Red Dwarf
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Categories: BBC television sitcoms | YTV shows | Red Dwarf | Science fiction television series | 1980s British television series | 1990s British television series | 1988 television series debuts | 1999 television series endings
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This article is about the British sitcom. For the type of star, see Red dwarf.
Red Dwarf is a British science fiction comedy franchise, the primary form of which comprises eight series of a television sitcom that ran on BBC2 between 1988 and 1999, and has achieved a global cult following. It was created and written by Rob Grant and Doug Naylor. The show's origins come from a recurring sketch, Dave Hollins: Space Cadet, in the mid-1980s BBC Radio 4 comedy show Son of Cliché, also scripted by Grant and Naylor. In addition to the television series, there have also been four bestselling novels, two pilot episodes for an American version of the show, and tie-in books, magazines and other merchandise. Despite the pastiche of science fiction used as a backdrop, Red Dwarf is primarily a character driven comedy, with off-the-wall science fiction elements used as complementary plot devices. In the early series episodes, a recurring source of comedy was the "odd couple" relationship between Dave Lister and Arnold Rimmer, the two central characters of the show, who have an intense dislike for each other but are trapped together deep in space. The show's highest accolade came in 1994, when an episode from the sixth series, "Gunmen of the Apocalypse", won an International Emmy Award in the Popular Arts category. In the same year the show was also awarded 'Best BBC Comedy series' at the British Comedy Awards. and attracted its highest ratings — of over eight million viewers — by the eighth series in 1999. The current state of the franchise remains uncertain. The series is unlikely to return to the BBC, after they turned down proposals for a ninth series and a big screen version of the show has often been promised, but has struggled to secure sufficient funding.
Setting and plot
The main setting of the series is the mining spaceship Red Dwarf[1] which is 6 miles (10 km) long, 5 miles (8 km) tall, and 4 miles (6 km) wide.[2] In the first episode, an on-board radiation leak of Cadmium II kills everyone except for low-ranking technician Dave Lister, who is in suspended animation at the time, and his pregnant cat, Frankenstein, who is safely sealed in the cargo hold.[3] Following the accident, the ship's computer Holly has to keep Lister in stasis until the background radiation dies down — a process that takes three million years.[3] Lister therefore emerges as the last human being in the universe — but not the only life form on-board the ship.[4] His former bunkmate and immediate superior Arnold Rimmer is resurrected by Holly as a Hologram after the accident to keep Lister sane, while a creature known only as Cat is the last known surviving member of Felis Sapiens, a race of humanoids that evolved in the ship's hold from Lister's cat Frankenstein and her kittens during the millions of years that Lister was in stasis.[4] The main dramatic thrust of the early series is Lister's desire to return home to Earth.[5] As their journey begins, the not-so-intrepid crew encounter such phenomena as time distortions, faster than light travel, mutant diseases and strange lifeforms that developed in the intervening millions of years.[5] During the second series, the group encounter the sanitation mechanoid Kryten, rescuing him from a long-since crashed vessel.[6] Initially, Kryten only appeared in one episode of series two, but by the beginning of series three he had become a regular character.[7] At the end of series five, Red Dwarf itself is stolen from the crew, forcing them to travel in the smaller Starbug craft for the subsequent two series, with the added side-effect that they lose contact with Holly.[8] In series seven, Rimmer departs the crew to take up the role of his alter-ego from a parallel universe, Ace Rimmer, whose name has become a long-standing legend and a legacy passed down from dimension to dimension. Shortly afterwards, the crew find a parallel version of themselves from a universe in which Kristine Kochanski, Lister's former girlfriend, was the person put into stasis and so became the last remaining human.[9] A complicated series of events leaves Kochanski stranded in "our" universe, and she is forced to join the crew.[9] In the eighth series, Red Dwarf is reconstructed by the nanobots that had originally stolen it and broken it down into its constituent atoms.[10] In the process, the entire crew of the ship — including a pre-accident Rimmer — are resurrected, but the Starbug crew find themselves sentenced to two years in the ship's brig on a set of convoluted charges.[10] The series ends with Red Dwarf being eaten away by a virus and the crew evacuated, save for Rimmer who is, in the cliffhanger ending, left stranded alone to face Death (and promptly knees him in the groin and flees).[11] Characters and actorsImage:Red dwarf series ii group.jpg
The original cast, Danny John-Jules, Craig Charles, Chris Barrie and Norman Lovett, in a scene from Series II.
