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Two Daleks pay a visit to Shepherds Bush Market (1963)Image source, 大象传媒 Archives
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Two Daleks pay a visit to Shepherd's Bush Market (1963)

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On 23 November 1963, the day after President John F Kennedy was assassinated, the UK was introduced to Doctor Who. At the time, the show was an entirely new and innovative concept, blending science fiction with historical drama.

"We're all stories in the end. Just make it a good one, eh?" The Eleventh Doctor (2010)

The first episode received relatively low ratings, reaching just 9% of the UK's audience, but the show鈥檚 premise piqued the curiosity of many viewers.

This audience research report gives an insight into the impact of The Doctor鈥檚 first appearance.

鈥淚t was all good, clean fun and I look forward to meeting the nice Doctor鈥檚 planetary friends next Saturday, whether it be in the ninth or the ninety-ninth century A.D鈥, wrote a retired Naval Officer.

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Page 1 of Audience Research Report for Doctor Who (1963)

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Page 2 of Audience Research Report for Doctor Who (1963)

Six million people watched the first Doctor Who story and the new fans (many of them children) sent letters to The Doctor.

In this clip, first broadcast on Radio Wales in 1993, William Hartnell鈥檚 granddaughter, Jessica Carney, tells Nicholas Courtney about the fan letters that her grandfather received after the initial shows.

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William Hartnell's letters from fans, from Doctor Who: Thirtieth Anniversary (1993)

The intention was for Doctor Who to be a family friendly programme, designed to appeal to a wide audience. Children were big fans of the show.

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Tom Baker signing autographs for excited fans during filming of The Android Invasion (1975)

Some storylines, however, were more child-friendly than others. In these clips from Thanks for the Memory and The Lively Arts: Whose Doctor Who, both broadcast in 1977, mothers and schoolchildren give a sense of just how brave they were (or weren鈥檛) when watching Doctor Who.

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Mothers and schoolchildren discuss watching Doctor Who (1977)

Late to the party, but no less enthusiastic, the American sci-fi community took Doctor Who to their hearts.

In the summer of 1983, South East at Six News travelled to a 'Whovian Festival' in New York. This was one of the first International Doctor Who conventions captured on film. It featured eager fans, merchandise stalls and guest appearances by the Third Doctor, Jon Pertwee and Elisabeth Sladen, who played his companion, Sarah Jane Smith.

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鈥淚t鈥檚 Doctor Who, New York, New York鈥 (1983)

Meanwhile, back in Britain, members of the Merseyside Doctor Who Appreciation Society were grilling two of the show鈥檚 writers, husband and wife team, Pip and Jane Baker.

Here Chris Chibnall criticises The Trial of the Time Lord from 1986. Chris would later become Head Writer and Executive Producer of Doctor Who from 2018 to 2021.

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The reviews were in from Doctor Who fans. Open Air (1986)

Thirty years on from that first International Doctor Who convention in New York, The Doctor finally conquered Earth. In 2015, Peter Capaldi, Jenna Coleman and Steven Moffat embarked on a global tour to key cities including Cardiff, London, Seoul, Sydney, New York, Mexico City and Rio.

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Fans in Brazil get to celebrate Doctor Who, from Doctor Who: Earth Conquest - The World Tour (2015)

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