Delta and the Bannermen

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150 – Delta and the Bannermen
Doctor Who serial

The Seventh Doctor and Mel visit the Shangri-La holiday camp
Cast
Doctor Sylvester McCoy (Seventh Doctor)
Companion Bonnie Langford (Melanie Bush)
Guest stars
  • Don Henderson - Gavrok
  • Belinda Mayne - Delta
  • Richard Davies - Burton
  • Stubby Kaye - Weismuller
  • Morgan Deare - Hawk
  • David Kinder - Billy
  • Martyn Geraint - Vinny
  • Sara Griffiths - Ray
  • Hugh Lloyd - Goronwy
  • Ken Dodd - Tollmaster
  • Brian Hibbard - Keillor
  • Johnny Dennis - Murray
  • Leslie Meadows - Adlon
  • Anita Graham - Bollit
  • Clive Michael Condon - Callon
  • Richard Mitchley - Arrex
  • Tim Scott - Chima
  • Jessica McGough, Amy Osborn - Young Chimeron
  • Laura Collins, Carley Joseph - Chimeron Princess
  • Robin Aspland, Keff McCulloch, Justin Myers, Ralph Samins - The Lorells
  • Tracey Wilson, Jodie Wilson - Vocalists
Production
Writer Malcolm Kohll
Director Chris Clough
Script editor Andrew Cartmel
Producer John Nathan-Turner
Executive producer(s) None
Production code 7F
Series Season 24
Length 3 episodes, 25 mins each
Originally broadcast November 2November 16, 1987
Chronology
← Preceded by Followed by →
Paradise Towers Dragonfire

Delta and the Bannermen is a serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in three weekly parts from November 2 to November 16, 1987. It was the 150th story of the series.

Contents

[edit] Plot

[edit] Synopsis

On an alien planet the genocide of the Chimeron by the merciless Bannermen led by Gavrok is almost complete. The last survivor, Chimeron Queen Delta, escapes by the skin of her teeth clutching her egg, the future for her species. She makes it to a space tollport where the Navarinos, a race of shape changing tourist aliens, are planning a visit to the planet Earth in 1959 in a spaceship disguised as an old holiday bus. She stows aboard, as does Mel, while the Doctor follows them in the TARDIS. The Doctor and Mel have won the trip as a prize for arriving in the Navarino spaceport at the right time to be declared the ten billionth customers. No sooner has the tourist vehicle blasted away than the Bannermen turn up, ruthlessly hunting down the fugitive, and they kill the Tollmaster when he refuses to co-operate.

The holiday vehicle from Nostalgia Tours meets an unfortunate collision with an American space satellite and is diverted off track, landing at a holiday camp in South Wales rather than Disney Land. However, the basic but cheerful Shangri-La holiday camp is happy to accommodate the visitors led by the ebullient Burton, who assures the travellers of a warm welcome while they wait for the driver, Murray, to repair their innocuous seeming transport. Mel gets close to Delta and uncovers the truth of her situation, including the hatching of the egg into a bright green baby that starts to grow at a startling rate. The Chimeron Queen supports this development with the equivalent of royal jelly given to bees.

Delta tries to take her mind off the situation and goes to the Shangri-La dance, instantly capturing the heart of Billy, the camp’s mechanic – and making an enemy of the smitten Rachel (or Ray), who loves Billy herself. Ray confides her situation in the Doctor, and they both stumble across a bounty hunter making contact with the Bannermen to tell them of the Chimeron’s whereabouts. It is only a matter of time before Gavrok and his troops arrive. Delta and Billy head off on a romantic countryside ramble the following morning, but the Doctor wastes no time in persuading Burton to evacuate the camp, helping Murray repair the ship, and then heading off to find the young lovers while there is still time. Once they are found, everyone returns to the camp but the situation has become dire. The Bannermen have destroyed the Navarino bus with all its official passengers inside, taking Mel as a hostage as Gavrok tries to work out how to capture the Chimeron. The Doctor’s early attempts to intercede are futile, but he does rescue Burton and Mel from the Bannermen.

