*The Strange Copyright of Doctor Who*
*Exterminate... Exterminate the copyright!*

By Jonathan Bailey
Plagiarism Today

January 18, 2018

https://www.plagiarismtoday.com/2018/01/18/the-strange-copyright-of-doctor-who/


Doctor Who is a 50-plus-year-old television series about a Time Lord known
as the Doctor who travels through time and space in a time machine
disguised as a police phone box that’s bigger on the inside.

To make matters even more complicated, the Doctor can regenerate, becoming
someone completely different upon his or her death. A death that happens
with frightening regularly during the character’s battles with a wide array
of villains including Cybermen, Daleks and Weeping Angels among others.

It’s a bizarre show, even for science fiction. However, a recent news story
highlighted an even stranger part of the series.

Shortly after the airing of the 2017 Christmas Special, which marked the
end of Peter Capaldi’s run as The Doctor and introduced Jodie Whittaker,
the series first female Doctor, a copyright controversy arose.

According to The Mirror, the estate of Marvyn Haisman, the creator of
Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart, took issue with the episode introducing a new
character that turned out to be Lethbridge-Stewart’s grandfather.
Lethbridge-Stewart is popular character from the series that they hold the
rights to.

Though later reports have downplayed the dispute, the story raised an
interesting question: Why was one of the series’ most popular characters
not controlled by the BBC, which produces the show?

It turns out though that Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart is far from alone in
his bizarre copyright status. Many of the show’s iconic characters are
controlled, at least in part, by outside entities. The list includes both
the robotic dog K9 and even The Daleks themselves.

How did this happen? The answer is both complicated and simple at the same
time but it all centers around how the series was written during its early
years.

*A TARDIS Divided*
Modern TARDIS ImageThe copyright control for most TV shows, including
sci-fi shows, is pretty straight forward. Star Trek, for example, is
controlled by CBS and Paramount, and Star Wars is controlled by Disney
(following the purchase of Lucasfilm). While there are complications over
licensing and specific rights, there are no outside entities that control
Spock or the Sith.

This is because, with most TV shows, writers who work on it either work as
employees or sign work for hire contracts that ensure that everything they
create becomes the property of their employer.

In Doctor Who’s case, that’s not what happened, at least in the beginning.

For much of the show’s history, up until roughly the Fifth Doctor, writers
often retained copyright in what they created. So while the series,
including its lead character, and much of the core of the show is
controlled by the BBC, many of the characters that were added early on were
not.

Why this was the case is unclear but ultimately comes down to the contracts
between the writers (and other creatives on the show) and the BBC. However,
it likely has to do, at least in part, with the show’s infamously low
budget during its original run.

Regardless of reason, the outcome is the same, many of the show’s
characters remain out of the control of the BBC, often with some bizarre
consequences.

(Note: Despite my best searches, I’ve been unable to find a definitive
reason for this oddity. If anyone has any information as to why these
characters were not signed over initially, please either contact me
directly or leave a note in the comments.)

*Out of Control*
Due to the nature of the show, a complete list of all the characters not
owned (wholly) by the BBC is probably impossible to compile. The myriad of
characters and writers is simply too great, especially when one looks at
the expanded universe and the characters created for it.

That being said, there are several well-known characters and creations
still owned by their original creators.

*K9:* The Doctor’s iconic robot dog companion, first created in 1977, was
co-created by Bob Baker and Dave Martin, who still hold the rights. This
has resulted in K9 being featured in not just a 1981 TV special and a 2010
TV series, but he is also the subject of an upcoming movie.

*The Daleks:* Though the design of the Daleks is owned by the BBC, the
character of The Daleks is owned by estate of their creator, Terry Nation.
This results in something of a joint ownership of the characters, where
neither can really move forward without the other. In the 1960s, Nation had
written a pilot for and pitched a TV series about the species but it was
never produced.

*The TARDIS:* Though nothing is more iconic about Doctor Who than the
TARDIS, at least two outside entities have tried to lay claim to it. First
is the London Metropolitan Police, which attempted to claim it should hold
the trademark to the name due to the likeness of a police box. They lost
the case. In 2013 the son of Tony Coburn, the man who came up with the
original concept for the TARDIS, claimed that the BBC was not giving due
credit to his father in the run up to the show’s 50th anniversary and filed
a lawsuit for copyright infringement.

*Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart:* As mentioned above, the rights to the
popular military commander Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart was created
by Mervyn Haisman and Henry Lincoln. Haisman died in 2010 leaving his
control over the character to his estate, which was the cause of the brief
kerfuffle following the recent Christmas special.

On top of those cases is a slew of characters created by third parties for
licensed books, audiobooks and more. Though the universe of Doctor Who is
already gigantic with over 800 episodes, it goes well beyond that
off-screen.

As such, companies such as Big Finish Productions own the rights to their
creations and contributions, creating possible challenges should the BBC
ever wish to bring those ideas to screen.

In short, the Doctor Who universe is massive, but it’s also divided up from
a rights standpoint. It’s difficult to imagine the Klingons or R2D2 being
owned by a separate entity but that’s exactly what Doctor Who faces.

Not that the rights challenges have done anything to slow the success or
the popularity of the show.

*Bottom Line*
When it comes to rights in a TV show, especially a major franchise, there’s
an expectation that everything will be neat and orderly. After all, with
millions (if not billions) on the line, the money spent on lawyers and
contracts is small change.

But Doctor Who is a show that began from humble beginnings over 50 years
ago and grew into a cultural phenomenon over time. Its ramshackle
beginnings show in its current copyright situation, one where key
characters are owned not by the BBC, but by their creators or their estates.

But this hasn’t slowed the program down. The Daleks still make regular
appearances (so much so it was falsely believed to be contractual) and K9,
though not a companion for over 30 years, made an appearance in a 2010
episode

Maybe it’s just another testament to the the series that it’s been able to
overcome so much and not only survive, but become a major science fiction
franchise.
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