The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve
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022 – The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve | |
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Doctor Who serial | |
First Doctor and Steven Taylor (William Hartnell, Peter Purves) |
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Cast | |
Doctor | William Hartnell (First Doctor) |
Companion | Peter Purves (Steven Taylor) |
Production | |
Writer | John Lucarotti Donald Tosh |
Director | Paddy Russell |
Script editor | Donald Tosh Gerry Davis |
Producer | John Wiles |
Executive producer(s) | None |
Production code | W |
Series | Season 3 |
Length | 4 episodes, 25 mins each |
Episode(s) missing | All 4 episodes |
Originally broadcast | February 5–February 26, 1966 |
Chronology | |
← Preceded by | Followed by → |
The Daleks' Master Plan | The Ark |
IMDb profile |
The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve is a serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in four weekly parts from February 5 to February 26, 1966. This serial marks the first appearance of Jackie Lane as companion Dodo Chaplet.
Contents |
[edit] Synopsis
The TARDIS materializes in Paris in the year 1572 and the First Doctor decides to visit the famous apothecary Charles Preslin. Steven, meanwhile, is befriended by a group of Huguenots from the household of the Protestant Admiral de Coligny. Having rescued a young serving girl, Anne Chaplet, from some pursuing guards, the Huguenots gain their first inkling of a heinous plan being hatched at the command of the Catholic Queen Mother, Catherine de' Medici...
[edit] Plot
The arrival of the TARDIS in Paris, France on August 19, 1572 places its occupants, the First Doctor and Steven Taylor, in a dangerous situation. Tensions between Protestants and Catholics are at fever pitch in the city –- with younger hotheads like Gaston, Viscount de Lerans, a Protestant Huguenot nobleman, and Simon Duval, a Catholic, drawn into violent confrontation in a tavern. Despite the danger, the Doctor heads off alone to visit the apothecary Charles Preslin, leaving Steven to drink alone but warning him to keep out of trouble. Moments later, Steven attracts the attention for the landlord of the tavern for not settling his bill, but is helped out financially by Nicholas Muss, a less aggressive Huguenot, who welcomes him to his party of drinkers. Muss explains that the marriage of the Protestant Prince Henri of Navarre, Gaston’s employer, to the Catholic Princess Marguerite de Valois, the sister of the King, is the cause of the heightened tension in Paris. While Steven, Gaston and Nicholas are wandering home, they find a frightened serving girl, Anne Chaplet, who is terrified of being pressed into the service of the Catholic Abbot of Amboise. Anne is also scared because she has heard some guards in the pay of the Cardinal mention how a religious massacre of Huguenots back in her home town of Wassy a decade earlier could now be replicated in Paris. To protect her and her knowledge, Nicholas arranges for Anne to go into the service of his master, Admiral Gaspard de Coligny, the most senior Protestant adviser at the Royal Court. Steven also stays with the Admiral to avoid the curfew in the city, as the Doctor has not returned to the tavern as arranged.
By August 20 the Abbot of Amboise has arrived at his Parisian residence. He bears the exact likeness and voice of the Doctor. He is a religious zealot who acts as enforcer to the ever-absent Cardinal of Lorraine. The Abbot is about to journey to Paris to conduct a metaphorical witch-hunt against all heresy, including the apothecaries and the Huguenots. He sends his secretary, Roger Colbert, out to track down the missing Anne Chaplet, convinced she has worked out the threat to the Protestants. Colbert makes for de Coligny’s house and tries to convince Nicholas, Gaston, and Steven that Anne has been over-creative in her interpretation of what she heard. A little later, Steven spies Colbert talking to the Abbot about the situation, and is stunned that the cleric seems to be the Doctor. When Steven and Nicholas track down Preslin’s shop to try and find the Doctor, they discover it has been closed since Preslin was arrested for heresy two years before. This news makes Nicholas suspicious that Steven is a spy in the employee of the Doctor/Abbot.
In the Council of France a power struggle is in place between the impassioned, Catholic Tavannes, Marshal of France, and the more cautious Admiral de Coligny, who is trying to persuade the Court to back the Dutch in their war against Spain. By the end of the Council meeting, de Coligny is confident his advice has been taken.
Steven has now fallen out with and evaded Nicholas Muss, taking his chances in the streets of Paris alone. He heads for the Abbot’s house, believing him to be the Doctor, and hides there while Tavannes, Duval and Colbert meet to discuss their plans. The “Sea Beggar dies tomorrow” assures Tavannes, as an assassin has been engaged to kill him when he departs the Royal Council in the Louvre. The Sea Beggar is a codename for de Coligny, but the conspirators do not reveal this. It is an order direct from Catherine de' Medici, the Queen Mother, and the real power in France as her son, the weak King Charles IX of France, is much in awe of her power and authority. With night falling again, Steven heads out again and finds Anne following him. She has been dismissed from service for protesting Steven’s innocence in the Catholic plot. They hide the night at Preslin’s empty shop then determine to try and find the identity of the Sea Beggar. As they start their search they agree that if they become separated they will return to Preslin's shop.
