Dont Panic

Home > Other > Dont Panic > Page 6
Dont Panic Page 6

by Dont Panic [lit]


  ROY HUDD

  He played the original Max Quordlepleen. He had to come into

  the studio and do his bit all by himself. To this day he still

  claims he doesn't know what it was all about...

  7

  A Slightly Unreliable Producer

  *************************************************************

  ARTHUR:Ford, I don't know if this sounds like a silly

  question, but what am I doing here?

  FORD: Well, you know that. I rescued you from the Earth.

  ARTHUR:And what has happened to the Earth?

  FORD: It's been disintegrated.

  ARTHUR:Has it ?

  FORD: Yes, it just boiled away into space.

  ARTHUR:Look. I'm a bit upset about that.

  FORD: Yes, I can understand. But there are plenty more

  Earths just like it.

  ARTHUR:Are you going to explain that? Or would it save

  time if I just went mad now?

  FORD: Keep looking at the book.

  ARTHUR:What ?

  FORD: "Don't Panic".

  ARTHUR:I'm looking.

  FORD: Alright. The universe we exist in is just one of a

  multiplicity of parallel universes which co-exist in

  the same space but on different matter wavelengths,

  and in millions of them the Earth is still alive and

  throbbing much as you remember - or very similar

  at least - because every possible variation of the

  Earth also exists.

  ARTHUR: Variation? I don't understand. You mean like a

  world where Hitler won the war?

  FORD: Yes. Or a world in which Shakespeare wrote

  pornography, made a lot more money and got a

  knighthood. They all exist. Some of course with

  only the minutest variations. For instance, one

  parallel universe must contain a world which is

  utterly identical to yours except that one small tree

  somewhere in the Amazon basin has an extra leaf.

  ARTHUR: So one could quite happily live on that world

  without knowing the difference?

  FORD: Yes, more or less. Of course it wouldn't be quite

  like home with that extra leaf.

  ARTHUR: Well, it's hardly going to notice.

  FORD: No, probably not for a while. It would be a few

  years before you really became strongly aware that

  something was off balance somewhere. Then you'd

  start looking for it and you'd probably end up going

  mad because you'd never be able to find it.

  ARTHUR: So what do I do?

  FORD: You come along with me and have a good time.

  You'll need to have this fish in your ear.

  ARTHUR: I beg your pardon?

  - Hitchhiker's pilot radio script.

  ****************************************************************

  From mid-1977 to the end of 1980 it often becomes difficult to

  disentangle what Douglas Adams was doing when. Even he is no

  longer sure. But about the time that the first Hitchhiker's radio

  series was broadcast, which was about the same time that The

  Pirate Planet was recorded, Douglas was offered a job as a radio

  producer in Radio 4's Light Entertainment department. He took

  the job. As he explains, "I felt I had to do it, because I'd set out to

  be a freelance writer, had one disaster after another, ended up

  having to be supported by my parents and so on, and I thought,

  `Well, here is someone offering me a solid job with a regular

  paycheck, which may not be exactly what I want to do, but I'm

  not showing any success in doing what I want to do, and this is

  pretty close to what I want to do; I am in trouble and I will take

  this job.' Also John Lloyd and Simon Brett had paved the way for

  me getting the job offer, and I owed it to them.

  "I started as a radio producer with Hitchhiker's going out

  and Dr Who shortly to go out. Everybody who starts as a radio

  producer has to start doing Weekending, so I produced

  Weekending for a few weeks. As the most junior member of the

  department I was getting all the bum jobs, like a programme on

  the history of practical jokes which involved going out and

  interviewing Max Bygraves and Des O'Connor. I thought, `What

  am I doing here?' But a lot of people had put themselves out to

  get me the job, and it was a staff job, not a contract job."

  According to his contemporaries, Douglas tended to be a

  slightly unreliable producer ("He tended to think you could go

  on forever."), but even so it came as a slight shock to the

  department when, after six months, he left to become script

  editor of Dr Who. This, as Simon Brett commented, put quite a

  few noses out of joint.

  However, he returned to radio very soon after leaving it for

  one final production job: the Radio 4 Christmas Pantomime (Footnote for Americans, who may not undersund how a pantomime can be performed on radio: this is one of those problems you're just going to have to learn to live with.). It turned out to be the project Douglas most enjoyed from that

  time. It was called Black Cinderella II Goes East, and was co-

  produced by John Lloyd. For no particular reason, it was written

  and cast entirely from ex-Footlights personnel.

