Doctor Who Polystyle comic strip explained

Italic Title:no
Doctor Who
Illustrator:Neville Main, Bill Mevin, John Canning
Status:Concluded
First:14 November 1964
Last:11 May 1979
Publisher:TV Comic (1964–1971)
Countdown (1971–1973)
TV Comic (1973–1979)
Genre:Science fiction

The Doctor Who Polystyle comic strip was the first comic strip devoted to the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who, and the first original spin-off media from the show. The strip was launched in TV Comic on 14 November 1964, less than a year after the television series began broadcasting. TV Comic was issued weekly, and one of a number of titles belonging to Polystyle Publications Ltd, the comic exclusively featuring strips based on television series.

In 1971, the Doctor Who strip moved to another Polystyle publication, Countdown comic, for its launch. Countdown soon began amalgamating other Polystyle comics and went through a number of renamings, before in turn being amalgamated into TV Comic in 1973 (itself then going through a number of name changes). The Doctor Who comic strip survived all the changes and ran for 15 years in nearly every issue mainly in episodic format, with the last instalment appearing on 11 May 1979.

During this time, the strip also featured in various Polystyle produced holiday specials, annuals, and giveaways. Accordingly, this period has become known as the 'Polystyle era'.[1]

History

TV Comic was a British comic book magazine published weekly from 9 November 1951 until 29 June 1984. It was originally published by News of the World before "passing in turn to Beaverbrook Newspapers, [then] TV Publications," which changed its name to Polystyle Publications Ltd in March 1968.[2] [3] [4] From the off, the comic featured stories based on television series running at the time of publication. The first issue ran to eight pages and had Muffin the Mule on the front cover. It also featured many other TV favorites of the day, including Mr. Pastry, Larry the Lamb, Tom Puss, Prince Valiant (Hal Foster reprint), Jack & Jill and Prudence Kitten.

The Doctor Who comic strip began in issue 674 of TV Comic, which went on sale on Monday 8 November 1964, with a cover date of 14 November 1964. It featured a story with the First Doctor titled "The Klepton Parasites". Mirroring the television series, the First Doctor was a likeness of actor William Hartnell. However, the character was known as "Dr. Who", and traveled with his grandchildren John and Gillian, who had never appeared in televised Doctor Who.

Polystyle comics

Title Issues Date Doctor(s)
TV Comic
  1. 674-999
1964-1971 First Doctor
Second Doctor
Third Doctor
Countdown
  1. 1-39
1971 Third Doctor
Countdown for TV Action
  1. 40-56
1971-1972 Third Doctor
TV Action in Countdown
  1. 57-58
1972 Third Doctor
TV Action + Countdown
  1. 59-100
1972-1973 Third Doctor
TV Action
  1. 101-131
1973 Third Doctor
TV Comic + TV Action
  1. 1133-1147
1973 Third Doctor
TV Comic
  1. 1148-1181
1973-1974 Third Doctor
TV Comic plus Tom & Jerry Weekly
  1. 1182-1201
1974 Third Doctor
TV Comic
  1. 1202-1291
1974-1976 Third Doctor
Fourth Doctor
Mighty TV Comic
  1. 1292-1352
1976-1977 Fourth Doctor
TV Comic
  1. 1353-1392
1977-1978 Fourth Doctor
TV Comic with Target
  1. 1393-1401
1978 Fourth Doctor
TV Comic
  1. 1402-1430
1978-1979 Fourth Doctor

Polystyle parallel publications

The Doctor Who strip also appeared in a number of Polystyle holiday specials, annuals, and giveaways:

Content

First Doctor Polystyle strips

The first artist to portray the Doctor in TV Comic was Neville Main. These strips appeared over two pages, and were in black and white. According to Doctor Who historian Jeremy Bentham, "Main's artwork was very simplistic in style, consisting of basic line illustrations drawn in a very cartoonish way. During his 45-week stint on the strip he never quite captured the likeness of Hartnell [...] He was, however, quite an inventive storywriter."[5] After about a year, Bill Mevin took over the strip, which now began to appear in full colour. After six months with Mevin at the helm, the strip passed to John Canning, at which point the strip returned to black and white.[4]

Second Doctor Polystyle strips

The first strip to feature the Second Doctor, Patrick Troughton, came with TV Comic issue 784 (24 December 1966). "No reason whatsoever," writes Jeremy Bentham, "was given for his sudden change of appearance."[6] The artist continued to be John Canning.

Third Doctor Polystyle strips

After nine stories in TV Comic, the Doctor Who strip ceased in this publication. As Jeremy Bentham writes, however, this was because "it had found a much better home to go to."[7] Polystyle launched Countdown with a rebooted Doctor Who strip, now in full colour on glossy paper. As John Ainsworth writes that the new strip "was a complete departure from the TV Comic version."[8] This was due to the high standard of writing and illustration, as much as the production values. However, within a year Polystyle found they could not sustain the quality of the publication as it was too costly, and so rebooted the publication as TV Action with a cheaper-to-produce format.[9] However, TV Action also eventually proved too costly, and was wound up in August 1973. At that point, the strip returned to its original home, TV Comic.[10]

Fourth Doctor Polystyle strips

The Fourth Doctor comic strip launched in TV Comic in issue 1204 (11 January 1975). "As with the switch between Hartnell and Troughton," writes Jeremy Bentham, "there was no actual strip changeover story although this time the first panel of the Baker story 'Death Flower' contained a two- paragraph synopsis [...] introducing readers to the new Doctor."[11]

End of Doctor Who strip

Paul Scoones, an historian of the Doctor Who comic strip, writes that Polystyle "held the rights to publish a Doctor Who comic [strip] until May 1979 when the last installment of the strip appeared [...] Once relinquished by Polystyle, the rights were soon snapped up by Marvel UK, who created their own ongoing comic [strip]. This new strip [...] continues to this day" in Doctor Who Magazine.[12]

See also

References

General

Specific

Notes and References

  1. "Scoones (2012), p. 11
  2. "Scoones (2012), p. 20
  3. "Scoones (2012), p. 11
  4. "Ainsworth, "Behind the Frame" (9 December 1992), p. 20
  5. "Bentham, "Doctor Who Comics" (March 1982), p. 16
  6. "Bentham, "Doctor Who Comics" (April 1982), p. 34
  7. "Bentham, "Doctor Who Comics" (May 1982), p. 30
  8. "Ainsworth, "Behind the Frame" (6 January 1993), p. 19
  9. "Bentham, "Doctor Who Comics" (June 1982), p. 33
  10. "Bentham, "Doctor Who Comics" (June 1982), p. 36
  11. "Bentham, "Doctor Who Comics" (July 1982), p. 33
  12. "Scoones (2012), p. 11