Two Bannermen who are holding prisoner two ageing American agents, Hawk and Weismuller, that were tracking the missing satellite when they first arrived was informed by Gavrok to wait for the Doctor, Burton and Mell on the side of the road. Just before they left the Amercians, they place a joined head lock advice to prevent them from escaping. While the two Bannerman was placing a tracker on the Doctor riding Billy's motorbike with Burton and Mel in a disguise of an ambush attempt, Ray manages to recuse Hawk and Weismuller head locks with an allen key. They all make contact with the mysterious bee keeper Goronwy, who hides them for a while in his house.

As the two Bannerman finds that the Americans have been set free, they were able to track the Doctor’s party to Goronwy House. As they were closing in to the house, the Chimeron child Princess made a high pitched scream of warning which traumatised the ears of the two Bannermans and so Data was able to shoot one of them while the other escape to inform Gavrok of the Data and the Princess location. At Shangri-La before leave to attack Goronwy House, Gavrok has booby-trapped the outside of the TARDIS in an attempt to kill the Doctor. As Gavrok and his Bannerman closed in on Goronwy House shooting and crashing into the Rock 'n roll music filled house only to have honey broken over them in the process. This then set Goronwy bees on honey-covered Bannermen. In the meanwhile the Doctor and his party makes it to the Shangri-La to set up a defence gettingBilly rigs up the Shangri-La sound system to amplify the perfectly pitched scream of the Chimeron child Princess – a sound which is excrutiatingly painful to Bannermen.

Goronwy explains to Billy the purpose of royal jelly in the life-cycle of the honey bee, provoking the mechanic to consume Delta's equivalent that she has been feeding her daughter, in the hope of metamorphosing into a Chimeron.

As Gavrok and his band of Bannerman attack the Shangri-La, the amplified scream for the Chimeron child princess traumised the attackers including Gavrok who becomes so stunned that he falls into the beam of the booby-trap he placed on the Tardis and is incinerated. Other Bannermen are so traumatised that they are easily rounded up. Delta and Billy leave together with the child and the prisoners, heading for an intergalactic war crimes tribunal. Hawk and Weismuller was then shown by the Doctor the missing satellite nearby to their delight. All is well and the next bus of holiday makers – this time human – arrive at Shangri-La as the Doctor and Mel slip away.

[edit] Continuity

  • The Seventh Doctor's question mark handle umbrella makes its first appearance in this story.
  • Sylvester McCoy can be seen wearing his glasses in certain long shots of him riding a motorcycle (consequently, the only time the Seventh Doctor is seen wearing spectacles, though he does produce a pair for use as an aid to hypnosis in the extended version of Silver Nemesis).

[edit] Production

[edit] Preproduction

  • This was the first three-part story since Planet of Giants (1964), not counting the 3 x 45 minute episodes of The Two Doctors which had been broadcast 2 years previously.
  • Working titles for this story included The Flight of the Chimeron[1]. The eventual title is a reference to the British band Echo and the Bunnymen. The story title makes a single substitution using the phonetic alphabet and a slight change in the final word of the title.
  • Weismuller states that he used to be an Eagle Scout, which is the highest rank attainable in the Boy Scouts organisation.
  • The character of Ray was originally created as a new companion for the Doctor as Bonnie Langford had announced she would be leaving the series at the end of the season. The serial, with the working title, The Flight Of The Chimeron, was originally scheduled to end the season. However, as the serial neared production, Langford had not yet decided whether she would leave at the end of Season 24 or during Season 25; that, plus the rescheduling of Delta and the Bannermen to earlier in the season and the decision by script editor Andrew Cartmel to create another replacement companion named Alf (later renamed 'Ace'), led to the idea of Ray as a new companion being abandoned[1].

[edit] Casting

Features guest appearance by Ken Dodd, Don Henderson, Hugh Lloyd, Richard Davies, and American stage and screen actor Stubby Kaye. See also Celebrity appearances in Doctor Who.

[edit] Production

[edit] Commercial releases

The story was released on VHS in March 2001.

[edit] In print

A novelisation of this serial, written by Malcolm Kohll, was published by Target Books in January 1989.


[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Delta and the Bannermen at Doctor Who: A Brief History Of Time (Travel)
  2. ^ Doctor Who Confidential - "Weird Science", 28 May 2005.

[edit] External links

[edit] Reviews

[edit] Target novelisation