Why has Doctor Who always been so LGBT-friendly? Russell T Davies thinks he knows
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For Doctor Who head writer Russell T Davies, watching the series in the mid-1980s paralleled his feelings about his own sexuality.
鈥淏eing gay was 鈥榯he love that dare not speak its name鈥 and Doctor Who shared that feature as well by that time," he says. "It was a cheap, old, mad science fiction show. You couldn鈥檛 say you fancied anyone, and who couldn鈥檛 say that you loved Doctor Who.鈥
鈥淏efore that, when I was a child, everyone loved Doctor Who,鈥 the gay writer and creator of shows including It鈥檚 a Sin and Queer as Folk tells the 91热爆 in an interview before the start of the new series. 鈥淏ut then a moment comes in secondary school when boys peel off and start playing football and fancying girls.
鈥淎nd I was just sitting there quietly, not expressing who I was until I became an adult, still watching Doctor Who.鈥
Russell is just one of many LGBT people who have been drawn to the show throughout its 60-year-history, from the show鈥檚 first-ever director Waris Hussein to the latest incarnation of the Doctor Ncuti Gatwa, who this year topped the Independent鈥檚 Pride List of LGBT changemakers.
The show has also long had a large LGBT fanbase, with numerous fan groups and even drag shows celebrating the series.
With its latest episode, however, the show has given LGBT fans something they have never had before: Rogue (played by Jonathan Groff), a figure who companion show Doctor Who: Unleashed called "the Doctor's new-found love interest."
Some fans may be surprised by this male love interest for the Doctor, but it is a culmination of a long process for the show...
鈥楧octor Who can鈥檛 avoid being camp鈥
On the 91热爆鈥檚 LGBT-focused magazine show Gaytime TV in 1995, a member of LGBT Doctor Who society the Sisterhood of Karn was asked why the show has such a big gay following.
He replies: 鈥淚t鈥檚 very anti-establishment鈥 the programme has never been overtly heterosexual and it鈥檚 incredibly camp鈥 all those incredibly vampy outfits.鈥
These were also elements that chimed with Russell. 鈥淒octor Who was kind of sexless,鈥 he says. 鈥淗e鈥檚 with a beautiful woman all the time and never looks at her sexually. And that鈥檚 an interesting little chime with a young, gay boy.鈥
As for the campness of the show, Russell thinks it came from the show trying to pull off expensive ideas on a small budget without using expensive special effects. 鈥淭he low budget means they used silver and glitter," he says. "They turned to someone with a funny wig on their head, pretending to be a Martian. The programme can鈥檛 avoid being camp.鈥
From the beginning, the team behind Doctor Who included LGBT people, including Waris Hussein, the director of the show鈥檚 first ever episode.
鈥淒octor Who鈥檚 first director was a gay Asian man,鈥 Russell says. 鈥淚 find that to be a tremendous victory.鈥
Meanwhile, in 1996, before being involved with the TV series, Russell wrote a Doctor Who spin-off novel for adults, called Damaged Goods.
鈥淭hese books were for adults, and as part of the story of these books, they gave me a six foot blonde sexy male companion,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd I was like, 鈥榟e鈥檚 so going to have gay sex.鈥 He鈥檚 from the far future, so these walls [between sexualities] we put up simply would not exist.鈥
鈥楥ulture was barren for young, queer kids鈥
When Russell took over Doctor Who for the first time in 2005, fans were introduced to the series' first LGBT character, the pansexual Captain Jack Harkness (played by John Barrowman).
For Reece Connolly, an actor who runs the LGBT Doctor Who-themed Gallifrey Cabaret with drag queen Carrot, this character was a 鈥渓ight bulb moment鈥.
鈥淲hen you are watching as a young working class north-easterner who鈥檚 never met someone like that in real life, you go: 鈥榃ow, who is that? That is so cool,鈥欌 says Reece.
The introduction of LGBT characters into Doctor Who was opposed by some. 鈥淚 was at a wedding once,鈥 says Russell, 鈥渨here a woman objected to that. She had a right old go at me, saying 鈥榙on鈥檛 you show my children that, I just won鈥檛 have it.鈥 I turned around and was as rude to her as she was to me.鈥
For a generation of LGBT fans growing up with modern Doctor Who, characters like the pansexual Captain Jack and lesbian couple Jenny (Catrin Stewart) and Vastra (Neve McIntosh) were unlike anything else on TV.
鈥淚n the early noughties, culture was barren for young, queer kids,鈥 says Reece. "So when Doctor Who was brought back by someone like Russell T Davies, a proud gay man who put that front and centre unashamedly, we gripped it with both hands.鈥
鈥楤ill Potts allowed be to realise I was bisexual鈥
In 2017, Russell鈥檚 successor Steven Moffat introduced the character of Bill Potts (played by Pearl Mackie), the first lesbian companion for the Doctor.
鈥淲hat I really like about Bill,鈥 says Pearl, 鈥渋s that her queerness is just part of her.
鈥淪he鈥檚 not grappling with it, she doesn鈥檛 need to reveal herself to the Doctor.鈥
Pearl says that it was only through playing Bill that she realised she herself was bisexual.
鈥淲hen I played her,鈥 she says, 鈥渋n my head I wasn鈥檛 a queer person. But the confidence Bill had really helped me to look at myself and realise there were some parallels there.
鈥淪itting with her and all the joy that she has brought to the LGBTQIA+ community and the black community particularly allowed me to realise that some of the feelings I had when I was younger that I pushed aside were real.鈥
鈥業 learned how to be human from watching Doctor Who鈥
For Carrot, the impact of Doctor Who on their life was equally profound. 鈥淚 feel like I learned how to be human from watching that show.鈥
A version of Vastra is one of Carrot鈥檚 favourite acts from their cabaret sets. 鈥淎 lovely lesbian lizard lady doing burlesque to Ariana Grande. What鈥檚 not to love,鈥 the drag performer says.
In creating an LGBT-friendly space like the Gallifrey Cabaret, Reece is reflecting one of their favourite parts of Doctor Who. 鈥淭hroughout the Doctor鈥檚 life, they collect friends and special people, comrades and companions, and they hold them close. We queer people can really relate to that idea of chosen family.鈥
For Russell, Doctor Who is a show that matches the things he most loves about the LGBT community.
鈥淒octor Who is a very, very clever show that doesn鈥檛 rely on guns and lasers, it relies on wit and style. It is a show about an outsider who visits communities where sometimes they are treated harshly and sometimes welcomed like an old friend.
鈥淥ther sci-fi is catching up with non-binary characters and queer relationships, but I like to think Doctor Who鈥檚 been there earlier, better, and always will be there.鈥
Doctor Who airs on Saturdays on 91热爆 One and is streaming now on 91热爆 iPlayer.
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