  "It was an excuse for such an odd bunch of people - apart

  from the obvious ones, we had John Cleese playing the Fairy

  Godperson; Peter Cook playing Prince Disgusting and Rob

  Buckman playing his brother, Prince Charming; The Goodies-

  Graeme Garden, Tim Brooke-Taylor and Bill Oddie - played

  the Ugly Sisters; Richard Baker, who used to play piano in

  Footlights, was the narrator; and John Pardoe MP, who was then

  Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party, played the fairy-tale Liberal

  Prime Minister (on the grounds that you only get Liberal Prime

  Ministers in fairy-tales); Jo Kendall played the Wicked

  Stepmother. . . It was terrific, but for some reason the BBC and

  the Radio Times gave it no publicity at all, and it was buried

  without a trace."

  After slightly less than six months, Douglas's first proper job

  had come to an end.

  8

  Have Tardis, Will Travel

  IT HAS ALREADY BEEN MENTIONED THAT, while Hitchhiker's was

  still in the pilot stage, Douglas found himself with time on his

  hands, during which he needed money and work.

  "So once it looked like I had a finished script I thought

  Where else can I generate some work? I sent the Hitchhiker's

  script to the then Dr Who script editor, Bob Holmes, who

  thought it was interesting and said, `Come in and see me'. This

  was just as Bob, who'd been script editor there for a long time,

  was on the verge of leaving and handing over to Tony Reed. So I

  met the two of them and Graham Williams, the producer, and

  talked about ideas. The one I came up with that they thought was

  promising was The Pirate Planet, so I went away and did a bit of

  work on it, and they thought it was promising but there was

  something wrong. So I did more reworking and took it back, and

  they still thought it was promising but needed more work, and

  this was going on for weeks, and eventually the inevitable

  happened..."

  The plan had been to do some Dr Who work as a fill-in until

  Hitchhiker's was ready to go into producti
on, and the rest of the

  Hitchhiker's scripts needed to be written. As a plan, this was an

  abysmal failure.

  At the end of August 1977, the six scripts for Hitchhiker's

  were commissioned. Within the week, four episodes of Dr Who

  were also commissioned. This was the start of a period of non-

  stop work, confusion and panic that was to last for the next three

  years.

  The Pirate Planet was a less than successful story, which

  managed to mix such elements as a telepathic gestalt of yellow-

  robed psychics, a bionic pirate captain, a planet that ate planets,

  and a centuries-gone evil queen imprisoned in time stasis, into a

  bit of a mess. The plot elements had obviously been worked out

  carefully, then edited down to the point of incomprehensibility

  by the time they reached the screen. There were Hitchhiker's in-

  jokes; there were some appalling performances; there was a

  murderous robotic parrot. It was teeming with ideas, and might

  have made a fairly decent six-parter.

  Douglas Adams still has a soft spot for it, as he explains, "In

  a way I preferred writing the Dr Who scripts to Hitchhiker's

  because I would be made to get the plot straight first. In The

  Pirate Planet, the plot was much more tightly worked out than

  was apparent in the final show because it had to be cut back so far

  in terms of time. But actually getting the mechanics to work at

  that time I really loved, and felt very frustrated that a lot of that

  didn't show in the final thing." Doubtless, if he ever did the

  novelisation, he would put back those elements lost in the

  television screening.

  The Dr Who people were impressed enough to offer Douglas

  a job as script editor. He had only just been given a job as a radio

  producer. He did not know what to do: "I'd only just taken this

  job in radio, and it seemed a pretty awful thing to do to leave

  after six months and go to television. I got very mixed up about

  that - I didn't know what to do. Various people gave me

  conflicting advice - some people said, `This is obviously what

  you must do because it's much more along the line of what you

  claim as your strengths', and other people said, `You can't desert

  radio immediately, just like that'. David Hatch said the latter to

  me very strongly, because he was head of the department, and he

  had given me the job.

  "But I did take the job, and the next person to desert the

  department was David Hatch, which made me feel a little better."

  Remembering his experiences with The Pirate Planet,

  Douglas assumed that the writing of the scripts and coming up

  with the ideas was the responsibility of the writer, and that the

  script editor's job was chiefly that of making sure that the scripts

  arrived and were twenty-five minutes long.

  "Then I discovered that other writers assumed that getting

  the storyline together was the script editor's job. So all that year I

  was continually working out storylines with writers, helping

  others with scripts, doing substantial rewrites on other scripts

  and putting yet other scripts into production. All simultaneously.

  "It was a nightmare year - for the four months that I was in

  control it was terrific: having all these storylines in your head

  simultaneously. But as soon as you stop actually coping, then it

  becomes a nightmare. At that time, I was writing the book,

  script-editing the next series of Dr Who, there were the stage

  productions of Hitchhiker's going on and the records were being

  made. I was writing the second series of Hitchhiker's and I was

  very close to blowing a fuse at the time. I was also doing some

  radio production with John Lloyd. The work overload was

  absolutely phenomenal."