Dave Lister, played by Craig Charles,[12] is a genial Liverpudlian and self-described bum. He was the lowest-ranking crew member on the ship before the accident and has a long-standing desire to return to Earth and start a farm on Fiji, but is left impossibly far away by the accident that renders him the last surviving member of the human race.[13] His bunk mate Arnold Rimmer, played by Chris Barrie,[12] is a fussy, bureaucratic, neurotic coward, who is nevertheless judged by Holly to have the highest chance of keeping Lister sane when chosen to be the ship's one available hologram.[14] Cat, played by Danny John-Jules,[12] is a humanoid creature who evolved from the offspring of Lister's smuggled pet cat Frankenstein. Cat is concerned with little other than sleeping, eating and fawning over his appearance, and tends not to socialise with other members of the crew. As time goes by, however, he becomes more influenced by his human companions, and so begins to resemble a stylish yet dimwitted human.[15] The ship's computer, Holly (played by Norman Lovett during Series I, II, VII and VIII[12] and Hattie Hayridge in Series III to V),[16] has an IQ of 6,000, although this is severely depleted by the three million years he/she is left alone after the accident, having developed "computer senility". The change in appearance for Series III is explained by Holly having changed his face to resemble that of a computer from a parallel universe with whom he'd fallen in love.[17] Kryten, full name Kryten 2X4B-523P (played by Robert Llewellyn from Series III onwards,[12] and as a one-off appearance in Series II by David Ross),[16] was rescued by the crew from a crashed spaceship Nova 5, upon which he had continued to serve the ship's crew despite them having been dead for thousands or even millions of years. After an accident involving Lister's spacebike, Kryten was rebuilt by Lister, with a slightly different appearance and voice. Kryten's main function is a sanitation mechanoid and has an overactive guilt chip. When first encountered by the crew, he is bound by his "behavioural protocols", but Lister gradually encourages him to break his programming and think for himself.[18] Kristine Kochanski (originally portrayed by Clare Grogan before Chloë Annett took on the role from Series VII)[16] was initially a long-gone girlfriend of Lister's whose memory he had cherished ever since.[19] However, a rift between two alternate dimensions revealed that, in the alternate dimension, Kochanski had survived the Red Dwarf cadmium II accident. She joined Lister and the crew after the link to her own dimension collapsed.[9] Image:Red dwarf series viii group.jpg
The cast of Series VIII. From left to right: Chris Barrie, Robert Llewellyn, Chloë Annett, Craig Charles and Danny John-Jules. Norman Lovett, not visible, returned as part of the cast.
In addition to the main characters, other characters have come and gone, and even come back again. Captain Frank Hollister (played by Mac McDonald)[16] died in the original cadmium II accident and was revived later on when the nanobots re-built the Red Dwarf ship.[10] Olaf Petersen (played by Mark Williams)[16] was one of Lister's drinking buddies on the ship. Lister's other drinking buddies were Selby and Chen (played by David Gillespie and Paul Bradley, respectively).[16] When Lister and Rimmer were imprisoned, and then enrolled in an SAS-style group called the Canaries, they socialised with the likes of Kill Crazy (played by Jake Wood)[16] and Baxter (played by Ricky Grover)[16] and both were on hand to help out with problems. Warden Ackerman (played by Graham McTavish) would also turn up to torment the imprisoned pair.[16] ProductionThe first series aired on BBC2 in 1988. Seven further series have so far been produced,[7] and a film has been in development hell almost continually since before the last series in 1999.[20] Concept and commissionThe concept for the show was originally developed from the sketch-series Dave Hollins: Space Cadet on the BBC Radio 4 show Son of Cliché in the mid-1980s, written by Rob Grant and Doug Naylor.[21] Their influences came from movies and television programmes such as Alien (1979), Dark Star (1974) and The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (1981),[7] but their concept had a large element of British-style comedy and satire thrown into the mix, ultimately moulded into the form of a sitcom. Having first written the pilot script in 1983, the former Spitting Image writers had hawked their unusual and original script around but it was rejected by everyone at the BBC, as it was believed a sitcom based around science fiction would not be popular.[21] However it was finally accepted by BBC North in 1986, a result of a spare budget being assigned for a second series of Happy Families that would never arise, and producer Paul Jackson's insistence that a new series called Red Dwarf should be filmed instead.