Difference between revisions of "United States--1987"

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*By '''November 1987''': [[wikipedia:CBS/FOX Video|CBS/FOX]], under its '''Playhouse Video''' imprint, begins releasing '''Doctor Who''' stories on home video (VHS and Betamax). The first titles are [[Revenge of the Cybermen]], [[Pyramids of Mars]], [[The Brain of Morbius]] and [[The Robots of Death]]. They retail for $19.98.  
 
*By '''November 1987''': [[wikipedia:CBS/FOX Video|CBS/FOX]], under its '''Playhouse Video''' imprint, begins releasing '''Doctor Who''' stories on home video (VHS and Betamax). The first titles are [[Revenge of the Cybermen]], [[Pyramids of Mars]], [[The Brain of Morbius]] and [[The Robots of Death]]. They retail for $19.98.  
  
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{{US nav}}

Revision as of 02:05, 6 March 2015




COLIN BAKER (continued)

One story, 14 episodes (also as four "movie length" omnibus editions):

The Trial of a Time Lord 14
7A The Mysterious Planet 4
7B Mindwarp 4
7C Terror of the Vervoids 4
7C The Ultimate Foe 2

.

  • By early 1987, Lionheart declares that Doctor Who is available in over 185 markets across the US.
  • 28 February 1987: Sylvester McCoy joins John Nathan-Turner and Jon Pertwee on the Doctor Who USA Tour at Mercer University in Macon, Georgia; this is his debut public appearance following his casting as the seventh Doctor, three days ahead of his "official" announcement in the UK!
Doctor Who Celebration & Tour 87-88 brochure, proclaiming over 185 US markets
  • By June 1987, it is reported that Doctor Who is seen potentially by 74% of the country. By September it is announced that over 200 markets have screened the series. However, Lionheart starts hiking up the price for Doctor Who, triggering a backlash that sees a number of PBS stations dropping the series for being too expensive... (By 1987, a package of episodes (number unknown) was costing over $126,000!)
  • By September 1987, the long-running FASA Doctor Who role-playing game is cancelled.