  The overload was also reflected in Douglas's dissatisfaction

  with Dr Who at that time: "The crazy thing about Dr Who, one

  of the things that led to my feelings of frustration, was doing

  twenty-six episodes a year with one producer and one script

  editor. It's a workload unlike any other drama series; if you are

  doing a police series, say, you know what a police car looks like,

  what the streets look like, what criminals do. With Dr Who, with

  every story you have to reinvent totally, but be entirely

  consistent with what's gone before. Twenty-six shows, each of

  which has to be new in some extraordinary way, was a major

  problem. And there was no money to do it with: in real terms Dr

  Who's budget has been shrinking, but somehow or other you

  have to deliver the goods. Twenty-six a year is too many. I was

  going out of my tiny mind."

  Douglas wrote three Dr Who stories, although only two

  were actually screened (Four, if you count Dr Who and the Krikkitmen. See the chapter on Life, the Universe and Everything for further details.). The first was The Pirate Planet. The

  second was The City of Death, co-written with Graham

  Williams, the producer. The third is the legendary `lost' Dr Who

  story, Shada (BBC Enterprises finally released all available material on video in 1992, accompanicd by the original script.).

  The City of Death was broadcast under the departmental

  pseudonym of `David Agnew', and was writcen in the following

  circumstances:

  "When I was script editor, one of our regular stalwart writers

  (who we'd left alone as he was a reliable guy) turned out to have

  been having terrible family problems - his wife had left him, and

  he was in a real turmoil. He'd done his best, but he didn't have a

  script that was going to work, and we were in deep trouble. This

  was Friday, and the producer came to me and said, `We've got a

  director coming on Monday, we have to have a new four-episode

  show by Monday!' So he took me back to his place, locked me in

  his study and hosed me down with whisky and black coffee for a

  few days, and there was the script. Because of the peculiar

  circumstances and Writers' Guild laws, it meant that it had to go

  out under the departmental name of David Agnew. It was set in

  Paris and had all sorts of bizarre things in it, including a guest

  appearance by John Cleese in the last episode."

  The City of Death, in contrast to Douglas's first script, was

  an adult and intelligent script, in which little was redundant or

  unnecessary. The humour is never forced, and it is obviously

  being written by a Dr Who veteran, not a newcomer. In addition

  to the cameo appearances of John Cleese and Eleanor Bron in the

  last episode, it contains no less than seven Mona Lisas (all of

  which are genuine, although six have `This is a fake' written

  underneath the paint in felt pen), and life on Earth having been

  created by the explosion of an alien space-ship (something the

  Doctor must go back in time to prevent being prevented). It also

  contains a detective. That Douglas still has high regard for this

  story can be seen from the fact that certain plot elements were

  reused in Douglas's first non-Hitchhiker's novel, Dirk Gently's

  Holistic Detective Agency, as were some elements of Shada, a six-

  part story that was abandoned half
-way through the production

  because of industrial problems (strikes).

  "Once you get beyond a certain point it becomes more

  expensive to remount the thing than it is to do the whole

  production again from the word go. That's because when you are

  casting, you're doing it from who's available - when you

  remount, you have to cast the people you've already got, and this

  becomes terribly difflcult."

  Shada was a return to Cambridge for Douglas and the

  Doctor, featuring a retired Time Lord whose TARDIS was his

  study, and a book that held the secrets to the Time Lord prison

  planet. The scripts for Shada (especially in early drafts) show an

  amusing and intelligent show - although Adams's script is far

  more comfortable with the temporal confusion of Professor

  Chronotis than with the villains, or, indeed, the plot. (The

  character of Chronotis, the retired Time Lord, is something else

  that Douglas would resurrect for Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective

  Agency.)

  Adams aroused resentment from many of the shows hard-

  core fans, who criticise his stint as script editor for resulting in a

  show that was too silly, self-indulgent, and more like a comedy

  than Dr Who should be. Tom Baker's Doctor, even more than

  Patrick Troughton's, was a cosmic clown, always ready with a

  whimsical remark in the face of danger.

  Adams disagrees with this: "I think it's slightly unfair. In the

  things I wrote for Dr Who, there were absurd things that

  happened in it, and funny things. But I feel that Dr Who is

  essentially a drama show, and only secondarily amusing. My aim

  was to create apparently bizarre situations and then pursue the

  logic so much that it became real. So on the one hand, someone

  behaves in an interesting, and apparently outrageous way, and

  you think at first that it's funny. Then you realise that they mean

  it, and that, at least to my mind, begins to make it more gripping

  and terrifying.

  "The trouble is that as soon as you produce scripts with

  some humour in them, there is a temptation on the part of the

  people making the show to say, `This is a funny bit. Let's pull out

  the stops, have fun, and be silly.' One always knows as soon as

  someone says that that they are going to spoil it.

  "So those episodes of Dr Who weren't best served by that

 

‹ Prev