[22] The show was lucky to be remounted after an electrician's strike partway through rehearsals shut the entire production down.[23] The pilot episode finally made it onto the screen on 15 February 1988.[7] CastingAlan Rickman and Alfred Molina had auditioned for roles in the series, with Molina actually being cast as Rimmer.[24] [25] However, after Molina had difficulties with the concept of the series, and of his role in particular, the role was recast and filled by Chris Barrie. Barrie was a professional voice-actor and impressionist who had previously worked with both the writers on Spitting Image, and with the producers on Happy Families and Jasper Carrott productions.[25] Craig Charles, a Liverpudlian "punk poet", was given the role of Dave Lister. He was approached by the production team for his opinion about the 'Cat' character, as they were concerned it may be considered by people as racist.[26] Charles described the character as 'pretty cool' and after reading the script he decided he wanted to audition for the part of Dave Lister.[23] Laconic stand up comedian Norman Lovett, who had originally tried out for the role of Rimmer, was kept in the show as Holly, the senile computer of the titular ship.[26] A professional dancer and singer, Danny John-Jules, arriving famously late for his appointment, stood out as the Cat immediately. This was partly due to his "cool" exterior, dedicated research (reading Desmond Morris's book Catwatching), and he showed up in character, wearing his father's 1950s-style suit.[26] Writing, producing, and directingImage:Red dwarf doug rob.jpg
Co-creators/writers Doug Naylor and Rob Grant take a break from the production of Series VI.
Grant and Naylor wrote the first six series together (using the pseudonym Grant Naylor on the first two novels and later as the name of their production company, although never on the episodes themselves).[27] Grant left in 1995,[7] to pursue other projects,[28] leaving Naylor to write the final two series with a group of new writers, including Paul Alexander and actor Robert Llewellyn who portrayed the character Kryten.[29] For the most part, Ed Bye produced and directed the series. He left before Series V due to a scheduling clash (he ending up directing a series starring his wife, Ruby Wax) so Juliet May took over as director.[30] May parted ways with the show halfway through the series for personal and professional reasons and Grant and Naylor took over direction of the series, in addition to writing and producing.[31] Series VI was directed by Andy de Emmony, and Ed Bye returned to direct Series VII and VIII. Series I, II and III were made by Paul Jackson Productions, with subsequent series produced by the writers' own company Grant Naylor Productions, for BBC North; the eight series' were broadcast on BBC2. At the beginning of Series IV, production moved from the BBC's Manchester studios to Shepperton.[32] The theme tune and incidental music were written and performed by Howard Goodall, with the distinctive vocals on the closing theme tune courtesy of Jenna Russell. Goodall also wrote music for the show's various songs, including "Tongue Tied", with lyrics written by Grant and Naylor,[33] which Danny John-Jules re-orchestrated and released as a Top 20 UK single.[34] Hiatus, changes, and future prospectsA period of three years elapsed between Series VI and VII, partly due to the parting of the Grant and Naylor partnership, but also due to cast and crew working on other projects.[28] When the series eventually returned, it was filmised and no longer shot in front of a live audience, allowing for greater use of four-walled sets, location shooting and single camera techniques.[35] When the show returned for its eighth series two years later, it had dropped use of the filmising process and restored the live audience[36]. The possibility of a new series received a setback when the BBC had rejected proposals for a Series IX. Doug Naylor confirmed that the BBC decided not to renew the series as they preferred to work on other things.[37] However, new animated mobisodes have been made available to mobile phone subscribers.[38] RemasteredIn 1998, on the tenth anniversary of the show's first airing (and between the broadcast of Series VII and VIII), the first three series of Red Dwarf were remastered and released on VHS. The remastering included replacing model shots with computer graphics, cutting small pieces of dialogue (and even entire scenes),[39] re-filming Norman Lovett's Holly footage, creating a consistent set of opening titles for use in the episodes, and updating music and ambient sound effects with a digital master.[40] The remastered series' were released in a 4 disc DVD boxset "The Bodysnatcher Collection" in 2007.[41] ThemesImage:Red dwarf polymorph.jpg
The episode "Polymorph" parodied the 1979 Alien film
