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Zoe Heriot

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Zoe Heriot
Doctor Who character
First appearanceThe Wheel in Space (1968)
Last appearanceTales of the TARDIS (2023)
Portrayed byWendy Padbury
Duration1968–1969, 1983, 2023
In-universe information
SpeciesHuman
AffiliationSecond Doctor
HomeEarth (Space Station W3)
Home era21st century

Zoe Heriot (sometimes spelled Zoe Herriot) is a fictional character played by Wendy Padbury in the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. A young astrophysicist who lived on a space wheel in the 21st century, she was a companion of the Second Doctor and a regular in the programme from 1968 to 1969.[1][2] Zoe appeared in eight stories (48 episodes).

Character history

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Zoe first appears in the serial The Wheel in Space,[3] where she is the librarian[4] on board Space Station W3, also known as the Wheel. When the Cybermen attack, she aids the Doctor and Jamie in defeating them before stowing away aboard the TARDIS.[5] In David Whitaker's script for The Wheel in Space, Zoe's last name is spelled "Heriot",[6] but the double-"r" misspelling is also seen in reference works.

Zoe's age is not given in the series, but according to initial publicity she was fifteen when she joined the TARDIS crew.[7] She holds a degree in pure mathematics[4] and is a genius, with intelligence scores comparable to the Doctor's. Coupled with her photographic memory[8] and the advanced learning techniques of her era, this makes her somewhat like a human calculator, able to perform complicated mathematics in her head. Part of the reason for her wanting to travel with the Doctor is her chafing at the restrictions and sterile surroundings of her station-bound existence. However, her real-world experience is severely limited, causing her to get herself into trouble frequently.

Together with the Doctor and Jamie, she meets the Cybermen again when they invade 20th-century London, enters the surreal Land of Fiction, fights the Ice Warriors[3] and survives the battlefields of the War Chief's war games. Her journeys with the Doctor come to an end in that serial, when the Time Lords finally catch up with the Doctor. As well as forcing a regeneration on him and exiling him to Earth, the Time Lords return Jamie and Zoe to their own times, wiping their memories of their experiences with the Doctor (save for their first encounters with him) in the process.

An illusory image of Zoe appears to the Second Doctor and the Brigadier in Gallifrey's Death Zone the 20th-anniversary episode, "The Five Doctors".[9]

An older Zoe, still played by Padbury, returns in the 60th-anniversary spin-off Tales of the TARDIS. She and Jamie, drawn from their respective timelines aboard a Memory Tardis, discover their memories of each and the Doctor have been restored. Zoe describes her life after the events of The War Games; she married an Australian man, has a scientist son she named James, and is currently serving her third term as president.

Other appearances

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Zoe's life after her return to her own time is not further explored in the series. In the spin-off short story "The Tip of the Mind" by Peter Anghelides, it is revealed that although her intellect allows her to resist the memory blocks by the Time Lords, she is unable to access the memories of her time with the Doctor consciously. This causes her strange dreams, and makes her work suffer. An encounter with the Third Doctor makes the memory blocks permanent, but she ultimately never reaches her full potential.

Padbury has appeared in Doctor Who audio adventures from Big Finish Productions, first as a character other than Zoe in the full-cast audio Davros, and then as Zoe in Fear of the Daleks, part of the "Companion Chronicles" talking book series. The latter story portrays an older Zoe having detailed dreams of her adventures with the Doctor; she suspects that something is blocking her memory, but she does not know what, and is seeing a psychiatric counselor in an effort to understand the "dreams". She has returned as Zoe in several more Big Finish plays such as Echoes of Grey and her second Companion Chronicle, Prison in Space, based on an unmade TV story. Echoes of Grey and subsequent follow-up stories, The Memory Cheats and The Uncertainty Principle depict Zoe being essentially taken prisoner by an unnamed Company whose experiments in creating a new form of life were disrupted by the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe—the TARDIS arriving on Earth a few decades in Zoe's future—in Echoes of Grey, subsequent stories seeing the Company arresting Zoe's older, contemporary self on trumped-up charges to try and provoke Zoe into unlocking her lost memories of her time with the Doctor so that they can harness the secret of time travel. This comes to a head in the audio Second Chances when Zoe has a 'flashback' of the destruction of a space station that will actually take place a few days in the future from her current point in time, allowing Zoe to interact with her past self as she tries to change her history and prevent the station's destruction. Although this part of her plan fails, the audio ends with Zoe using a computer virus that has mutated to attack physical matter to destroy the Company and escape, although her mental state and memories of her time with the Doctor are still lost.

