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Toshiko Sato

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Template:Doctorwhocharacter Toshiko "Tosh" Sato (佐藤敏子, Sato Toshiko, /ˈtɒʃikoʊ ˈsɑːtoʊ/)[1][2] is a fictional character from the television series Doctor Who and its spin-off Torchwood, played by Naoko Mori. She is a regular in the latter programme for the first two series, but actually first appeared in the Doctor Who episode "Aliens of London". In Torchwood, Sato is the Cardiff branch's "technical expert",[3] described as "quiet but highly intelligent",[3] and a "computer genius".[4]

Appearances

Television

Sato first appears in the Doctor Who episode "Aliens of London", credited as 'Doctor Sato', when she is called in to examine a supposed alien corpse at Albion Hospital.[5] Although it is not mentioned in the episode that she is working for Torchwood Three, it is later revealed in Torchwood episode "Exit Wounds" that Sato was deceptively standing in as a medic to cover up for a hungover and unreachable Owen Harper (Burn Gorman).[6] Toshiko is reintroduced in the Torchwood 2006 premiere episode "Everything Changes".[7] In "Greeks Bearing Gifts", Toshiko enters into a sexual relationship with a woman named Mary (Daniela Denby-Ashe), from whom Toshiko receives a telepathy-granting necklace. Her experiences with telepathy greatly distress Toshiko. She expresses despair and hopelessness, noting that across space, all cultures are essentially similar, leading to utter disappointment with existence.[8] In the penultimate episode of the series, "Captain Jack Harkness", she and Captain Jack (John Barrowman) are sent to the year 1941 by the villainous Bilis Manger (Murray Melvin), where being Japanese, Tosh is the victim of bigotry. With their resident genius stranded, Ianto (Gareth David-Lloyd) and Owen are unable to open the Cardiff spacetime Rift and save her until Toshiko leaves them the necessary equations, which she is forced to write in her own blood.[9] In the first series finale, a vision of Toshiko's mother is used to convince her to mutiny against Jack.[10]

In the second series (2008) episode "To the Last Man", Tosh has a relationship with a soldier from 1918 (Anthony Lewis), who had to be frozen and re-awoken every year until the time was right for him to return to 1918 and heal the Rift.[11] In episode "Reset" Owen agrees to go on a date with her, but dies at the end of the episode after being shot in the heart.[12] When Owen is briefly revived by team leader Jack Harkness using a resurrection glove, Tosh says her goodbye to him by confessing that she has always loved him. Owen flatlines, only to revive again permanently, existing in a state resembling undeath.[13] In the episode "Fragments", the audience comes to understand how Toshiko came to work for Torchwood; Captain Jack rescued her from a UNIT detention centre where she was held after she being forced to build a sonic modulator for an unnamed terrorist organisation.[14] In the show's second season finale, "Exit Wounds", Toshiko is shot and killed by Gray (Lachlan Nieboer), Jack Harkness's unstable younger brother. She dies within minutes of Owen, having been unable to save him from his own death when he becomes trapped in a nuclear power facility bunker flooding with radioactive material. In the moments before their deaths, Owen apologises to Toshiko for never having managed to bring their relationship to full fruition. By initiating the final log-off procedure for her account on the Torchwood computer system, Ianto activates a pre recorded message from Toshiko, in which she thanks Jack for saving her. She tells him that she is grateful for the opportunity to work in Torchwood and see all the wonders she'd seen, and that she loves them all.[6] After being killed off, the character is mentioned in the two episodes of Doctor Who which follow "Exit Wounds". In these episodes, Gwen (Eve Myles) and Ianto vow to keep fighting in Tosh and Owen's memory, and later discover a "time lock" designed by Tosh which protects the Hub from Dalek invasion.[15]

Literature

Toshiko appears in the first six of the Torchwood novels, published by BBC Books. The first wave, Another Life by Peter Anghelides,[16] Border Princes by Dan Abnett,[17] and Slow Decay by Andy Lane,[18] were published in January 2007 and form a loose story arc.

Published in March 2008, and tying in with the concurrently airing second series of Torchwood, Toshiko appears in the novels Trace Memory by David Llewellyn,[19] The Twilight Streets by Gary Russell,[20] and Something in the Water by Trevor Baxendale.[21]

Toshiko also appears in the first two Torchwood audio books, Everyone Says Hello by Dan Abnett, narrated by Burn Gorman (who plays Owen),[22] and Hidden by Steven Savile, narrated by Naoko Mori.[23]

The novel Trace Memory depicts a five year old Toshiko living in Japan with her parents and elderly grandmother. This depiction is consistent with the character's history seeded across the series, although as with all Doctor Who and Torchwood spin-off media, the canonicity in relation to the television series is open to interpretation.[24]

Character development

It is revealed in episode "Greeks Bearing Gifts" that Sato's parents were both in the Royal Air Force, and her grandfather worked at Bletchley Park, the World War II code-breaking facility.[8] Sato joined a government scientific think-tank after graduating from university, and is recruited by the Torchwood Institute to work with Jack Harkness three years before the series begins.[9] The episode "Fragments" depicts more fully the story of how Toshiko joined Torchwood; she is forced to steal the design plans for a "sonic modulator" from the Ministry of Defence, trading the finished design and prototype to an unnamed terrorist organisation in exchange for the freedom of her kidnapped mother. Captured by UNIT and imprisoned with an indefinite sentence and suspended human rights, she is later given a chance to escape captivity by Jack, in exchange for working for him as part of Torchwood Three for a minimum period of five years.[14]

