Unearthed 1965 Doctor Who Episodes Restored for BBC iPlayer Debut

March 13, 2026
Unearthed 1965 Doctor Who Episodes Restored for BBC iPlayer Debut
  • This story includes the first Doctor Who Christmas episode (The Feast of Steven) and marks Nicholas Courtney’s TV debut as Lethbridge-Stewart in Episode 1.

  • The Daleks’ Master Plan stands as the longest, most ambitious Dalek story, broadcast over 12 weeks in 1965–66, spanning multiple worlds and eras.

  • Two missing Doctor Who episodes, Nightmare Begins and Devil’s Planet, have been unearthed and restored by the BBC after being found in a private collection donated to the Film is Fabulous! charity.

  • The episodes, dating to 1965 (series three), feature William Hartnell as the Doctor and the Daleks, with Peter Purves guest-starring as companion Steven Taylor.

  • A special London screening is planned for April 4, with Peter Purves as guest of honour, coinciding with their public release on BBC iPlayer.

  • Production tensions from the era are highlighted, including a strained relationship between producer John Wiles and Hartnell and the controversial mid-series exit of companion Vicki.

  • Context notes that Disney ended its working relationship with the BBC, Ncuti Gatwa departed, but Doctor Who programming continues under Russell T Davies, including a new Christmas special.

  • The upcoming Christmas special is written by Russell T Davies, with broader plans for Doctor Who in light of Disney’s withdrawal from a co-production deal.

  • Adrienne Hill’s Katarina debuts and dies in her first scene, while Sara Kingdom (Jean Marsh) also dies in the final episode, marking a double companion death in a single story.

  • Fans remain engaged, with io9 coverage and related Doctor Who news maintaining interest in the recovered material.

  • Recovered material features Nicholas Courtney as Bret Vyon, Adrienne Hill as Katarina, and Kevin Stoney as Mavic Chen, with Courtney later becoming a recurring character, the Brigadier.

  • The arc faced broadcasting challenges abroad due to censorship in Australia and New Zealand, contributing to its past erasure; some copies survived as technical versions.

Summary based on 19 sources


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