracy, starring Mark Gatiss as investigative reporter Terry Scanlon, following up the events surrounding the incident at Global Chemicals. Several actors from The Green Death briefly reprise their roles, and it is revealed that Stevens and BOSS survived.

Production

During the recording of the footage of the maggots around the quarrysite, several of the maggot props were in fact inflated condoms (some inflated with air, others with water). The colliery used for filming was Ogilvie Colliery near Deri, Caerphilly, while Global Chemicals was the RCA International factory in Brynmawr. The script required the Doctor to state that the maggots have "thick chitinous skin". Pertwee asked Producer Barry Letts how to pronounce the word, and Letts, unaware of the term, told him to pronounce the first syllable "chit", rather than the more correct "kite". Two days after Episode 4 was broadcast, Letts received a letter consisting simply of the words, "The reason I'm writin'/Is how to say kitin [sic]."[3]

This story marks the final appearance of the "howlaround" title sequence introduced in 1970. It also is the last appearance of the logo introduced in Spearhead from Space until the 1996 television movie. The 1996 version of this logo has been used for marketing purposes by the BBC since that time, and is still used for the "classic series". The closing title graphics are run upside down and backwards on Episodes 2, 5, and 6. The reasons for this are unclear and range from saving time rewinding the film to trying something new with the titles, as they would not be used again.

Cast notes

Tony Adams, who played Elgin, was taken ill during the recording of The Green Death and so Roy Skelton was brought in to play a new character called Mr James, who was given the lines written for Elgin. In Global Conspiracy, Adams actually uses his real illness as an explanation for his character's sudden absence towards the end of the story.

The part of Professor Clifford Jones was played by Stewart Bevan. Bevan was at the time engaged to Katy Manning. The fictional couple become engaged at the end of the story, whereas Bevan and Manning separated a year after the show was recorded.[4]

Outside references

The Doctor temporarily stumps BOSS by asking it "If I were to tell you that the next thing I say would be true, but the last thing I said was a lie, would you believe me?" The question is an example of the liar paradox, which dates back to at least the fourth century BC.

Broadcast and reception

Serial details by episode
EpisodeBroadcast dateRun timeViewers
(in millions)
Archive
"Episode One" 19 May 1973 (1973-05-19) 25:55 9.2 PAL 2" colour videotape
"Episode Two" 26 May 1973 (1973-05-26) 25:56 7.2 PAL 2" colour videotape
"Episode Three" 2 June 1973 (1973-06-02) 25:12 7.8 PAL 2" colour videotape
"Episode Four" 9 June 1973 (1973-06-09) 25:47 6.8 PAL 2" colour videotape
"Episode Five" 16 June 1973 (1973-06-16) 25:20 8.3 PAL 2" colour videotape
"Episode Six" 23 June 1973 (1973-06-23) 26:06 7.0 PAL 2" colour videotape
[5][6][7]

An edited, condensed single omnibus episode of the story was broadcast on BBC1 at 4:00 pm on 27 December 1973,[8] reaching a higher audience than the original episodes, with 10.4 million viewers.[9] A repeat series of all six episodes was shown on BBC2 from 2 January to 6 February 1994, with ratings of 1.3, 1.1, 0.8, 1.1, 1.3 and 1.3 million viewers respectively.[10] BBCFour showed the story in three double length episodes at 7:10 pm on 3–5 April 2006.[11][12][13]

Paul Cornell, Martin Day, and Keith Topping gave the serial a favourable review in The Discontinuity Guide (1995), though they noted that it "patronises the Welsh".[14] In The Television Companion (1998), David J. Howe and Stephen James Walker felt that the story was "nicely set up", although the script resorted to stereotypes with the hippies and the Welshmen. While they noted that the story "suffers from an over-reliance on CSO" and the acting of the Global Chemicals employees failed to impress, they praised the maggots and Jo's departure.[15] In 2010, Mark Braxton of Radio Times described The Green Death as "entertaining, frightening, poignant and important". He also felt the CSO was "woeful" but the maggots a success, and additionally praised the moral and cultural messages.[16] In 2012, SFX named Jo's departure as the fourth greatest companion farewell, noting how it was the first time the Doctor was "truly upset" since leaving Susan.[17] In 2009, they listed the scene where a giant maggot approaches Jo as the eighth scariest Doctor Who moment.[18] The magazine also listed the scene where the Doctor dresses in drag as one of the silliest moments in Doctor Who's history in a 2010 article.[19] In 2013, Ben Lawrence of The Daily Telegraph named The Green Death as one of the top ten Doctor Who stories set in the contemporary time.[20]

