Difference between revisions of "TVOntario"

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There were repeats of [[The Two Doctors]] to [[Revelation of the Daleks]] from April to July 1989.  
 
There were repeats of [[The Two Doctors]] to [[Revelation of the Daleks]] from April to July 1989.  
  
In order to use up their repeat rights, '''TVO''' repeated [[The Trial of a Time Lord]] on Thursday nights at 10.00pm, around '''June 1991'''. (We've not been able to confirm exact dates.) It was packaged together with old '''Flash Gordon''' serials from the 1930s.
+
In '''mid-1991''', in order to use up their repeat rights, '''TVO''' repeated [[The Trial of a Time Lord]] on Thursday nights at 10.00pm. We've not been able to confirm exact start date, but part 13 aired '''29 August 1991'''. The series was packaged together with old '''Flash Gordon''' serials from the 1930s.
  
  

Revision as of 06:25, 7 May 2011

TV ONTARIO (TVO) (1976-1991?)

Channel Profile

The ONTARIO EDUCATIONAL COMMUNICATIONS AUTHORITY (OECA) was established in 1970 as a Crown Corporation to serve all levels of education in Ontario, Canada. The OECA's headquarters was in Toronto.

In September 1970, the first UHF station in Canada went on the air: known as CICA-TV or TVOntario, this station was operated by the OECA. Additional transmitters were subsequently established throughout the Province in the years that followed. And with the addition of affiliate stations in other cities, the OECA / TVOntario service was available to over 75% of the population of the the eastern Province.


The distributor of BBC programming to Canada and the United States was Time Life Films / Television, and from 1982 Lionheart Films Ltd. From 1987, the distributor was Cinar Films, who operated out of Toronto and Montreal, and who specialised in comedy and drama.

Starting in 1976, TVO enjoyed a virtually unbroken 13-year run of Doctor Who


Stories bought and broadcast


JON PERTWEE

Eleven stories, 54 episodes; although screened out of order:

Doctor Who Resource Handbook
Doctor Who Resource Handbook
GGG The Claws of Axos 4
KKK Day of the Daleks 4
MMM The Curse of Peladon 4
NNN The Mutants 6
OOO The Time Monster 6
RRR The Three Doctors 4
TTT The Green Death 6
UUU The Time Warrior 4
XXX Death to the Daleks 4
YYY The Monster of Peladon 6
ZZZ Planet of the Spiders 6

TVO therefore bought parts of GROUPs B, C, D and all of E of the Jon Pertwee stories.

The programme was supplied as NTSC colour video tapes with English soundtracks.

Some of these stories also aired on these stations around the same time:

They also later aired on:

Interestingly, seasons 10 and 11 were not made available to the United States until mid 1983, which means that NTSC conversions of the last six stories in the above table were done solely for the sales to Canada.

Of note, The Three Doctors and The Green Death were the only ones from that season that BBC London still had in full PAL colour at that time. Frontier in Space and Planet of the Daleks would not have been supplied because by 1976 there were already episodes missing. (Could it be that Carnival of Monsters was also missing some of its episodes in 1976, which is why it was not sold to Canada?)


Resource Handbook

In 1976, the OECA published a DOCTOR WHO RESOURCE HANDBOOK, designed to supplement the educational aspects of the series. The eight-page document featured a brief background to the series, a short episode guide to the six stories in the 1976/77 run (which referred to Day of the Daleks as "Dr Who and the Daleks"), and provided a list of recommended SF-themes books and periodicals.


Transmission

The Three Doctors, part one; 18 September 1976
The Time Monster, part one; 17 September 1977
The Green Death, part one; 29 October 1977

After an eleven year gap, Doctor Who returned to Canada, skipping the entire Patrick Troughton era, and starting with Jon Pertwee.

From 18 September 1976, CKVU in Vancouver commenced screenings of Doctor Who. The same day, but in a later timeslot, Doctor Who also aired in Ontario.

The Three Doctors – guest-starring Patrick Troughton! – commenced the TVO run from Saturday, 18 September 1976, at 7.30pm. The series screened for 26 episodes and aired without break until 12 March 1977, with The Time Warrior part four.

For reasons unknown, the order in which the six serials aired did not reflect the correct BBC order.

As part of its charter, TVO filmed educational commentaries from Dr Jim Dator, whose five minute segments ran before each episode, and in which he discussed scientific and philosophical aspects presented within the forth-coming episode.

