Difference between revisions of "Category:Canada"
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==Canadian Merchandise== | ==Canadian Merchandise== | ||
+ | [[File:CanadaJigsawSontarans.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Waddingtons Canadian jigsaw of Andrew Skilleter's Sontaran poster print]] | ||
− | There are only a few known examples of exclusively Canadian items of merchandise. In 1984, Waddingtons Games Canada released four '''Doctor Who''' jigsaw puzzles; these featured artwork of Omega, Davros and the Daleks, Sontarans, and K9 taken from Andrew Skilleter's Profile Prints series. | + | There are only a few known examples of exclusively Canadian items of merchandise. In 1984, Waddingtons Games Canada released four 500-piece '''Doctor Who''' jigsaw puzzles; these featured artwork of Omega, Davros and the Daleks, Sontarans, and K9 taken from Andrew Skilleter's Profile Prints series. |
Revision as of 04:25, 29 May 2021
Canada
CANADA is of the North American continent, and shares its borders with the United States.
Profile
Country Number (3) | 1965 | FIRST and SECOND WAVE |
Region | North America | Commonwealth |
Television commenced | 1946 | |
Colour System | 1966 | NTSC |
Population | 1966 | 19.9 million |
TV Sets | 1966 | 5.1 million |
Population | 1976 | 22.659 million |
TV Sets | 1976 | 9.39 million |
Language/s | English | also dubbed into French |
Television Stations / Channels
Canada has a number of major television networks providing broadcasts across the country. The country is also served by broadcasts from several hundred small privately-owned commercial stations across all the Provinces.
During its regular runs on Canadian television, Doctor Who was screened by these known broadcasters:
After an eleven year gap, Doctor Who returned, screening simultaneously on (at least these) three channels:
- CKVU in Vancouver from 1976 to 1982
- TV Ontario (TVO) from 1976 to 1993
- Co-operative Programming Network (CPN) in Saskatchewan from 1978 to 1979
When TVO lost the rights, the series was picked up by:
- YTV from 1989 to 1994
The one-off TV Movie debuted on:
- CITV in 1996
The final stations to screen the Classic series were:
- Space from 1997 to 2000
- BBC Kids from 2001 to 2010
The TV Movie was later shown several times on:
- Ztélé starting in 2006
A selection of Tom Baker episodes was available on Air Canada's in-flight entertainment systems during 2014
Of course, for many Canadians, another primary source of Doctor Who were PBS broadcasts from the US states that bordered with Canada. For instance, WTVS in Detroit, Michigan could be viewed in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and many parts of southern Ontario; and KSPS in Spokane, Washington, was available in southern British Columbia and Alberta. The many PBS stations operating out of the northern regions of New York state were also available in southern Ontario and Quebec.
DOCTOR WHO IN CANADA
Canada was the third country to screen Doctor Who (see Selling Doctor Who). On 9 December 1964, a 16mm film print of the first episode was evaluated by technical quality advisers.
DALEK MOVIES
PETER CUSHING Movies
The first Aaru movie played in theatres across Canada. The initial release dates are not known, but the film was played in provincial theatres in the late 1960s. In April 1969 the film played at the Chateau in Pine Falls, Manitoba.
The films also screened several times on television - see the sections on CKVU, YTV and SPACE.
BBC Records
The Stanmark Productions Ltd advertisement from 1966, identifies Canada as one of sixteen countries screening Doctor Who by January 1966.
Canada is not included in the list of 27 countries in The Making of Doctor Who (1972 Piccolo edition).
The Seventies records a sale of "(6)" stories by 28 February 1977. The Handbook identifies five of these to be: A, B, C, D and E. The sixth story is the Pertwee serial UUU.
The Eighties - THE LOST CHAPTERS records a sale of "(64)" stories (by 10 February 1987).
As far as we can determine, this total is made up of the 14 Pertwees that aired on CKVU and TVO, plus 37 Tom Baker and 13 Davison serials that were sold to TVO.
In DWM, Canada is identified in 57 story Archives: five Hartnells (the same as above); no Troughtons; 16 Pertwees; 27 Tom Bakers; seven Davisons; no Colin Bakers; and two McCoys. The sales years are given as 1965, then 1977 to 1989. These 57 are a combination of the CBC and TVO screenings. (DWM includes Canada in AAA, FFF, and 4W, which must be a mistake, as those three did not screen in Canada until the 1990s.)
