You can't kill Doctor Who.
That's the ultimate meta-lesson from "The Obscene WifeStory & the Engine," episode 5 of Season 2 of the show's tenure on Disney+. Even if persistent online rumors that Disney won't renew its co-production for a third season turn out to be true, this 61-year-old BBC show will simply emerge in a new form.
As the Doctor (Ncuti Gatwa) says in his first ever six-word memoir: "I'm born. I die. I am reborn."
"The Story & the Engine," which mostly takes place inside a barber shop in Lagos, Nigeria, is a prime example of how Doctor Who can adapt to many different places, times, and cultures. Written by Nigerian-British playwright Inua Ellams, the script builds on his play "Barber Shop Chronicles" — for which Ellams visited 60 Black-owned barber shops in the UK and across Africa — and gives an American Gods-style sci-fi spin to the stories traditionally told there.
Ellams is the first Black man to write for Doctor Who, and this episode is the first to feature a fully BIPOC cast — other than in a brief flashback scene in which current companion Belinda Chandra (Varada Sethu) is working as a nurse in a UK hospital.
But Ellams himself is hardly new to Who; he's a fan of the show from his childhood in Nigeria. Classic 1970s episodes were shown, via an ancient projector, on a large screen — hence the magic screen in the Lagos barber shop where stories are projected ... and where, for the first time, the Doctor Who opening titles appear in the universe of the show itself.
SEE ALSO: All the times 'Doctor Who' broke the fourth wall"As a kid I was terrified of this show," Ellams told Doctor Who Magazine. "Hiding behind the sofa, peeking ... it was closer to a cinema in my living room."
Technically, we've seen the Doctor in Africa twice before — but he barely knew he was there.
In "The Chase" (1965), William Hartnell's first Doctor visits a haunted house exhibit which turns out to be in Ghana in the then-far future year of 1996. And in "The Pyramids of Mars" (1975), which saw the original appearance of Season 1 villain Sutekh, the Tom Baker Doctor is transported to Sutekh's tomb in Egypt.
But "The Story & the Engine" is the first time the Doctor knowinglylands his TARDIS on the African continent. Why? First, Lagos' status as a communications hub can help the TARDIS navigate Belinda's way home. But the Doctor also explains to Belinda that since his current "Black body" is not fully accepted in many parts of the world, he likes to come to the barber shop in Lagos formerly run by his friend Omo, where he can just be himself.
The Doctor discovers a mysterious barber has taken Omo and his customers hostage. The barber is using stories to power a journey through story-space known as the Nexus. And that gives the Doctor a path to victory: by inserting his own "never-ending story" into the barber's engine, using just six words.
The six-word story concept isn't new, of course; it's generally attributed to Ernest Hemingway, an American writer with his own connections to Africa. But the Doctor claims that he gave Hemingway the idea for six-word stories because, "I wanted to see how good he was."
The six-word story Hemingway came up with isn't actually mentioned in the show, but you might be familiar with it if you've ever taken a creative writing class. "For sale: baby shoes, never worn."
Whatever happens to the show next on the U.S. side, its popularity in the UK — not to mention many countries around the world like Nigeria — will ensure its continuity in the long run. Ncuti Gatwa's Doctor will regenerate, and the Doctor will be reborn.
Doctor Who Season 2 premiered Apr. 12 on Disney+ and BBC. New episodes air weekly on Saturdays at 3 a.m. ET.
Topics Doctor Who
2018 Whiting Awards: Hansol Jung, Drama2018 Whiting Awards: Antoinette Nwandu, DramaMarian Blue, the Color of Angels, Virgins, and Other Untouchable ThingsRedux: Luisa Valenzuela, Gordon Lish, Thomas HealyNYT's The Mini crossword answers for November 24UFO Drawings from the National ArchivesRedux: Luisa Valenzuela, Gordon Lish, Thomas HealyMarian Blue, the Color of Angels, Virgins, and Other Untouchable Things2018 Whiting Awards: Nathan Alan Davis, DramaBest Black Friday coffee and espresso machine deals 2023Whiting Awards 2018: Anne Boyer, Poetry and NonfictionBest deals of the day March 14: 9thMoon phase and astrology compatibility explainedTennessee Williams in Four ObjectsBlack Friday Anker Soundcore deals: headphones, earbuds, speakers50+ best Black Friday monitor deals: Save up to $8004 best small businesses to shop from this monthBest Black Friday AirPods deals: AirPods Pro at new recordWomen in TreesBlack Friday Anker Soundcore deals: headphones, earbuds, speakers Early Cyber Monday drone deals 2023: DJI, Holy Stone, more Staff Picks: Bandits, Revenge, and Decapitated Animals by The Paris Review Tommy Orange and the New Native Renaissance by Julian Brave NoiseCat 24 of the spiciest emoji for when you definitely mean masturbation Five Summer Book Reports by Chia Michael Stipe, R.E.M., and the Anxiety of Influence King Charles III coronation: Social media reactions BeReal introduces new features to draw users back to the platform Early Cyber Monday: Dyson Airwrap multi Apple iTunes Store turns 20: A journey from 'Free Singles' to music streaming to AI Ode to the Library Museum by Erica X Eisen SmileDirectClub Australia: Everything you need to know Pornhub blocks Utah because of age verification law Staff Picks: Creek Boyz, Mechanical Chickens, and Trash Heaps by The Paris Review Best early Cyber Monday laptop deals 2023 from Apple, Dell, so much more Grilling with Homer by Valerie Stivers When Female Artists Stop Being Seen as Muses Target's sale is live — check out the deals ahead of Cyber Monday Staff Picks: Trick Mirrors, Summer Beers, and Bedazzled Pianos by The Paris Review What Comes After Idealism?
1.1057s , 10136.2734375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Obscene Wife】,New Knowledge Information Network