Tegan Jovanka: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
Methelfilms (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 15: | Line 15: | ||
==Character history== |
==Character history== |
||
Tegan first appears in the Fourth Doctor's last serial, ''[[Logopolis]]''. On her way to [[London Heathrow Airport|Heathrow Airport]] to start her new job with Air Australia, her car suffers a flat |
Tegan first appears in the Fourth Doctor's last serial, ''[[Logopolis]]''. On her way to [[London Heathrow Airport|Heathrow Airport]] to start her new job with Air Australia, her car suffers a flat tire. She enters a roadside [[police box]] to seek help, not knowing that it is actually [[Doctor (Doctor Who)|the Doctor]]'s disguised [[TARDIS]]. She is present when the Fourth Doctor falls from the Pharos Project [[radio telescope]] and [[Doctor (Doctor Who)#Changing faces|regenerates]] into his fifth incarnation, and continues to journey with the Doctor and his other companions. |
||
Tegan is stubborn, loud, and direct, with a no-nonsense manner and not afraid to speak her mind (in ''[[Earthshock]]'' she describes herself as "just a mouth on legs"). Her time in the TARDIS coincides with that of [[Adric]], [[Nyssa of Traken|Nyssa]], [[Vislor Turlough|Turlough]] and [[Kamelion]]. While she often bickers with them as well as with the Doctor, her strength of character keeps them together and her loyalty to her fellow crewmates is unquestionable. She is close to Nyssa, and is especially saddened at her leaving. The Doctor notes that she is a good coordinator, and often encourages her with the words, "Brave heart, Tegan." She is apparently able to speak one of many [[Indigenous Australian]] languages fluently, and shows an ability to use [[firearm]]s. |
Tegan is stubborn, loud, and direct, with a no-nonsense manner and not afraid to speak her mind (in ''[[Earthshock]]'' she describes herself as "just a mouth on legs"). Her time in the TARDIS coincides with that of [[Adric]], [[Nyssa of Traken|Nyssa]], [[Vislor Turlough|Turlough]] and [[Kamelion]]. While she often bickers with them as well as with the Doctor, her strength of character keeps them together and her loyalty to her fellow crewmates is unquestionable. She is close to Nyssa, and is especially saddened at her leaving. The Doctor notes that she is a good coordinator, and often encourages her with the words, "Brave heart, Tegan." She is apparently able to speak one of many [[Indigenous Australian]] languages fluently, and shows an ability to use [[firearm]]s. |
Revision as of 20:27, 10 June 2008
Template:Doctorwhocharacter Tegan Jovanka is a fictional character played by Janet Fielding in the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. An Australian airline stewardess and a native of Brisbane who was a companion of the Fourth and Fifth Doctors, she was a regular in the programme from 1981 to 1984. Tegan was the longest-serving companion in terms of years on the series (3 years, 1 month), although Jamie McCrimmon was in the most episodes and stories.
According to producer John Nathan-Turner, when he was thinking of a name for the character, it was either going to be Tegan, after a friend's niece in Australia, or Jovanka, after Jovanka Broz, the widow of Yugoslavian President Josip Broz Tito, so he wrote both down on a piece of paper. Script editor Christopher H. Bidmead mistakenly believed that Jovanka was the character's last name rather than an alternative, and so christened her Tegan Jovanka.
Character history
Tegan first appears in the Fourth Doctor's last serial, Logopolis. On her way to Heathrow Airport to start her new job with Air Australia, her car suffers a flat tire. She enters a roadside police box to seek help, not knowing that it is actually the Doctor's disguised TARDIS. She is present when the Fourth Doctor falls from the Pharos Project radio telescope and regenerates into his fifth incarnation, and continues to journey with the Doctor and his other companions.
Tegan is stubborn, loud, and direct, with a no-nonsense manner and not afraid to speak her mind (in Earthshock she describes herself as "just a mouth on legs"). Her time in the TARDIS coincides with that of Adric, Nyssa, Turlough and Kamelion. While she often bickers with them as well as with the Doctor, her strength of character keeps them together and her loyalty to her fellow crewmates is unquestionable. She is close to Nyssa, and is especially saddened at her leaving. The Doctor notes that she is a good coordinator, and often encourages her with the words, "Brave heart, Tegan." She is apparently able to speak one of many Indigenous Australian languages fluently, and shows an ability to use firearms.