When the early Council resumes at the Louvre on the morning of August 21, Tavannes and de Coligny are still locked in conflict, and the King now seems less tempted by de Coligny’s arguments for entering a war. They also argue about domestic matters, with de Coligny urging more action to protect the Huguenots. In doing so he insults the Queen Mother, who leaves the Council Chamber in a fury. The Council is then dissolved for two days until St Bartholomew’s Day.
Steven and Anne call upon the Abbot, where he learns both that the Doctor is not the Abbot and the identity of the Sea Beggar. The pair flee before Anne can be confined, alerting the Abbot, Tavannes and Colbert of their danger since they evidently know too much. Steven and Anne make contact with Nicholas Muss and warn him the assassination of his master is about to take place. Nicholas bolts off and witnesses the assassination attempt, but fortunately de Coligny is merely wounded.
Tavannes believes the bungled assassination is the fault of the Abbot, who has become a liability, and the cleric is placed under arrest, suspected of being an impostor. At the Court, the King is also enraged by news of the assassination attempt – and vows the culprit will be caught. In response he calls a meeting of the Council and urges Tavannes to take measures to control the lawlessness on the streets, warning him that if anything further happens to the Admiral then he will be held responsible. The King also turns against the Queen Mother, believing her to be bloodied by the assassination attempt, and threatens her with a convent unless she desists in the political machinations. She responds by warning him that his own throne is not safe now that the Protestant Prince Henri is in line for the throne, sewing seeds of doubt in his mind.
De Coligny has meanwhile been moved to his house, and a surgeon called, and as Steven and Nicholas tend to him they too receive some shocking news: it seems the Abbot of Amboise has died! Steven is distraught, still partly convinced that the Doctor has adopted the Abbot’s guise, heads to the Abbot’s lodgings and sees the dead body there. It seems the Abbot has been assassinated too, inflaming the Catholic mob outside the house, which does not disappoint the real culprits, Colbert and Tavannes.
On the following day, August 22, Steven heads back to Preslin’s shop in a low mood and is reunited with Anne. A little later he is shocked when the Doctor himself arrives, brooking no criticism of his absence, and is very insistent that he and Steven must depart the city as soon as possible. Anne is sent to her aunt’s house, with a warning from the Doctor that she must stay behind doors for the next day. She heads off in fear and tears, while Steven and the Doctor head across the city.
The Queen Mother has now persuaded the King that the Huguenots are a threat to his reign, and has signed an edict authorising a Huguenot massacre over the next twenty-four hours. She also insists that that the massacre is not confined to a list drawn up by Tavannes, containing supposed enemies of the state, but rather is aimed at all Protestants within the city walls – bar Prince Henri himself, despite his supposed pretensions to the throne. The King also commands the gates to the city be locked. He has thus ordered the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre of August 23 1572. Simon Duval and Colbert greet the coming massacre with more glee and bloodlust than that displayed by Tavannes, who fears the Queen Mother has gone too far.
The Doctor and Steven make it to the TARDIS just as the curfew is falling and depart as the massacre begins. Steven is in a foul mood, worried for Anne and his friends, and angry that the Doctor made him leave. The Doctor insists that history could not be changed: ten thousand Huguenots will die in Paris alone during the massacre, which will last for several weeks. De Coligny and Nicholas Muss will be amongst the dead, and possibly Anne too. Steven cannot accept that the Doctor had to leave Anne behind, and is so disgusted with his colleague that he determines to leave his company. When the TARDIS lands Steven offers a terse goodbye and ventures out into a woodland area. The Doctor is left totally alone for the first time, and reflects on the other companions that have travelled with him and then left him. Going home is not an option either…
The TARDIS has arrived in 1966 and a young girl enters the vehicle thinking it to be a Police Box on Wimbledon Common. A small child has been hurt in a road accident and she wishes to make a call. Steven arrives back too, saying that policemen are approaching, and his heart softens when the young woman introduces herself as Dorothea (or Dodo) Chaplet. It looks like Anne could have survived the massacre after all. She is an orphan who lives with her great aunt and so has few ties, and persuades the two men to take her with them on their travels.
