Doctor Who showrunner Steven Moffat has described writing
the upcoming 50th anniversary special as "The most terrifying thing I’ve
ever done".
Speaking to CultBox on the set of 'The Day
of the Doctor' in Cardiff earlier this year, the writer commented: "I
knew the story we wanted tell and certain things in the kit of parts
that we could tell it with. That has to be the priority, otherwise you
might as well just have a walk-down, a curtain call… It can’t all be
curtain call. Not that I’m saying we don’t have a curtain call!"
Moffat added: "It was a very, very, very difficult script to start
writing, because it had to be epically ambitious. I’ve never written
anything quite like it. It was the most terrifying thing I’ve ever
done."
The writer explained: "I knew what I wanted to accomplish. I think
there’s a tremendous danger if you attach the word 50 to anything that
you are arranging a state funeral and a retrospective. I wanted it to be
the show that ensures the next 50 years – it does celebrate the last 50
years, trust me, people seem to worry that I‘m not going to do that. It
celebrates the legend, rather than saying ‘it’s really old, you know’."
He joked: "You don’t want to say that to kids, do you? ‘This is
something your grandparents watched!’ You want it to be an absolute
forward thrust."
'The Day of the Doctor' will air at 7.50pm on Saturday 23 November on BBC One.
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