According to the Fifth Doctor audio drama The Gathering, she was born on September 22, 1960. However, the canonicity of the spin-off media is open to interpretation.
Despite her strong front, however, her adventures with the Doctor, both thrilling and terrifying, eventually take a psychological toll. She is deeply upset by the death of Adric in Earthshock. After being left behind in Heathrow due to a misunderstanding at the end of Time-Flight she returns to the TARDIS in the subsequent adventure Arc of Infinity. Soon after she is once again possessed by the alien intelligence known as the Mara. Nyssa's departure affects her as well, and she is initially suspicious of Turlough's intentions in joining the Doctor. Eventually, the carnage surrounding the events of Resurrection of the Daleks prove too much and she bids an emotional good-bye to the Doctor and Turlough in 1984 London.
An illusory image of Tegan is seen during the Fifth Doctor's regeneration into the Sixth in The Caves of Androzani (1984).
Tegan is mentioned in the new series in the 2007 Children in Need special episode "Time Crash" by the Tenth Doctor
Other appearances
Fielding reprised the role in a 1985 sketch ("A Fix with Sontarans") for the children's show Jim'll Fix It alongside Colin Baker as the Sixth Doctor. This sketch suggests Tegan returns to the life of a flight attendant and has also frosted her hair blonde, before being accidentally returned to the TARDIS by the Sixth Doctor.
Tegan's life after journeying with the Doctor is investigated in the Big Finish Productions audio drama The Gathering. Although she finds it difficult to enter into relationships and is suffering from a terminal illness, she tells the Doctor that she has no regrets about her time with him, and now appreciates her life to the full.[1]
The spin-off fiction suggests that she was briefly married to pop star Johnny Chester (also known as Johnny Chess), the son of the First Doctor's companions Ian Chesterton and Barbara Wright. In the spin-off short story "Good Companions" by Peter Anghelides Tegan has suffered a nervous breakdown and convinced herself that her time with the Doctor was a delusion.
List of appearances
Television
- Season 18
- Season 19
- Season 20
- 20th anniversary special
- Season 21
- Warriors of the Deep
- The Awakening
- Frontios
- Resurrection of the Daleks
- The Caves of Androzani (cameo)
Audio drama
Novels
- Goth Opera by Paul Cornell
- The Crystal Bucephalus by Craig Hinton
- The Sands of Time by Justin Richards
- Cold Fusion by Lance Parkin
- Zeta Major by Simon Messingham
- Deep Blue by Mark Morris
- Divided Loyalties by Gary Russell
- The King of Terror by Keith Topping
- Fear of the Dark by Trevor Baxendale
- Empire of Death by David Bishop
Short stories
- "Birth of a Renegade" by Eric Saward (Radio Times Doctor Who 20th Anniversary Special)
- "Lackaday Express" by Paul Cornell (Decalog)
- "Hearts of Stone" by Steve Lyons (Short Trips: Companions)
- "Qualia" by Stephen Fewell (Short Trips: Companions)
- "Soul Mate" by David Bailey (Short Trips: A Universe of Terrors)
- "No Exit" by Kate Orman (Short Trips: Steel Skies)
- "The Immortals" by Simon Guerrier (Short Trips: Past Tense)
- "Fixing a Hole" by Samantha Baker (Short Trips: Past Tense)
- "Lant Land" by Jonathan Morris (Short Trips: Life Science)
- "The Assassin's Story" by Andrew Collins (Short Trips: Repercussions)
- "Categorical Imperative" by Simon Guerrier (Short Trips: Monsters)
- "In the TARDIS: Christmas Day" by Val Douglas (Short Trips: A Christmas Treasury)
- "Last Minute Shopping" by Neil Perryman (Short Trips: A Christmas Treasury)
- "Rome" by Marcus Flavin (Short Trips: The History of Christmas)
- "Keeping it Real" by Joseph Lidster (Short Trips: The Ghosts of Christmas)
- "Goths and Robbers" by Diane Duane (Short Trips: The Quality of Leadership)
Comics
- "On The Planet Isopterus" by Glenn Rix (Doctor Who Annual 1983)
- "The Lunar Strangers" by Gareth Roberts and Martin Geraghty (Doctor Who Magazine 215–217)
- "Blood Invocation" by Paul Cornell and John Ridgway (Doctor Who Magazine Yearbook 1995)