Mara (Doctor Who)
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Doctor Who character | |
---|---|
The Mara, as it manifested itself in Kinda |
|
Mara | |
Affiliated with | none |
Race | none (artificial construct) |
Home planet | Manussa |
Home era | Unknown |
First appearance | Kinda |
Last appearance | Snakedance |
Portrayed by | Barry Smith (puppeteer) |
The Mara is a fictional villain from the long-running British science fiction television series, Doctor Who. It is a creature that exists in the minds of its victims and can transmit itself telepathically, although it can also take on the physical manifestation of a giant snake.
The Mara was created on the planet Manussa in the Scrampus system, turning the Manussan empire into the Sumaran empire. Eventually the Mara was defeated and driven out by a Manussan. However, it survived and escaped to the planet Deva Loka.
It was on this planet that the Fifth Doctor, Nyssa, Tegan and Adric encountered the Mara. When Tegan fell asleep near the wind chimes on Deva Loka, she became possessed by the Mara, although it soon left her and possessed a native Kinda named Aris. The possessed Aris then began to stir up the normally peaceful Kinda against an expedition of human colonists who were also present on Deva Loka. The Doctor was able to prevent the humans detonating a bomb which would have destroyed their dome and killed many Kinda, and managed to trap the Mara in a circle of mirrors. As the Mara could not bear to see its own reflection, as evil cannot face itself, it was driven out to a place known as the Dark Places of the Inside.
Sometime later, after Adric had been killed saving the Earth, Tegan became possessed by the Mara once again. She then navigated the TARDIS to Manussa, where a ceremony was to be held to mark the 500th anniversary of the banishment of the Mara. Using Tegan and a young Manussan named Lon, the Mara tried to obtain the "great crystal" with which it hoped to restore its own corporeal existence. The Doctor was guided by an old mystic named Dojjen who showed him how to find the "still point". When the Mara tried to make its return at the ceremony, the Doctor concentrated his thought with a small replica of the great crystal, and by finding the still point was able to repel the Mara. Then by grabbing the great crystal, the Doctor broke the Mara's hold over its controlled victims, and destroyed its new snake body. This time, the Mara had apparently been destroyed for good.
In the Torchwood episode Small Worlds, Jack speculates that "fairies" may be "part Mara". However, his noting of "Mara" as the origin of the word "nightmare" and their ability to steal the breath from their victims suggests that he is referring to the Mara of Germanic/Scandinavian mythology rather than the Manussan Mara. Christopher Bailey, writer of Snakedance and Kinda, was a practising Buddhist and named Doctor Who's Mara after the Buddhist demon Mara.[1]
[edit] References
- ^ Shannon Patrick Sullivan. A Brief History Of Time (Travel): Kinda. Retrieved on 2006-11-13.