[edit] Cast
- Dr. Who / The Abbot of Amboise — William Hartnell
- Steven — Peter Purves
- Dodo Chaplet — Jackie Lane (end of episode 4 only)
- King Charles IX of France — Barry Justice
- Catherine de' Medici — Joan Young
- Admiral de Coligny — Leonard Sachs
- Marshal Tavannes — André Morell
- Toligny — Michael Bilton
- Charles Preslin — Erik Chitty
- Gaston, Viscount de Lerans — Eric Thompson
- Nicholas Muss — David Weston
- Simon Duvall — John Tillinger
- Roger Colbert — Christopher Tranchell
- Anne Chaplet — Annette Robinson
- Old Woman — Cynthia Etherington
- Landlord — Edwin Finn
- Captain of the Guard — Clive Cazes
- Servant — Reginald Jessup
- Priest — Norman Claridge
- Officer — John Slavid
- Men — Will Stampe, Ernest Smith
- Guards — Jack Tarran, Leslie Bates
[edit] Cast notes
- William Hartnell plays the Doctor in episodes 1 and 4 only.
- Guest star André Morell was one of the actors to play the BBC's other famous science-fiction hero, Professor Bernard Quatermass. He is the only one of them to appear in Doctor Who on television, although Scottish actor Andrew Keir, who portrayed Quatermass on film, also played a role in the film Daleks - Invasion Earth 2150 AD.
[edit] Production
- All four episodes of this serial are missing from the BBC Archives.
- Script editor Donald Tosh actually wrote most of the serial himself after the script delivered by John Lucarotti was considered to be too far from the storyline pitched to Lucarotti by Tosh and producer John Wiles. Lucarotti was reportedly so outraged by the changes that he demanded his name be removed from the credits. By the time the BBC realized the story had no writer's credit, the first episode had been transmitted and the second and third were already in the can. As a result, Tosh was credited as the writer on episode four. [1]
- Due to the lack of footage, it is not known who (if anyone) was credited as the writer on episodes two and three.
[edit] Continuity
- The last episode of this serial introduces Dodo Chaplet, played by Jackie Lane. The story suggests that Dodo might be a descendant of Anne Chaplet; however, it has often been pointed out that this would only be possible if Anne had an illegitimate child (or else married someone who shared her surname). There is some speculation that Stephen might even have been the father of that child, given that: there is room in the plot for him and Anne to have had relations on the night they both sleep at the shop; his reaction to Anne's likely death at the end is so strong; and he is immediately very protective towards Dodo.
- According to the book Doctor Who: Companions by David J. Howe and Mark Stammers, the final episode of the serial was to have included a cameo appearance by William Russell and Jacqueline Hill reprising their roles as former companions Ian Chesterton and Barbara Wright. The scene — which was scheduled to be filmed but was cancelled — had Ian and Barbara witnessing the dematerialisation of the TARDIS after Dodo enters.
[edit] Alternative titles
The episodes of this serial had individual titles. They were, respectively, "War of God", "The Sea Beggar", "Priest of Death" and "Bell of Doom".
A few original production documents state the name of the serial as The Massacre of St Barthlomew's Eve, although this is historically a misnomer, as the actual massacre took place on St Bartholomew's Day. Some have noted that as the original French name for the event (Massacre de la Saint-Barthélemy) lacks a day, the title actually refers to the lead up to the massacre itself — that is, the Eve of the Massacre of St Bartholomew, although to claim this does involve ignoring the conventions of modern English usage.
The BBC Radio Collection release gives the title as, variously, The Massacre and The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve. The packaging uses the title The Massacre, but the accompanying booklet uses both titles. The CDs have The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve printed on them and this is also the title announced by Peter Purves on the discs themselves.
[edit] In print
Doctor Who book | |
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The Massacre | |
Series | Target novelisations |
Release number | 122 |
Writer | John Lucarotti |
Publisher | Target Books |
Cover artist | Tony Masero |
ISBN | 0 491 03423 7 |
Release date | June 1987 (Hardback)
19th November 1987 (Paperback) |
Preceded by | The Ambassadors of Death |
Followed by | The Macra Terror |
John Lucarotti's 1987 novelisation of this serial for Target Books, entitled simply The Massacre, returned the story to a previous draft before both a scheduled holiday for Hartnell and technical limitations forced a number of rewrites (allowing Hartnell to not have to be present during recording of the second episode and removing the need for Hartnell to be doubled throughout the story). It is listed as book number 122 in the Target series. See Doctor Who spin-offs.
[edit] Broadcast and CD release
This is one of only three serials, along with Marco Polo and Mission to the Unknown, of which not a second of footage survives. However, a fan-recorded soundtrack, with linking narration provided by Peter Purves, was released by the BBC Radio Collection on both audio CD and cassette in 1999.
[edit] External links
- The Massacre at bbc.co.uk
- The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve at Doctor Who: A Brief History Of Time (Travel)
- The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve at the Doctor Who Reference Guide
- The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve at Outpost Gallifrey
- Doctor Who Locations - The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve
[edit] Reviews
- The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve reviews at The Doctor Who Ratings Guide
- The Massacre of St Bartholomew's Eve reviews at Outpost Gallifrey
- The Whoniverse's review on The Massacre
[edit] Target novelisation
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