CANADIAN AIRDATES
The usual categories – Stories Bought and Broadcast, Transmission, and TV listings – are detailed on a separate profile page for each of these broadcasters:
Novelisations
For many years the Target novelisations were readily available in Canada – the back covers of most but not all of the books bear a price in Canadian dollars. (From 1983 to 1989, CANCOAST BOOKS in Toronto, Ontario, is identified as the distributor.) New books published in 1976, 1977, 1981, 1982 and 1992 do not have Canadian prices (*).
- 1973: 95c
- 1974: 95c; $1.25; $1.35
- 1975: $1.35
- 1976: none
- 1977: none
- 1978: $1.50
- 1979: $1.50; $1.75; $1.95
- 1980: $1.95; $2.25; $2.50
- 1981: none
- 1982: none
- 1983: $3.75
- 1984: $3.95
- 1985: $3.95; $4.50
- 1986: $3.95; $4.95
- 1987: $4.50; $4.95
- 1988: $4.95; $6.95
- 1989: $4.95
- 1990: $4.95; $6.25; $6.50
- 1991: $5.95; $6.25
- 1992: none
The first Doctor Who The New Adventures novel, Timewyrm Genesys was priced $8.75 in 1991, but Canadian prices did not appear again until 1996's Just War ($6.99). The final New Adventures, The Dying Days, was $7.99 in 1997.
(*) One of the reasons why a Canadian price is absent from the books published in these years may be due to the agreement signed between the Canadian government and the European Economic Community (EEC) in July 1976, which provided Canada with mutual commercial and economic cooperation. And then in 1982, Canada was granted greater political independence from the UK. Of course, this could be a coincidence...
Canadian Merchandise
There are only a few known examples of exclusively Canadian items of merchandise. In 1984, Waddingtons Games Canada released four 500-piece Doctor Who jigsaw puzzles; these featured artwork of Omega, Davros and the Daleks, Sontarans, and K9 taken from Andrew Skilleter's Profile Prints series.
Canadian Fandom
The Canadian fan club, Doctor Who Information Network (DWIN) was founded in 1980; they produce the excellent fanzine ENLIGHTENMENT.
On 25-26 May 1985, Jon Pertwee appeared at the Who Party 7 convention in Kitchener, Ontario. He was interviewed for CKCO-TV:
- CLIP: JON PERTWEE INTERVIEW for CKCO
- CLIP: JON PERTWEE AT WHO PARTY 7
We are grateful to Enlightenment, Michael J Doran, Ed Conroy, Alex Frazer-Harrison, Graeme Burk, Doug Orlowski and especially Randy K Howell, for research material and general information about Canadian broadcasts.
Canada in Doctor Who
In a way, without Canada, Doctor Who wouldn't exist!
- SYDNEY NEWMAN, the man who devised Doctor Who, was born in Toronto in 1917
- Andrew Cartmel, the series' script editor from 1987 to 1989, grew up in Canada aged 5-15, and saw the series on CBC
Several Canadian-born actors appeared in the series:
- Robin Phillips (Altos; The Keys of Marinus)
- Shane Rimmer (Seth Harper; The Gunfighters)
- Robert Beatty (General Cutler; The Tenth Planet)
- Garrick Hagon (Ky; The Mutants)
- Jeremy Wilkin (Kellman; Revenge of the Cybermen)
- Richard Easton (Captain Stapley; Time-Flight)
- Robert Jezek (Sgt Zbrigniev; Battlefield)
- The 1996 TV Movie was filmed in Vancouver, and features Canadian actors
Other references to Canada include:
- Two of the Moonbase technicians - P Baker No 1 and E Braun No 12 – are Canadian (The Moonbase)
- Mention is made of the wheat plains of Canada in The Enemy of the World
- There is a T-Mat station in Toronto and Ottawa (The Seeds of Death)
- Algonquin (Ontario) is named in The Ambassadors of Death
- Ottawa is mentioned in The Claws of Axos
- New Montreal is mentioned in Frontier in Space
- One of the sacred books of Marb Station is UK Habitats of the Canadian Goose by HM Stationery Office (The Trial of a Time Lord)
Links
This category has only the following subcategory.