Vislor Turlough is a fictional character played by Mark Strickson in the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. He was a companion of the Fifth Doctor, being a regular in the programme from 1983 to 1984. Turlough is an alien from the planet Trion who seeks to kill the Fifth Doctor on orders from the antagonist known as the Black Guardian. Turlough later chooses to side with the Doctor, accompanying him until Turlough's departure from the series in the 1984 serial Planet of Fire.
Turlough was created during a script meeting with script editor Eric Saward, who liked the concept of a companion who existed to try and kill the Doctor. Strickson was requested to be cast in the part by his agent, and was one of the last actors producer John Nathan-Turner saw in the auditions for Turlough's character. Nathan-Turner enjoyed Strickson's performance and offered him the part, with Strickson turning down a potential role in the series Angels to appear in Doctor Who.
Turlough's role in the series was criticized by literary critic John Kenneth Muir, who believed Turlough to be underdeveloped despite Strickson's good acting performance. Other critics felt the character's writing quality varied, though he has received analysis in the book Who is Who?, which analyzed his development as a result of his interactions with the Doctor.
Character history
Turlough first appears in the serial Mawdryn Undead, where he is a student of retired Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart. Turlough is an alien in exile, and after nearly dying in a car accident, is contacted by the malevolent Black Guardian, who offers to take him back to his home planet Trion if he kills the Fifth Doctor, which is an offer that Turlough accepts. At the end of the serial, Turlough asks to accompany the Doctor. Despite the suspicions of the Doctor's other companions, the Doctor lets Turlough join him and the others in the TARDIS.
Turlough accompanies the Doctor but fails in his attempts on his life in Terminus, proving hesitant in his attempts to kill the Doctor. In the serial Enlightenment, Turlough joins in the race to obtain the titular "Enlightenment". He is given the choice to give the power from the Enlightenment to either the Doctor or the Black Guardian, and chooses the Doctor, freeing himself from the Black Guardian's pact. Turlough continues to accompany the Doctor following this point.
Turlough makes his final appearance in the serial Planet of Fire, where it is revealed that Turlough is a junior ensign commander from the planet Trion. Following a civil war on his home planet, in which his mother was killed, Turlough's family were arrested as political prisoners. His father and younger brother Malkon were exiled to the planet Sarn while Turlough himself was exiled to Earth. Turlough discovers that political prisoners are no longer treated harshly on Trion, and decides to return home. Turlough makes a brief cameo in the following serial, The Caves of Androzani, where he appears as a hallucination encouraging the Doctor not to die.
Turlough later appeared in a short episode released alongside the announcement of a Blu-ray boxset of Doctor Who season 21. In the episode, Turlough sends a distress signal to the Fifth Doctor and Tegan Jovanka requesting aid due to Trion being invaded by the Daleks.
Development
The concept for Turlough was created at a script conference with script editor Eric Saward. The concept of a companion who would be working to kill the Doctor proved appealing to Saward, and so they went ahead with the idea. The character was conceived as having his duplicity known by both the audience and the other characters, including the Doctor, though the latter would pretend to be unaware of Turlough's actions until Turlough was faced with the choice to kill him. It was deemed boring for the character to hold strictly to the concept of "evil companion turned good", and thus it was decided that Turlough would continue to show hints of potential betrayal even after proving himself to the Doctor. Lead actor Peter Davison remarked that it was one of producer John Nathan-Turner's attempts to give the Doctor a "companion with attitude", citing previous examples like Adric and Tegan.
According to Nathan-Turner, Strickson's agent, Jan Evans, had recommended Strickson to Nathan-Turner, believing Strickson fit Turlough's character perfectly. Julia Smith, who was producing Angels, encouraged Nathan-Turner to cancel Strickson's audition, but Nathan-Turner went through with it regardless. According to Strickson, he signed to do his own stunts. He stopped after an incident filming Enlightenment, in which a harness attached around the actor's crotch broke, causing injury. Strickson stated that he was unable to walk properly for two weeks afterward. Andrew Blair, writing for Den of Geek, highlighted Turlough's departure, stating that while Turlough was undeveloped after his appearance in Enlightenment, the departure was well-written. Blair also highlighted how Planet of Fire allowed Turlough to use intelligence, unlike his other appearances.
Fantasy Empire described Turlough as being a reliable character in the series, being a strong character who could function individually of the Doctor. They felt that his reunion with his species in Planet of Fire made the character appear gullible, unlike his prior characterization. Tanya Huff, writing in the book Queers Dig Time Lords, described Turlough's tendency to keep secrets, as well as the character's intensity, to appear akin to a romantic partner for the Fifth Doctor, which Huff cited as laying the ground for the eventual debut of Jack Harkness, the show's first openly bisexual character.
References
External links
- Vislor Turlough on the BBC's Doctor Who website