Toshiko has a close relationship with colleague Owen Harper throughout the series. Mori suggested in an early interview that Sato has a crush on Harper,[25] also indicating that Toshiko has good working relationships with the rest of the team and in particular with Jack Harkness, although she is not afraid of expressing her opinions to him.[25]

The Sun newspaper had claimed all the members of Torchwood were bisexual.[26] Toshiko's own bisexuality is evidenced in episode "Greeks Bearing Gifts", when she begins a brief relationship with a female.[8] Torchwood's second series explores other sides to Tosh's personality, romances, her crush on Owen, and sheds some light on her original Doctor Who appearance.[27]

Speaking of the decision to kill off her character, Naoko Mori has commented that it "made sense because Tosh has been through so much. She's come a full circle and had her journey."[28] With regards her input on the death itself, she stated: "One of the things that I wanted to ensure was that it made sense, and that the connection between Owen and Tosh had the right balance. All through the series I didn't want it to come across as her being this stalker girl with a crush on Owen. I wanted it to be deeper than that, because as a colleague and as a human being she cared for him. I wanted their last conversation to be delicately and well put."[28] Mori has not ruled out the possibility of returning to the show at a later date.[28]

References

  1. ^ Japanese pronunciation: [toɕiko satoː]
  2. ^ Torchwood External Hub Interface - Correspondence from Toshiko
  3. ^ a b "BBC - Torchwood - Toshiko Sato". BBC.co.uk. Retrieved 2008-04-05.
  4. ^ Claire Black (17 March 2008). "To infinity and beyond". The Scotsman. Retrieved 2008-04-05.
  5. ^ Christopher Eccleston, Russel T Davies, Keith Boak (2005-04-16). "Aliens of London". Series 1. British Broadcasting Corporation. {{cite episode}}: Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  6. ^ a b Russell T Davies, Chris Chibnall, Ashley Way (2008-04-04). "Exit Wounds". Torchwood. BBC Two.
  7. ^ Russell T Davies, Brian Kelly (2006-08-22). "Everything Changes". Torchwood. BBC Three.
  8. ^ a b c Russell T Davies, Toby Whithouse, Colin Teague (2006-11-26). "Greeks Bearing Gifts". Torchwood. BBC Three.
  9. ^ a b Russell T Davies, Catherine Tregenna, Ashley Way (2007-01-01). "Captain Jack Harkness". Torchwood. BBC Three.
  10. ^ Russell T Davies, Chris Chibnall, Ashley Way (2007-01-01). "End of Days". Torchwood. BBC Three.
  11. ^ Russell T Davies, Helen Raynor, Andy Goddard (2008-01-20). "To the Last Man". Torchwood. BBC Two.
  12. ^ Russell T Davies, J.C. Wilsher, Ashley Way (2008-02-13). "Reset". Torchwood. BBC Three.
  13. ^ Russell T Davies, Matt Jones, Andy Goddard (2008-02-20). "Dead Man Walking". Torchwood. BBC Three.
  14. ^ a b Russell T Davies, Chris Chibnall, Jonathan Fox Bassett (2008-03-21). "Fragments". Torchwood. BBC Three. Cite error: The named reference "Fragments" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  15. ^ Russell T Davies, Graeme Harper (2008-07-06). "Journey's End". Doctor Who. BBC one.
  16. ^ Anghelides, Peter (2007). Another Life. BBC Books. ISBN 978-0-563-48655-8. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  17. ^ Abnett, Dan (2007). Border Princes. BBC Books. ISBN 978-0-563-48654-1. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  18. ^ Lane, Andy (2007). Slow Decay. BBC Books. ISBN 978-0-563-48655-8. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  19. ^ Llewwellyn, David (2008). Trace Memory. BBC Books. ISBN 184607438X. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  20. ^ Russell, Gary (2008). The Twilight Streets. BBC Books. ISBN 1846074398. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  21. ^ Baxendale, Trevor (2008). Something in the Water. BBC Books. ISBN 1846074371. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  22. ^ Dan Abnett (author), Burn Gorman (narrator) (2008-02-04). Everyone Says Hello (Audio book). BBC Audio. {{cite AV media}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  23. ^ Steven Savile (author), Naoko Mori (narrator) (2008-02-04). Hidden (Audio book). BBC Audio. {{cite AV media}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  24. ^ Stephen Gray. "The Whoniverse Guide to Canon". Whoniverse.org. Retrieved 2006-12-30.
  25. ^ a b "Torchwood pushes all the right buttons for Naoko" (Press release). BBC Press Office. 2006-11-03. Retrieved 2006-11-04..
  26. ^ Sarah Nathan (2006). "Dr Ooh gets four gay pals". Retrieved 2006-10-06. GAY Doctor Who star John Barrowman gets four BISEXUAL assistants in raunchy BBC3 spin-off Torchwood. {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |publwasher= ignored (help)
  27. ^ Torchwood - Interview - The cast of 'Torchwood' - Digital Spy
  28. ^ a b c Neil Wilkes (4 April 2008). "EXCLUSIVE: Naoko Mori ('Torchwood')". DigitalSpy. Retrieved 2008-04-05.