Red Dwarf was founded on a standard sitcom trope: namely, a disparate and frequently dysfunctional group of individuals living together in a restricted setting. With the main characters routinely displaying their cowardice, incompetence and laziness, while exchanging insulting and sarcastic dialogue, the series provided a humorous antidote to the fearless and morally-upright space explorers typically found in science fiction shows, such as Star Trek.[7] The increasing science fiction elements of the series were treated seriously by Grant and Naylor. Satire, parody and drama were alternately woven into the episodes, referencing other - not always science fiction - television shows, films and books.[42] These have included references to the likes of 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968),[43] Top Gun (1986),[44] RoboCop (1987), Star Wars (1977),[45] Citizen Kane (1942),[46] The Wild One (1953), Rebel Without a Cause (1955), Easy Rider (1969),[47] Terminator (1984)[48] and Pride and Prejudice (1813).[49] The writers even based the whole theme of an episode on a film's plot. The Series III episode "Polymorph" references and parodies key moments from Alien (1979),[45] Series IV's "Camille" echoes key scenes from Casablanca (1942),[50] and "Meltdown" borrows the main plot from Westworld (1973).[51] But the series does not limit its themes to movies or television, historical events and figures have also been referenced and even integrated as part of an episode.[52] Religion also plays a part in the series as the overall religion theme of the Cat species and how Lister turns out to be their God are explored.[53] HallmarksThe series developed its own distinct vocabulary. Words and phrases such as Hologrammatic, Dollarpound, Felis sapiens, Rogue Simulants, GELF, Space weevil and Zero G Football appear throughout the series, highlighting a development in language, political climate, technology, evolution and culture in the future.[54] The creators also employed a vocabulary of fictional expletives in order to avoid using potentially-offensive expletives in the show, and to give nuance to futuristic colloquial language. 'Smeg', gimp, gimboid, goit, and variants of smeg like smegging, smegger and smeg-head were used.[55] Mixed reactions and achievementsMixed reactionsThe changes that were made to the series' cast, setting, creative teams and even production values from series to series have meant that opinions differ greatly between fans, and critics alike, as to the quality of certain series.[56] [7] In the 'Great Red Dwarf Debate', published in volume 2 issue 3 of the Red Dwarf Smegazine, science fiction writers Steve Lyons and Joe Nazzaro both argued on the pros and cons of the early series' against the later series'. Lyons stated that what the show "once had was a unique balance of sci-fi comedy, which worked magnificently".[57] While Nazarro agreed that "the first two series are very original and very funny", but went on to say that "it wasn't until Series III that the show hit its stride".[58] Series VI is regarded as a continuation of the 'Monster of the week' philosophy of Series V, which was nevertheless visually impressive,[59] Discussions revolve around the quality of Series VI, seen by viewers as just as good as the earlier series',[60] but has been criticised as a descent into formulaic comedy with an unwelcome change of setting.[61] The changes seen in Series VII were seen as a disappointment to viewers; while much slicker and higher-budget in appearance, the shift away from outright sitcom and into something approaching comedy drama was seen as a move in the wrong direction.[9] Furthermore, the attempt to shift back into traditional sitcom format for Series VIII was greeted with a response that was similarly lukewarm.[7] There was criticism aimed at the decision to resurrect the entire crew of Red Dwarf, as it was felt this detracted from the series' central premise of Lister being the last human being alive.[62] There are critics who feel that Series VII and VIII are no weaker than the earlier series,[63] [64] and the topic is the subject of constant fervent debate among the show's fanbase.[7] AchievementsThe series began with rather poor ratings, although gathering over five million viewers for the pilot episode, this soon trailed off.[65] Through to Series VI the ratings had steadily increased and peaked at over six million viewers,[28] achieved with the episode "Gunmen of the Apocalypse".[66] When the series returned in 1999 it gained the highest audience figures yet - over eight million viewers tuned in for Series VIII's opening episode "Back in the Red: Part I"[67] In its eight-series history, the series has won numerous awards including the Royal Television Society Award for special effects, the British Science Fiction award for Best Dramatic Presentation, as well as an International Emmy.[68] The International Emmy Award was achieved for Series VI episode "Gunmen of the Apocalypse", which tied with Absolutely Fabulous' episode "Hospital" in the Popular Arts category.[69] The show had also been nominated for the International Emmy Award in 1987, 1989, and 1992.