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Dr Who Exhibition brought giant spiders and Daleks to Blackpool UK back in 1973

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  • libby 1957dog
    Persistent Member
    • Sep 3, 2009
    • 1342

    Dr Who Exhibition brought giant spiders and Daleks to Blackpool UK back in 1973

    Dr Who Exhibition brought giant spiders and Daleks to Blackpool and they stayed for 11 years




    The Golden Mile of yesteryear was noted for its traditional sideshows which by the close of the 1960s had pretty well gone.
    The last one standing was the “See the Two Headed Monster” booth which, for the princely sum of threepence, afforded an opportunity to look at the sculptured mannequin of a two headed monster in a glass case.

    At least it did what it said on the tin.The 1970s saw the Golden Mile increasingly populated with a spiritual successor to the sideshow, only these new outlets were rooted far more in the popular media culture of the time.

    With the guarantee of an already established audience, the film/TV themed exhibition proved to be a crowd puller.

    The first and most well remembered of these was the Doctor Who Exhibition, located on Chapel Street in a café basement that previously housed the Disco 72 club.

    It was opened in 1973 by Jon Pertwee who was actually about to hand in his TARDIS keys, and lucky young winners of the Gazette’s design a monster competition got to meet the Timelord in person.






    His successor, Tom Baker, took time out from switching on the illumination to visit the place in 1975, along with co-stars Elizabeth Sladen and Ian Marter. It was another ten years before sixth Doctor Colin Baker put in an appearance with companion Nicola Bryant.

    The exhibition showcased a collection of costumes and props from the series, many of them animated, and was updated every year with items from the latest season.

    The Dalek that resided within the TARDIS entrance never changed, however, nor its threat “Smokers will be exterminated!”


    The success of the attraction quickly inspired others to open shop.


    Ten giant spiders stop traffic on their way to Blackpool's Dr Who Exhibition. They were appearing as Dr Who's latest enemies in the BBC TV series, 1974
    Ten giant spiders stop traffic on their way to Blackpool's Dr Who Exhibition. They were appearing as Dr Who's latest enemies in the BBC TV series, 1974
    The BBC installed a complimentary museum next to Uncle Peter Webster’s showcasing costumes from historic and light entertainment shows, including dramas like The Pallisers and the Tweedles from It’s A Knock Out.

    At one point the visitors book included an entry from Little and Large, their comment being “Where’s us?”


    Meanwhile, The Devil’s Den opened in between the Brunswick café and Bob’s Big Bargain Bag rock stall.

    Inspired by recent movies like The Exorcist and The Omen, this was an exhibition of all things Satanic with its depictions of demons and black magic.


    The tardis outside the exhibition in 1993
    The tardis outside the exhibition in 1993
    Its stated door policy restricted admission to the over 16s unless accompanied by an adult, though this was probably more of a selling point than genuine caution.

    It further attracted punters with Mike Oldfield’s Tubular Bells played over its loudspeaker, parts of it having been used on The Exorcist’s soundtrack.

    It actually ran for a couple of seasons, until the cinema’s interest in the dark arts waned along with public interest.

    Similarly, the vogue for martial arts films prompted an exhibition of Karate and Kung Fu, housed in a prefab hut on the former Central Station site which was being used as a fun fair at the time.

    It too had an age restriction, reflecting the audiences allowed to see such films which were usually rated X certificate.

    Again, probably an over caution as it only really consisted of martial arts memorabilia and a loop film show demonstrating fight moves.

    It closed when Coral Island was built and the Kung Fu craze had run its course.

    More successful was Gerry Anderson’s Space City, installed upstairs in the Golden Mile Centre (now Sea Life Centre) from 1977 to 1980.

    It featured models and sets from Anderson’s classic puppet shows like Thunderbirds and Captain Scarlet, plus UFO and Space: 1999 which both used real actors. Like the Doctor Who exhibition, it featured a robot called Brian the Brain from an episode of Space: 1999 and voiced by Bernard Cribbins.

    It warned smokers they could be “transmuted by disintegrator rays” should they have the audacity to light up.

    So no copying going on there then!

    With its rivals already gone by the wayside, the Who exhibition finally dematerialised in 1985 when the BBC decided to send it to America.

