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When Doctor Who Weekly began publishing in 1979, the Fourth Doctor (played by Tom Baker) was the current Doctor on television. Doctor Who Weekly took over an ongoing regular comic strip presence of the Doctor's adventures from TV Comic. Central to the concept of Doctor Who Weekly (later renamed as Doctor Who Magazine), was to offer more mature ...
In the "Flood Barriers" feature in the trade paperback Doctor Who: The Flood, it is revealed the comic strip was given the opportunity to show the regeneration of the Eighth Doctor into the Ninth Doctor. The publishers of Doctor Who Magazine have also produced a number of special issues, annuals, and other publications containing comics.
Front cover – Doctor Who Weekly No. 1. Doctor Who Weekly. Five stories / twenty two instalments. 1979–1980. Marvel UK. Although Polystyle ceased to publish a Doctor Who comic strip in 1973 [citation needed] it retained the rights until 1979, effectively banishing the character and his adversaries from the medium for five years.
Two separate series of original comic strips featuring the Eighth Doctor (and thus the likeness of actor Paul McGann) were published during the character's original tenure. Radio Times published a weekly comic strip for a time. There was also the standard Doctor Who Magazine strip. The two series introduced brand-new companions, although the ...
First Doctor Who crossover: Doctor Who Magazine – The character's first association with Doctor Who happened in the April 1998 edition of Doctor Who Magazine (issue 135) in the Seventh Doctor main strip "The Crossroads of Time". In this story the Doctor and Death's Head clashed, the former reducing the latter from a giant robot to human size ...
The following is a list of comic strips.Dates after names indicate the time frames when the strips appeared. There is usually a fair degree of accuracy about a start date, but because of rights being transferred or the very gradual loss of appeal of a particular strip, the termination date is sometimes uncertain.
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TV Comic was issued weekly, and one of a number of titles belonging to Polystyle Publications Ltd, the comic exclusively featuring strips based on television series. In 1971, the Doctor Who strip moved to another Polystyle publication, Countdown comic, for its launch.