[69] Series VI won a British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) award for "Best British Comedy Series".[69] The video sales have won eight Gold Awards from the British Video Association,[70] and the series still holds the record for being BBC2's longest running, highest rated sitcom.[71] In 2007 the series was voted 'Best Sci-Fi show of all time' by the readers of Radio Times magazine. Editor, Gill Hudson, stated that this result had surprised them as "the show hadn't broadcast any new episodes this century".[72] Spin-offs and merchandiseThe show's logo and characters have appeared on things ranging from t-shirts[73] to novels. [74] In October 2006 an Interactive Quiz DVD entitled Red Dwarf: Beat The Geek was released and hosted by Norman Lovett and Hattie Hayridge, both reprising their roles as Holly.[75] The song "Tongue Tied", which featured in the episode "Parallel Universe", was released in 1993 as a single and became a top 20 UK hit for Danny John Jules (under the name 'The Cat').[34] Stage plays of the show have been produced through Blak Yak, a theatre group in Perth, Western Australia, who were given permission by Grant Naylor Productions to mount stage versions of certain episodes in 2002, 2004 and 2006.[76] [77] [78] [79] NovelsImage:GrantNaylor RedDwarf.jpg
The first novel; Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers
The franchise has expanded to include four novels - Infinity Welcomes Careful Drivers (1989), Better Than Life (1990), Last Human (1995) and Backwards (1996) - becoming best sellers.[80] Rather than adapting the show outright, the books provided yet another, possibly idealized version of the series' backstory. They reinterpreted and repositioned elements from past episodes, and even introduce ideas that would later be used in the show.[81] Both authors were working together on a sequel to Better than Life, called The Last Human, but Grant had decided to go it alone and do other things besides Red Dwarf. Still owing Penguin Publishing two more Red Dwarf novels, Grant and Naylor decided to each work alone on a novel. Two completely different, contradicting sequels were made as a result. Last Human added Kochanski to the crew and places more emphasis on the science-fiction and plot elements, while Backwards (by Rob Grant) was more in keeping with the previous two novels, borrowing more extensively from established television stories.[28] An Omnibus edition of the first two novels, including edits to the original text and extra material such as the original script to the first episode of the TV series, was released in 1992.[81] The novels have been published in audiobook format, the first two were read by Chris Barrie,[82] [83] Last Human was read by Craig Charles,[84] and Backwards was read by its author Rob Grant.[85] DVD and VHS releasesFor the initial release of the VHS editions, the videos were named after the first episode on the tape, as were other BBC videos at the time. However, on occasions the BBC had decided to ignore the original running order and use the most popular episodes from the series to maximise sales of the videos. For Series V "Quarantine" and "Back to Reality" were given top billing on their respective video release.[86] All eight series' had been available on VHS, three episodes of Series VII were also released as special "Xtended" versions with extra scenes and no laugh track[87] while the remastered versions of Series I–III were released individually[88] [89] and in a complete box-set.[90] Finally, two outtake videos were released, Smeg Ups in 1994, and its sequel Smeg Outs in 1995.[91] [92] The eight series' have now been released on DVD in Region 1, 2 and 4, with each release from Series III onward being accompanied by an original documentary about the making of each respective series, and a bonus disc of extra material.[93] Regions 2 and 4 have also seen the release of two Just The Shows, digipack boxsets containing the episodes from Series I–IV (Volume 1)[94] and V-VIII (Volume 2) with static menus and no extras.[95] Red Dwarf: The Bodysnatcher Collection, rather than Red Dwarf Remastered, as previously titled, was released in 2007. The new title highlighted one of the set's other main bonus features: a storyboard construction of "Bodysnatcher". The unfinished script from 1987 was finally completed by Rob Grant and Doug Naylor in 2007, working together for the first time since 1993.[41] MagazineImage:Red dwarf comic strip image.jpg
Rimmer with a greyscale appearance