  • For instance, for Day of the Daleks part four, Dator discussed the nature of time paradoxes. And for The Curse of Peladon, there was discussion about whether or not extraterrestrial life could exist through evolutionary development. For part four of that serial, he spoke about the importance of holding onto and preserving tradition.

Six months later, a second run of 28 episodes commenced on Saturday, 17 September 1977, again at 7.30pm. The first story was The Time Monster.

The second story was The Green Death; this was the first time the serial had screened anywhere since its original UK broadcasts in 1974. (It had been "rejected" in Australia in 1973, and unable to be screened elsewhere by the few Commonwealth countries still buying the series at that time. It wasn't until 1978 that The Green Death aired in Australia.)

These episodes also featured introductions from Jim Dator.

During the first run of Tom Baker stories, The Three Doctors, Day of the Daleks, and The Curse of Peladon were repeated on Thursdays, from 5 April 1979 to 21 June 1979, then after a six week break, The Mutants from 9 August to 13 September 1979, all at 7.00pm. Unlike the previous, and as would become the norm in later years, there was no corresponding Saturday broadcast of these episodes.

Episodes from the 1977/1978 run (but not Planet of the Spiders) were also repeated, from 15 March 1980 through until 14 August 1980. Each episode aired on Saturday at 7.30pm, and repeated on the following Thursday at 7.00pm.

Fate of the Tapes

A number of the NTSC colour video tapes of Pertwee stories that had screened across Canada in the late 1970s, were found and returned to the BBC, replacing many episodes that the BBC only had on black and white 16mm film:

By April 1981, TVO had returned colour video tapes of:

Of note, one of the tape cassettes of The Curse of Peladon had a distributor's label on it that said HBO STUDIOS TIME/LIFE TELEVISION. The tape was in a very bad state, and required a lot of clean-up work by the BBC to make it playable.

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TOM BAKER

38 stories, 160 episodes purchased:

Action! Introducing Doctor Who; 16 September 1978
TVO Doctor Who transmission caption
4A Robot 4
4C The Ark in Space 4
4B The Sontaran Experiment 2
4E Genesis of the Daleks 6
4D Revenge of the Cybermen 4
4F Terror of the Zygons 4
4G Pyramids of Mars 4
4H Planet of Evil 4
4J The Android Invasion 4
4K The Brain of Morbius 4
4L The Seeds of Doom 6
4M The Masque of Mandragora 4
4N The Hand of Fear 4
4P The Deadly Assassin 4
4Q The Face of Evil 4
4R The Robots of Death 4
4S The Talons of Weng-Chiang(*) 6
4V Horror of Fang Rock 4
4T The Invisible Enemy 4
4Z The Invasion of Time 6
5A The Ribos Operation 4
5B The Pirate Planet 4
5C The Stones of Blood 4
5D The Androids of Tara 4
5E The Power of Kroll 4
5F The Armageddon Factor 6
5G The Creature from the Pit 4
5H City of Death 4
5J Destiny of the Daleks 4
5K Nightmare of Eden 4
5L The Horns of Nimon 4
5N The Leisure Hive 4
5Q Meglos 4
5R Full Circle 4
5P State of Decay 4
5S Warriors' Gate 4
5T The Keeper of Traken 4
5V Logopolis 4

TVO therefore bought all bar three of the Tom Baker stories.

The programme was supplied as NTSC colour video tapes with English soundtracks.

Toronto Star, 6 November 1980

(*) The Talons of Weng-Chiang had been purchased but was pulled from its scheduled December 1980 screening following claims that it was "dangerous, offensive, racist stereotyping of people of Chinese origin". That the serial had been dropped was reported in the 6 November 1980 issue of the Toronto Star.

Three stories from season 15 were not purchased: Image of the Fendahl, The Sun Makers and Underworld. Why this was is unknown.

These episodes later aired on:


Transmission

The Tom Baker era commenced on Saturday, 16 September 1978, at 7.30pm. All episodes were repeated the following Thursday, at 7.00pm.

The episodes were presented by Dr Judith Merril, who – as "The UnDoctor" - talked about the philosophical concepts explored within the series.

Seven serials aired in this first 28 episode block; the run concluded with the repeat of part four of Pyramids of Mars on 29 March 1979.

(The following week, and through until 13 September, several Jon Pertwee stories were repeated.)

On 15 September 1979, the series returned with Planet of Evil. Again, episodes aired on Saturdays at 7.30pm, with a repeat on Thursday at 7.00pm. The 26 week run ended on Thursday, 13 March 1980, with the repeat of part four of The Hand of Fear.

