Still prepping for that Doctor Who RPG I mean to run, and we really want to cast the role of the Doctor analog correctly. We don't want our principal Time Lord to be the Doctor per se, but someone sufficiently Doctorish (or someones, since multiple players may play later regenerations in side games). So first off, what are the qualities we're looking for? What does Doctorish mean? We identified three things that are necessary to creater a proper, adventuring Time Lord, and an extra for this particular campaign:
1) Curiosity (to motivate travel and get us into plots)
2) Eccentricity (rogue Time Lords are a quirky bunch, as much physically and mentally)
3) Brilliance (must be able to carry off their great intellect)
4) Because we want to play post-Time War, we also need the Time Lord to be a wounded soul.
So who fits? Here are the ideas we came up with for our Time Lord, the Shepherd.
BRITS
(If all Time Lords are Brits - and we want to forget Eric Roberts' Master as much as possible - then these guys are Time Lords, surely.)
Ian HolmA little like the 7th Doctor, a seemingly harmless little gentleman with a dark side you don't see coming. Relevant experience: Tons of genre work from The Fifth Element and Lord of the Rings to From Hell and Brazil.
Jim Broadbent
He's proven that he can play loud and eccentric in such fare as Moulin Rouge, and walk the line between comedy and drama in Hot Fuzz. Relevant experience: He actually played the Doctor in The Curse of Fatal Death, though not a very effective regeneration.
Ian McKellen
His Gandalf persona would certainly match a character we want to call "The Shepherd", but he was never so eccentric than as "himself" in an episode of Extras. Relevant experience: Certainly no stranger to genre work (like all the Ians, though I haven't tagged Ian McNeice here).
James Nesbitt
My favored casting for the 11th Doctor, Jimmy Nesbitt makes a great "working class" Time Lord. Admittedly, my familiarity with his career is limited to Millions and Jekyll. Relevant experience: Jekyll was the brainchild of the new Doctor Who head writer Steven Moffat.
Carey Elwes
Circa The Princess Bride. A young regeneration of the Shepherd, in the Davison/Tennant/Smith mold, he manages to combine supreme confidence, quick wit and a swashbuckler's skill in the same performance. CAST! He will play a later regeneration for a side-game filled with one-shots, but the character for our main gain must be a little older and sadder.
Michael Caine
We're thinking anyone who makes an excellent all-knowing father figure to Batman should be able to handle a few companions. Worried about not coming off as quirky enough.
John Rhys-Davies
Boisterous even in life and he played a character called The Professor in Sliders. Seeing as the usual Doctor analog in called the Professor, that's a pretty tight fit. CAST! He plays the lead in our main campaign. Welcome aboard, JRD!
NOT BRITS
(There's no reason an American or other nationality couldn't play a Time Lord... Every planet has a West.)
Christopher Lloyd
For Americans, it's important that their accents aren't TOO American, and eccentricity has to carry the day to justify their casting. Christopher Lloyd SWEATS eccentricity. Too much? Relevant experience: Doc Brown is the model here, obviously.
Michael Keaton
An odd choice, you might say, but his many neurotic performances earn him at least a first audition. I'm thinking about his distracted Bruce Wayne, but The Dream Team and other comedies might also provide clues to how he would play a Time Lord.
Gene Wilder
Probably the best American fit, especially in his early 70s work. Had Doctor Who been an American program, he would have played him for sure. Relevant experience: Willy Wonka, Sherlock Holmes' Younger Brother, Young Frankenstein.
James Spader
Quirky in everything I've ever seen him in, from Sex, Lies & Videotape to Boston Legal, James Spader may be just a little too lascivious in his quirkiness though.
Paul Giamatti
His faux-British accent in John Adams proves he could do it AS a Brit, and his lovable loser persona would make for an entertaining spin on the rogue Time Lord archetype. Definitely one of my favorite ideas, and if I were player rather than GM, probably my personal casting.
Obviously, as we've decided on a male Time Lord, I didn't cast any ladies. It's not because I don't think any actresses are "Doctorish", quite the opposite. I would love the Doctor to get a sex change some day. But I'll open the floor to you. If you were to cast a new rogue Time Lord hero or heroine, who would you cast?
1) Curiosity (to motivate travel and get us into plots)
2) Eccentricity (rogue Time Lords are a quirky bunch, as much physically and mentally)
3) Brilliance (must be able to carry off their great intellect)
4) Because we want to play post-Time War, we also need the Time Lord to be a wounded soul.
So who fits? Here are the ideas we came up with for our Time Lord, the Shepherd.
BRITS
(If all Time Lords are Brits - and we want to forget Eric Roberts' Master as much as possible - then these guys are Time Lords, surely.)
Ian HolmA little like the 7th Doctor, a seemingly harmless little gentleman with a dark side you don't see coming. Relevant experience: Tons of genre work from The Fifth Element and Lord of the Rings to From Hell and Brazil.
Jim Broadbent
He's proven that he can play loud and eccentric in such fare as Moulin Rouge, and walk the line between comedy and drama in Hot Fuzz. Relevant experience: He actually played the Doctor in The Curse of Fatal Death, though not a very effective regeneration.