The Red Dwarf Magazine - the magazine part of the title changed to 'Smegazine' from issue 3 - was launched in 1992 by Fleetway Editions. It comprised of a mix of news, reviews, interviews, comic strips and competitions. The comic strips featured episode adaptions and original material, including further stories of popular characters like the Polymorph and Ace Rimmer. These comic strip stories were notable for the fact that hologramatics, most notably Rimmer, were drawn in greyscale. This was at the request of Grant and Naylor, who had wanted to use the technique for the television series, but the process was deemed too expensive to produce.[96] Despite achieving circulation figures of over 40,000 per month,[96] the magazine's publisher decided to close the title down to concentrate on their other publications.[28] A farewell issue was published - cover dated January 1994 - and featured the remaining interviews, features and comic strips that were to feature in the following issues.[97] U.S. versionA pilot episode for an American version (known as Red Dwarf USA) was produced through Universal Studios with the intention of broadcasting on NBC in 1992.[98] The show essentially followed the same story as the first episode of the original series, using American actors for three of the roles,[99] Craig Bierko as Lister, Chris Eigeman as Rimmer, and Hinton Battle as the Cat.[100] Exceptions to this being Llewellyn, who reprised his role as Kryten, and the British actress Jane Leeves who played Holly.[100] It was written by Linwood Boomer and directed by Jeffrey Melman,[100] with Grant and Naylor onboard as creators and executive producers.[101] During filming of the pilot the audience reaction was good and it was felt that the story had been well received.[101] The studio executives were not entirely happy with the pilot, especially the casting, but decided to give the project another chance with Grant and Naylor in charge.[102] The intention was to shoot a 'promo video' for the show in a small studio described by the writers as 'a garage'.[101] New cast members were hired for the roles of Cat and Rimmer;[101] Terry Farrell and Anthony Fuscle respectively.[100] With a small budget and deadline, new scenes were quickly shot and mixed in with existing footage of the pilot and UK Series V episodes.[101] However, despite the re-shoots and re-casting, the option on the pilot was not picked up.[101] The MovieSince the end of the eighth series in 1999, Doug Naylor has been attempting to make a feature length version of the show. A final draft of the script was written, by Naylor, and flyers began circulating around certain websites. The flyer was genuine and had been distributed by Winchester Films to market the movie overseas.[103] Plot details were included as part of the teaser. Set in the distant future where Homo Sapienoids - a fearsome flesh machine hybrid race - had taken over the solar system and were wiping out the human race. Spaceships that tried to escape Earth were hunted down until only one remained... Red Dwarf.[104] Naylor had scouted Australia to get an idea of locations and finance costs, with pre-production beginning in 2004 and filming planned for 2005.[104] However finding sufficient funding has been difficult. Naylor explaining at a Red Dwarf Dimension Jump convention that the film has been rejected by people stating that they think it's funny, but it's not what they're looking for at the moment. The BBC had also rejected the idea and the British Film Council rejected the film on the grounds that they deemed it as "too commercial".[105] SpecialsOn 14 February 1998, the night before the tenth anniversary of the show's first broadcast episode, BBC2 devoted an evening of special programming to the series, under the banner of Red Dwarf Night. The evening consisted of a mixture of new, specially-recorded content and existing material, and was introduced and linked by famed actor and Dwarf fan Patrick Stewart. In addition, a series of special take-offs on BBC2's famous idents, featuring the "2" logo falling in love with a skutter, were used.[87] The night began with Can't Smeg, Won't Smeg, a spoof of the popular cookery programme Can't Cook, Won't Cook, presented by that show's host Ainsley Harriott who had himself earlier appeared in Red Dwarf. Taking place out of the continuity of the series, two teams (Kryten and Lister versus Rimmer and the Cat, although the Cat quickly departs to be replaced by alter ego Duane Dibbley) are challenged to make the best chicken vindaloo.[87] After a compilation bloopers show, featuring out-takes, the next special programme was Universe Challenge, a take-off of the programme of the University Challenge. Hosted by original University Challenge presenter Bamber Gascoigne. The show saw a team of knowledgeable Dwarf fans defeat a team consisting of Chris Barrie, Craig Charles, Robert Llewellyn, Chloe Annett and Danny John Jules.[87] This was followed by The Red Dwarf A-Z, a half-hour documentary special that chose a different aspect of the show to focus on for each letter of the alphabet. Talking heads on the episode included Stephen Hawking, Terry Pratchett, original producer Paul Jackson, and Patrick Stewart. Finally, the night ended with a showing of the Emmy award-winning episode from 1993, "Gunmen of the Apocalypse".[87] See also
Notes
References
Further reading
External links
Cast links
Fan sites
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