(From 15 March 1980 through to 11 September 1980 (on Saturdays and Thursdays) repeats of the Jon Pertwee episodes from the 1977/78 run, with the exception of Planet of the Spiders. The repeat run concluded with a re-run of Robot.)

Doctor Who returns; Thunder Bay TV Guide, 13 September 1980

A run of new episodes commenced that weekend, with part one of The Deadly Assassin on Saturday, 13 September 1980. The usual Saturday / Thursday repeat cycle continued until 29 January 1981, when the series took a break for two weeks. The run resumed on 14 February 1981 with part one of The Invasion of Time. As noted earlier, The Talons of Weng-Chiang and three serials from season 15 were skipped over. This run also saw the end of Judith Merril's commentaries.

This run ended on 26 March 1981, and was followed by more repeats, which included Robot (for a second repeat), and ended with Terror of the Zygons.

The Doctor and Romana's search for the Key To Time commenced on Saturday, 12 September 1981, and concluded on 11 March 1982. As before, episodes aired Saturdays and repeated Thursdays.

More repeats followed, March to September 1981: with (Planet of Evil to The Hand of Fear (but skipping Pyramids of Mars).

At some point during this repeat run, TVO showed the Peter Cushing movie Dr Who and the Daleks, split into three half-hour instalments, as part of its classic movie programme Magic Shadows that was regularly shown weeknights at 7.30pm. This meant that viewers got two instalments of Doctor Who one Thursday night!

The new fall TV season began in September 1982; Doctor Who returned in its usual Saturday / Thursday timeslots on 11 September 1982; these season 17 stories aired out of sequence, with The Creature from the Pit, Destiny of the Daleks and City of Death playing in that order. This run concluded with The Leisure Hive part four, repeated on Thursday, 24 February 1983.


The Key to Time episodes and Destiny of the Daleks were repeated in the usual March to September repeat season.

Meglos opened the new fall season, from 24 September 1983. Tom Baker's reign as the Doctor came to an end on 8 March 1983 when Logopolis part four was re-run.

However, this was not the final end to Baker, as the viewers saw some of his earlier episodes from March through to September 1984, when City of Death to Full Circle were repeated. And from March to September 1985, another re-run of Meglos and Full Circle, followed by the remaining four serials from Baker's final season.

The Baker episodes also aired on:


Omnibus Editions?

In DWM issue #114 (July 1986), Gavin Campbell from Canada wrote that his TV station (or the Canadian distributor) had been retitling the stories. A compilation of The Sontaran Experiment became "The Hunter", The Hand of Fear became "Eldrad Must Live", and even more confusingly, The Sun Makers became "The Underworld".

We can be sure that Campbell was not watching TVO, since all stories aired episodically and not as omnibus editions. The Hand of Fear last aired in Canada in 1982, and the other two stories were never screened by TVO. If there is any truth in Campbell's claim, then it's more than likely that these retitled compilations were coming from one of the many US PBS stations that could also be received by Canadians living close to the US border...


French Broadcasts

In 1987, TVO launched La Chaîne Française, which broadcast French-language programming. From 30 September 1990, the station screened a run of Doctor Who stories using the tapes that had originally been dubbed into French by TF1, which had an abbreviated run of "Le Docteur Who" in 1989 – see France.

  • A clip from the end of episode six of the French dubbed version La Genèse du Daleks can be seen here:

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PETER DAVISON

19 stories, equivalent of 70 half-hour episodes:

5Z Castrovalva 4
5W Four to Doomsday 4
5Y Kinda 4
5X The Visitation 4
6A Black Orchid 2
6B Earthshock 4
6C Time-Flight 4
6D Snakedance 4
6E Arc of Infinity 4
6F Mawdryn Undead 4
6G Terminus 4
6H Enlightenment 4
6J The King's Demons 2
6L Warriors of the Deep 4
6M The Awakening 2
6N Frontios 4
6P Resurrection of the Daleks (2/4)
6Q Planet of Fire 4
6R The Caves of Androzani 4

TVO therefore bought all of the Peter Davison stories, except for The Five Doctors.

The programme was supplied as NTSC colour video tapes with English soundtracks.


Transmission

Peter Davison's first serial, Castrovalva commenced from Saturday, 22 September 1984. After Time-Flight part four's repeat on 21 March 1985, Tom Baker returned in a run of repeats, with another re-run of Meglos and Full Circle, followed by the remaining four serials from Baker's final season.

The Saturday episodes now screened at 7.00pm rather than 7.30pm.

The 20th season of Doctor Who commenced on 7 September 1985, with Snakedance and Arc of Infinity airing out of sequence. The run concluded with Warriors of the Deep in March 1986. (The Five Doctors did not air on TVO.)


