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Template:Infobox Doctor Who character

Vicki is a fictional character played by Maureen O'Brien in the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. An orphan from the 25th century, she was a companion of the First Doctor and a regular in the programme in Seasons 2 and 3 in 1965. Her last name was never revealed during the series, but was in the novel Byzantium!.[citation needed] Vicki appeared in 9 stories (38 episodes).

Appearances

Vicki first appears in the serial The Rescue (1965), a survivor of a spaceship crash on the planet Dido. She and fellow survivor Bennett were menaced by the monstrous Koquillion when she meets the Doctor (William Hartnell) and his companions Ian (William Russell) and Barbara (Jacqueline Hill). They discover that Koquillion is actually Bennett, who had killed the crew of the spaceship, including Vicki's father. Still coping with his recent parting from his granddaughter Susan at the end of The Dalek Invasion of Earth, the Doctor invites the teenage girl to join the TARDIS crew.

Vicki is the one who persuades the Doctor to let Ian and Barbara use a Dalek time machine to return to their own time in The Chase. At the beginning of The Time Meddler, it is revealed that the refugee Steven Taylor (Peter Purves) had stowed away on the TARDIS at the end of The Chase, and he accompanies Vicki and the Doctor.

Vicki eventually falls in love with the warrior Troilus when the TARDIS lands during the siege of Troy (The Myth Makers). After making sure that Steven and the Doctor will be all right without her, she decides to remain with Troilus, eventually passing into legend as Cressida, the name given to her by King Priam. She ensures that the Trojan girl Katarina (Adrienne Hill) enters the TARDIS in her place.

Other media

Vicki appears in several spin-off short stories in the BBC Short Trips range. In "Apocrypha Bipedium" by Ian Potter, the Eighth Doctor - having convinced her that he is a later Doctor rather than a younger one as Vicki first believed due to her ignorance of Regeneration - advises her and Troilus to move to Cornwall to avoid the tragic conclusion to their story as related by William Shakespeare.

The Big Finish audio story Frostfire (2007) is told by an older Vicki living in Carthage, where she and Troilus traveled with Aeneas, had children and settled, although it is shown that she now regrets her decision to stay in Troy. Frostfire portrays Vicki as somewhat lonely and isolated, conversing with a somewhat malevolent living cinder (a spark of the phoenix) because it is the only being with whom she can discuss her travels with the Doctor. Vicki also appears in The Suffering (2010) alongside Steven[1] and The Rocket Men (2011) alongside Ian and Barbara.[2] She will also feature in an upcoming release titled The Dark Planet, which is an adaptation of an unnmade story submitted for season two.[3] Maureen O'Brien provided narration for these stories,[1][3][4] aside from The Rocket Men, which was read by Russell.[2]

Vicki appears in two First Doctor novels of the Virgin Missing Adventures range: The Plotters by Gareth Roberts (1996) alongside Ian and Barbara, and The Empire of Glass by Andy Lane (1995) alongside Steven and Irving Braxiatel. She appears with Ian and Barbara in the Past Doctor Adventures novels Byzantium! by Keith Topping (2001) and The Eleventh Tiger by David A. McIntee (2004). The latter states that her full name is Vicki Pallister. Like all spin-off media, the canonicity of these stories is unclear.

Development

Vicki was the replacement for the Doctor's granddaughter, Susan (Carole Ann Ford), who was the first companion to leave Doctor Who; Ford was displeased with the lack of her character's development.[5] In contrast to Susan, Vicki was conceived as an Earth orphan from the future; the production team considered many names from here, some of them odd like "Luckky" and "Tanni".[5] Maureen O'Brien had just come out of drama school when she was cast;[5] it was her first television acting job.[6] Doctor Who creator Sydney Newman told O'Brien that they were considering having her cut her hair and dye it black. O'Brien refused, saying, "Why don't you just get Carole Ann Ford back?"[5]

Reception

Reviewing The Time Meddler, Christopher Bahn of The A.V. Club wrote that Vicki was "more than just a replacement of Susan but an improvement on her", due to O'Brien being a "much more engaging and lively actress". Bahn also felt that Vicki was a "more effective conversational foil" to Steven than Susan would have been.[7] Radio Times reviewer Mark Braxton praised the way Vicki takes control in The Space Museum, comparing her to later companion Sarah Jane Smith (Elisabeth Sladen).[8] Despite this, Braxton felt that the character was "badly underused", though he wrote positively of how her departure was handled,[9] and Braxton's colleague Patrick Mulkern wrote that Vicki showed "promise" in her first story but was "short-changed by subsequent writers".[10]

References

  1. ^ a b "4.07. The Suffering". Big Finish Productions. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  2. ^ a b "6.02. The Rocket Men". Big Finish Productions. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  3. ^ a b "4.01. Doctor Who: The Dark Planet". Big Finish Productions. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  4. ^ "1.1. Frostfire". Big Finish Productions. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  5. ^ a b c d Barrett, Ray, Christopher Barry, Raymond Cusick, Maureen O'Brien, William Russell, Ian McLachlan (2009). Mounting the Rescue (DVD). Doctor Who: The Rescue: BBC.
  6. ^ "A New Companion For Dr. Who?". Radio Times: 3. 31 December 1964.
  7. ^ Bahn, Christopher (4 March 2012). "The Time Meddler". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  8. ^ Braxton, Mark (7 January 2009). "Doctor Who: The Space Museum". Radio Times. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  9. ^ Braxton, Mark (7 February 2009). "Doctor Who: The Myth Makers". Radio Times. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  10. ^ Mulkern, Patrick (7 December 2008). "Doctor Who: The Rescue". Radio Times. Retrieved 6 January 2012.