Who has lasted 50 years on television around the world, inspiring radio shows, comic books, toys and fan conventions?
Who? Yes. Who.
Doctor Who, more properly called The Doctor -- that galactic-traveling time lord, whose first tube appearance on the BBC on Nov. 23, 1963, is being celebrated worldwide this week with hours of video tribute, here on BBC America.
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Kicking it off is Monday's marathon of "The Doctors Revisited" (9 a.m.-9 p.m.), profiling the actors who have portrayed the "regenerated" hero, from cranky original oldster William Hartnell to '70s hip Tom Baker to recently beloved David Tennant. (It's actually preceded at 8 a.m. by "The Companions," about the Doctor's human partners.) Monday night at 9 comes the new special "Tales from the TARDIS," with backstage reminiscences, followed at 10 p.m. by "The Science of Doctor Who" with Brian Cox.
Tuesday morning at 10 begins a five-day run of the modern "Doctor Who" continuation that launched in 2005 starring Christopher Eccleston. With 9 p.m.'s "The Parting of the Ways," The Doctor morphs into Tennant, then morphs again into Matt Smith with Wednesday's 8 p.m. "The End of Time."
Friday night, Nov. 22, holds two premiere specials -- "Doctor Who: Explained" (8 p.m.), help for the uninitiated, and "An Adventure in Space and Time" (9 p.m.), dramatizing the show's 1963 creation. Saturday, Nov. 23, brings the big global simulcast of the 50th-anniversary drama "The Day of the Doctor" (2:50 p.m., with a 7 p.m. encore), pairing Tennant and Smith in action set in both 2013 and 1562.
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