Re-runs of Four to Doomsday through to Mawdryn Undead filled the usual March to September repeat cycle.

The series returned on 1 November 1986, two months later than its usual September start, in which the final run of Davison episodes, The Awakening to The Caves of Androzani, screened. Resurrection of the Daleks aired as a four-parter. The first two Colin Baker stories aired after The Caves of Androzani.

(Repeats of Davison stories, Snakedance, then Terminus to The Awakening (but not The Five Doctors) aired March to September 1987; and Frontios to The Caves of Androzani in 1988.)

These episodes also aired on:

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COLIN BAKER

Eight stories, equivalent of 44 half-hour episodes:

6S The Twin Dilemma 4
6T Attack of the Cybermen 2/4
6V Vengeance on Varos 2/4
6W The Two Doctors 3/6
6X The Mark of the Rani 2/4
6Y Timelash 2/4
6Z Revelation of the Daleks 2/4
7A The Trial of a Time Lord 14

TVO therefore bought all of the Colin Baker stories. The longer 45-minute episodes were re-edited as half hours.

The programme was supplied as NTSC colour video tapes with English soundtracks.

It was during this run of Baker episodes that the Canadian distributor for BBC programmes changed from Lionheart to Cinar Films.


Transmission

Immediately after The Caves of Androzani part four, the first two Colin Baker serials aired: The Twin Dilemma from Saturday, 7 March 1987, and Attack of the Cybermen from 4 April 1987, with the usual Thursday repeats.

After a repeat run of season 20 and 21 Davisons, the rest of Colin Baker's first season screened: the run commenced 19 September 1987 and ended with the 18 February 1988 repeat of Revelation of the Daleks.

Four Davison serials from season 21, and the first three Colin Baker serials, were repeated from February to September 1988.

The 14-part epic, The Trial of a Time Lord, aired from Saturday, 1 October 1988 to Thursday, 5 January 1988.

There were repeats of The Two Doctors to Revelation of the Daleks from April to July 1989.

In mid-1991, in order to use up their repeat rights, TVO repeated The Trial of a Time Lord on Thursday nights at 10.00pm. We've not been able to confirm exact start date, but part 13 aired 29 August 1991. The series was packaged together with old Flash Gordon serials from the 1930s.


These episodes also aired on:

.

.


SYLVESTER McCOY

Four stories, 14 episodes:

7D Time and the Rani 4
7E Paradise Towers 4
7F Delta and the Bannermen 3
7G Dragonfire 3

TVO therefore bought the first season of the Sylvester McCoy stories.

The programme was supplied as NTSC colour video tapes with English soundtracks.


Transmission

The weekend after the Thursday repeat of Colin Baker's final episode, Sylvester McCoy appeared as the Doctor. This run of 14 episodes started 7 January 1989 and ended with the Dragonfire part three repeat on 13 April 1989.

Following a run of Colin Baker re-runs, Time and the Rani and Dragonfire were also repeated on Saturdays and Thursdays. This re-run cycle concluded on Thursday, 7 September 1989.

TVO lost its rights to Doctor Who in July 1989. The re-run of Dragonfire part three on 7 September 1989 was - after an eleven year run of virtually non-stop screenings and repeats – the final regular episode of Doctor Who to air on TVO...

During the summer of 1991, presumably soon after the June 1991 repeat of The Trial of a Time Lord, TVO repeated some of McCoy's stories in order to use up their repeats rights. It is likely this run included Paradise Towers and Delta and the Bannermen, as they had not aired for a third and fourth time alongside the rest of season 24 in 1989.


These episodes also aired on:


Repeats Summary

  • The majority of stories were screened by TVO four times – 1) first screening; 2) Thursday repeat; 3) Saturday repeat; 4) Second Thursday repeat


TV listings

Airdates in Canada (TVO)
← AIRDATES ...... (CLICK ICON TO GO TO TABLE SHOWING EPISODE BREAKDOWN AND AIRDATES - N/S = story title is Not Stated)

Listings for TVO have been obtained from the Toronto Daily Star; other airdates and broadcast information has been provided by Michael J Doran, Ed Conroy, Alex Frazer-Harrison, Graeme Burk and Doug Orlowski, with our thanks.


KEY:

  • Story titles in BOLD ITALICISED CAPITALS are first screenings.
  • Story titles in PLAIN CAPITALS are "Thursday Repeats".
  • Story titles in standard Title Case are general repeats.


Next Canadian broadcaster


Links