Commercial releases

In print

Doctor Who and the Green Death
Author Malcolm Hulke
Cover artist Peter Brookes
Series Doctor Who book:
Target novelisations
Release number
29
Publisher Target Books
Publication date
21 August 1975
ISBN 0-426-10647-4

A novelisation of this serial, written by Malcolm Hulke, was published by Target Books in August 1975. The company Global Chemicals had to be changed to Panorama Chemicals because a real Global Chemicals was found to exist. Hulke tells the story from several points of view including the possessed Stevens, the psychotic Hinks and even a hungry maggot. An unabridged reading by Katy Manning of the novelisation was released on CD in September 2008 by BBC Audiobooks.[21]

Home media

The story was released on VHS in October 1996 as a two-tape set. On the back of the VHS box, BBC Video presented this serial's release as a tribute to Jon Pertwee, who died a few months earlier in May 1996. The Green Death was released on DVD in the United Kingdom on 10 May 2004. The Green Death featured in issue 48 of Doctor Who DVD Files, published 3 November 2010. A Special Edition DVD of the serial was released in the UK on 5 August 2013 containing extra bonus features including a new 25-minute documentary on the making of the serial called "The One With the Maggots", as well as The Sarah Jane Adventures serial Death of the Doctor, which reunites the Doctor and Jo. This story is also available on the instant video streaming service Netflix.

References

  1. "Exclusive First Look: The Final Curtain Part 1 - Doctor Who - Planet of the Spiders". YouTube. BBCClassicDoctorWho. 4 March 2011.
  2. http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/greendeath/detail.shtml
  3. Haining, Peter (1983). Doctor Who: A Celebration. W.H. Allen. p. 145. ISBN 0-491-03351-6.
  4. Doctor Who: The Green Death DVD. BBC Worldwide. ASIN: B0006J28O6. 1 March 2005
  5. Shaun Lyon; et al. (2007-03-31). "The Green Death". Outpost Gallifrey. Retrieved 2008-08-30. Archived 12 December 2004 at the Wayback Machine.
  6. "The Green Death". Doctor Who Reference Guide. Retrieved 2008-08-30.
  7. Sullivan, Shannon (2007-08-07). "The Green Death". A Brief History of Time Travel. Retrieved 2008-08-30.
  8. http://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/c07191da3fc143908924c1b1c8ad00ab
  9. http://guide.doctorwhonews.net/story.php?story=TheGreenDeath&detail=broadcast
  10. http://guide.doctorwhonews.net/story.php?story=TheGreenDeath&detail=broadcast&page=2
  11. http://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/9617c4b6eb7742ca841b3297935b1ad4
  12. http://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/e2e7c229a80341658361e22285279167
  13. http://genome.ch.bbc.co.uk/6a07493a19334d6bb9db30df85183482
  14. Cornell, Paul; Day, Martin; Topping, Keith (1995). "The Green Death". The Discontinuity Guide. London: Virgin Books. ISBN 0-426-20442-5.
  15. Howe, David J & Walker, Stephen James (1998). Doctor Who: The Television Companion (1st ed.). London: BBC Books. ISBN 978-0-563-40588-7.
  16. Braxton, Mark (14 February 2010). "Doctor Who: The Green Death". Radio Times. Retrieved 3 March 2013.
  17. Salmon, Will (26 September 2012). "10 Best Doctor Who Companion Departures (And 5 Worst)". SFX. Retrieved 3 March 2013.
  18. "21 Scariest Doctor Who Moments 5". SFX. 1 February 2009. Retrieved 20 March 2013.
  19. O'Brian, Steve (November 2010). "Doctor Who's 25 Silliest Moments". SFX. Retrieved 3 March 2013.
  20. Lawrence, Ben (30 March 2013). "Doctor Who: the 10 best contemporary tales". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  21. "Doctor Who and the Green Death". Big Finish Productions. Retrieved 23 November 2012.
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