Ian McKellen
His Gandalf persona would certainly match a character we want to call "The Shepherd", but he was never so eccentric than as "himself" in an episode of Extras. Relevant experience: Certainly no stranger to genre work (like all the Ians, though I haven't tagged Ian McNeice here).
James Nesbitt
My favored casting for the 11th Doctor, Jimmy Nesbitt makes a great "working class" Time Lord. Admittedly, my familiarity with his career is limited to Millions and Jekyll. Relevant experience: Jekyll was the brainchild of the new Doctor Who head writer Steven Moffat.
Carey Elwes
Circa The Princess Bride. A young regeneration of the Shepherd, in the Davison/Tennant/Smith mold, he manages to combine supreme confidence, quick wit and a swashbuckler's skill in the same performance. CAST! He will play a later regeneration for a side-game filled with one-shots, but the character for our main gain must be a little older and sadder.
Michael Caine
We're thinking anyone who makes an excellent all-knowing father figure to Batman should be able to handle a few companions. Worried about not coming off as quirky enough.
John Rhys-Davies
Boisterous even in life and he played a character called The Professor in Sliders. Seeing as the usual Doctor analog in called the Professor, that's a pretty tight fit. CAST! He plays the lead in our main campaign. Welcome aboard, JRD!
NOT BRITS
(There's no reason an American or other nationality couldn't play a Time Lord... Every planet has a West.)
Christopher Lloyd
For Americans, it's important that their accents aren't TOO American, and eccentricity has to carry the day to justify their casting. Christopher Lloyd SWEATS eccentricity. Too much? Relevant experience: Doc Brown is the model here, obviously.
Michael Keaton
An odd choice, you might say, but his many neurotic performances earn him at least a first audition. I'm thinking about his distracted Bruce Wayne, but The Dream Team and other comedies might also provide clues to how he would play a Time Lord.
Gene Wilder
Probably the best American fit, especially in his early 70s work. Had Doctor Who been an American program, he would have played him for sure. Relevant experience: Willy Wonka, Sherlock Holmes' Younger Brother, Young Frankenstein.
James Spader
Quirky in everything I've ever seen him in, from Sex, Lies & Videotape to Boston Legal, James Spader may be just a little too lascivious in his quirkiness though.
Paul Giamatti
His faux-British accent in John Adams proves he could do it AS a Brit, and his lovable loser persona would make for an entertaining spin on the rogue Time Lord archetype. Definitely one of my favorite ideas, and if I were player rather than GM, probably my personal casting.
Obviously, as we've decided on a male Time Lord, I didn't cast any ladies. It's not because I don't think any actresses are "Doctorish", quite the opposite. I would love the Doctor to get a sex change some day. But I'll open the floor to you. If you were to cast a new rogue Time Lord hero or heroine, who would you cast?
Comments
For Brits as Time Lords might I also suggest:
* Alan Davies (of Jonathan Creek - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Davies)
* Stephen Fry (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stephen_Fry - a man with the brain of a Time Lord already and the closest you could get to having Oscar Wilde in a TARDIS)
And I'll try and think of some more, I distinctly remmeber watching TV the other day, seeing someone and thinking: "He's make a great Doctor."
Stephen Fry! yes yes yes
Brent Spiner
Jeffrey Combs
Oh, and allow me to throw in Hugh Laurie for the double ticket with Fry. Plus, he'd be great.
As for Americans, odd choices. Firstly, Mos Def, simply because he did so well as Ford Prefect, as this guy who is a little off but you would still trust him to go at the end of the universe. And a black doctor would be cool.
Now something completly random because I can, Tom Hanks. Think about it, mix in some post-time war angst from Saving Private Ryan, some silly component of Cast Away, silly honest obliviousness of Forest Gump, curiousity and intelligence of The DaVinci Code and Bam! You got this cool americain Doctor!
"Obviously, as we've decided on a male Time Lord, I didn't cast any ladies. It's not because I don't think any actresses are "Doctorish", quite the opposite. I would love the Doctor to get a sex change some day."
*facepalm*
Does that mean that at some point Romana should have been played by a man? I'm not sure if cross-gender regeneration annoys me more than that "loom" nonsense from the novels or not.
At any rate, have you considered actually using the Professor?
http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=397D472CD8C41360&search_query=Professor+What
The last one, William C. Gelinas, would be a good choice. That or the guy from this Who fanfilm I once did an article on.
http://bwmedia.wordpress.com/2009/01/24/fan-film-theater-doctor-who-flight-of-the-daleks/
Not self promoting: I'm not going to spend the night hunting down the video on Google. Both would be good choices.
As for a female Doctor, Who writers are really good at justifying all manner of craziness, and I believe it WOULD work. I've said so before and I'll stand behind that opinion (and use as a shielg against thrown objects).
Lenny Henry does have experience as the Doctor, and he's a good actor.
Although I could go real obscure and mention Chicken Boo played the Doctor in an Animaniacs comic.
Another suggestion would be Dominic West (of The Wire et al). Didn't realise for ages he was a fellow Brit; now seen him in a variety of roles and he's always different.