An older Zoe is reunited with the Doctor in his sixth incarnation in Legend of the Cybermen, where she returns to the Land of Fiction after she is nearly converted by the Cybermen after leaving the Doctor, her attempt to trap the Cybermen in the Land resulting in the universe being endangered by the risk that the Cybermen will harness the computer that controls the Land and use that to influence the imagination of the entire universe. After Zoe draws the Doctor into the Land, she created a fictional duplicate of Jamie to protect the Doctor until he learns the full situation and helps Zoe drive the Cybermen out, at the cost of Zoe losing her memories again as the Doctor takes her home. Zoe and Jamie also meet the Sixth Doctor in the audio Last of the Cybermen, but in this case the Sixth Doctor has swapped with the Second shortly before the events of "The War Games", the Doctor's attempt to change his personal history to let his companions keep their memories failing when history is 'reset' as the Second Doctor returns to his proper place in history.

The novelisation of the TV serial The Mind Robber mentions, in passing, that Zoe discussed that adventure "long afterwards",[10] suggesting that she eventually recovered some or all of her lost memories.

List of appearances

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Television

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Season 5
Season 6
20th anniversary special
2023 specials

Audio drama

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Short Trips audios

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  • A Stain of Red in the Sand
  • The Five Dimensional Man
  • Penny Wise, Pound Foolish

Novels

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Virgin Missing Adventures
Past Doctor Adventures
Telos Doctor Who novellas
BBC Books

Short stories

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Comics

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  • "The Vampire Plants" by David Brian (Doctor Who Annual 1970)
  • "The Robot King" by David Brian (Doctor Who Annual 1970)
  • "The Tides of Time" (Cameo) by Steve Parkhouse and Dave Gibbons (Doctor Who Magazine)
  • "Land of the Blind" by W. Scott Gray and Lee Sullivan (Doctor Who Magazine 224–226)
  • "Renewal" by Tony Lee and Pia Guerra (Doctor Who: The Forgotten #2)

References

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  1. ^ Howe, David J.; Stammers, Mark (1995). Doctor Who: Companions. Virgin Publishing. ISBN 1-85227-582-0.
  2. ^ Haining, Peter (1988). Doctor Who: 25 Glorious Years. W.H.Allen. ISBN 1-85227-021-7.
  3. ^ a b "Wendy Padbury | Doctor Who Interview Archive". Drwhointerviews.wordpress.com. 15 February 2010. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  4. ^ a b "Doctor Who – Classic Series – Companions – Zoe Herriot". BBC. 24 September 2014. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  5. ^ "Doctor Who companions through the ages, from Jacqueline Hill to Karen Gillan and Bradley Walsh". The Telegraph. 14 April 2017.
  6. ^ "BBC One - Doctor Who".
  7. ^ Doctor Who – The Invasion (production subtitles) (DVD). 2 Entertain Video. 2006.
  8. ^ "A Companion To The Doctor's Companions: Zoe Heriot | Anglophenia". BBC America. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  9. ^ "BBC One - Doctor Who". Archived from the original on 21 December 2019. Retrieved 25 December 2019.
  10. ^ Ling, Peter (1986). The Mind Robber. Target Books. p. 73. ISBN 0-426-20286-4.
  11. ^ "Stephen Baxter: Doctor Who: The Wheel of Ice". 14 January 2013.
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