    Themed exhibitions have returned to the Golden Mile since and currently in the form of the Star Trek collection, but not in the same numbers as their glory days of the seventies.



    for any that are interested in the exhibition heres a thing i downloaded that is pretty comprehensive on the subject year by year ,over 400 pages ,even features the denys fisher figures in the gift shop page 314

  • libby 1957dog
    Persistent Member
    • Sep 3, 2009
    • 1342

    #2
    as a coda to blackpool's connection to dr who ,looks like there were plans to film for a series there at one point

    Dr Who's abandoned Blackpool adventure
    Historian Barry McCann looks back on how cost cutting brought resort’s Dr Who episode to an abrupt end
    By Claire Lark
    Thursday, 18th June 2020, 3:45 pm

    Colin Baker board the Space Invader ride at Blackpool Pleasure Beach in 1984
    Colin Baker board the Space Invader ride at Blackpool Pleasure Beach in 1984
    Blackpool Pleasure Beach has hosted some illustrious guests in its lifetime.


    Gracie Fields filmed parts of Sing as You Go there in 1934, Marlene Dietrich road its Big Dipper that same year, while Chrissie Hind and The Pretenders were spotted enjoying its attractions in 1979.

    And there have been many others.


    Colin Baker
    Colin Baker

    In 1984 the park received a visit from none other than Doctor Who himself, in the form of Colin Baker.

    He materialised to open the Space Invader ride, and this invite to cut the ribbon gave the BBC an idea for a Doctor Who adventure set in the resort’s amusement park.

    Planned for screening in early 1986, The Nightmare Fair would have seen the Tardis arrive in Blackpool, the Doctor and his companion Peri (Nicola Bryant) deciding to give themselves a holiday.

    However people have been going missing in the resort, and when visiting the Pleasure Beach the Doctor is captured by his old enemy the Celestial Toymaker (to have been played by Michael Gough).


    The cover of the book The Nightmare Fair
    The cover of the book The Nightmare Fair
    The Doctor’s previous encounter with the Toymaker had been way back in his William Hartnell incarnation, when the villain was forcing captives to play deadly nursery games and turning the losers into toys.

    This time he is tricking people into playing a video game which feeds on their souls when they lose to it, and from which he can generate powerful creature to take over the Earth.

    Having used the amusement park to trial the device, he now proposes to have the game mass-produced in America and complete his conquest.


    The serial was written by Graham Williams who had previously produced the series itself during the Tom Baker days of the late 1970s.

    The villainous Toymaker had been created for a story 20 years earlier by Brian Hayles who was best known as a writer for The Archers!

    Though only appearing in the series once, the Toymaker as played by Michael Gough remained popular with long standing fans and the actor readily agreed to reprising the role.

    Apart from the Pleasure Beach itself, other planned locations included scenes of the Doctor and Peri enjoying themselves on the promenade, and south shore police station for a sequence where a teenage boy, Kevin, reports the disappearance of his brother last seen at the amusement park.


    The question is did the Doctor defeat the Toymaker’s nefarious plan and save the Earth once again?

    Unfortunately, television viewers never got to know.

    Filming was all good to go in May 1985 when BBC Controller Michael Grade cancelled the planned entire season of Doctor Who in a cost cutting exercise which also included the axing of other old favourites such as Are You Being Served? and Crackerjack.

    Grade did not anticipate the public backlash at shelving the ever popular Timelord.


    Newspapers launched campaigns to save the series and Blackpool’s own record producer Ian Levine even released a charity single called Save Doctor Who, though Band Aid it wasn’t.

    The BBC issued an assurance that the series was merely being rested and would return after an 18-month hold.

    When it did the production team decided on a change of direction and a new format, and as a result The Nightmare Fair was never recommissioned.

    Colin Baker and Nicola Bryant did get their holiday in Blackpool when appearing at the resort’s Doctor Who exhibition in the summer of 1985.


    The pair followed in the footsteps of Jon Pertwee who opened the exhibition in 1974, and Tom Baker the day following his switch on of Blackpool illuminations, along with his then companions Elizabeth Sladen and Ian Marter.

    However you cannot keep a good story down and The Blackpool based adventure resurfaced in 1991 as a novel written by Graham Williams from his own script.

    In 2009 it was adapted into an audio play by John Ainsworth for release by Big Finish productions with Colin and Nicola reprising their roles, while David Bailie replaced Michael Gough as the Toymaker due to the actor’s ill health. So who knows? Maybe the story will be one day remade for television, and the resort paid a visit by Jodie Whittaker.

    Comment

    • palitoy
      live. laugh. lisa needs braces
      • Jun 16, 2001
      • 59229

      #3
      Loving this history Chris.
      Places to find PlaidStallions online: https://linktr.ee/Plaidstallions

      Buy Toy-Ventures Magazine here:
      http://www.plaidstallions.com/reboot/shop

      Comment

      • Bruce Banner
        HULK SMASH!
        • Apr 3, 2010
        • 4332

        #4
        I made it to the Blackpool DW Exhibition during Peter Davison's tenure.
        Still have my pin-badge from the gift shop.
        PUNY HUMANS!

        Comment

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