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Vislor Turlough

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Portrayed by
  
Species
  
Trion

Played by
  
Home era
  
1983

Affiliated
  
Home planet
  
Trion

First appearance
  
Affiliation
  

Movies and TV shows
  
Last appearance
  
Similar
  
Tegan Jovanka, Nyssa, Fifth Doctor, Adric, Kamelion

Doctor who 50th anniversary 1 min companion guide vislor turlough


Vislor Turlough is a fictional character played by Mark Strickson in the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. He was a companion of the Fifth Doctor, being a regular in the programme from 1983 to 1984. Turlough appeared in 10 stories (33 episodes).

Contents

Vislor Turlough httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb8

Character history

Vislor Turlough Vislor Turlough The Daily POP

When Turlough first appears in the serial Mawdryn Undead, he is a student of retired Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart (himself a former companion of the Doctor) at the Brendon Public School, but it becomes apparent that he is not what he seems. He is contacted by the malevolent Black Guardian, who offers to take him home if he kills the Doctor. He also appears familiar with concepts of time travel and matter transmission. At the end of the serial, Turlough asks to accompany the Doctor. Despite Tegan and Nyssa's suspicions, the Doctor accepts Turlough as part of the TARDIS crew.

Vislor Turlough 1000 images about Vislor TurloughMark Strickson on Pinterest

During the course of the next two serials, Terminus and Enlightenment (collectively known, together with Mawdryn Undead, as the Black Guardian Trilogy), Turlough finds himself unable to decide whether or not to carry out his assignment from the Black Guardian, but eventually rejects him in favour of loyalty to the Doctor. Although always slightly cowardly, with excellent instincts of self-preservation and a streak of ruthlessness, his relationship with the Doctor and Tegan improves with time (Nyssa having departed at the end of Terminus). He is one of the few companions capable of operating many of the TARDIS's systems, being able to run a diagnostic in The Five Doctors and program the TARDIS to retrieve the Doctor in Planet of Fire. Initially expressing a desire to return home, he continues travelling with the Doctor and Tegan until Tegan leaves at the end of Resurrection of the Daleks.

Vislor Turlough Pinterest The worlds catalog of ideas

In the very next serial, Planet of Fire, it is revealed that Turlough is a junior ensign commander from the planet Trion. Following a civil war on his home planet, in which his mother was killed, Turlough's family were branded political prisoners. His father and younger brother Malkon were exiled to the planet Sarn whilst Turlough himself become a political exile to Earth watched over by an eccentric Trion agent disguised as a solicitor in Chancery Lane. Also revealed for the first time in this serial is Turlough's first name, Vislor. At the end of the serial, Turlough discovers that political prisoners are no longer mistreated on Trion and decides it is time to return home.

An image of Turlough appears during the Fifth Doctor's regeneration scene in The Caves of Androzani.

Strickson has humorously commented that, not knowing what to do with him, the writers of the television series would often have the villains capture or lock him up, leading to Turlough ending up in various "states of bondage".

Television

Season 20
  • Mawdryn Undead
  • Terminus
  • Enlightenment
  • The King's Demons
  • 20th anniversary special
  • The Five Doctors
  • Season 21
  • Warriors of the Deep
  • The Awakening
  • Frontios
  • Resurrection of the Daleks
  • Planet of Fire
  • The Caves of Androzani (cameo in episode 4)
  • Audio dramas

  • Phantasmagoria
  • The Light at the End
  • Loups-Garoux
  • Singularity
  • Ringpullworld
  • Freakshow
  • Cobwebs
  • The Whispering Forest
  • The Cradle of the Snake
  • Heroes of Sontar
  • Kiss of Death
  • Rat Trap
  • The Emerald Tiger
  • The Jupiter Conjunction
  • The Butcher of Brisbane
  • Eldrad Must Die!
  • The Lady of Mercia
  • Prisoners of Fate
  • Novels

    Make Your Own Adventure
  • Crisis in Space by Michael Holt
  • The Companions of Doctor Who
  • Turlough and the Earthlink Dilemma by Tony Attwood
  • Virgin Missing Adventures
  • The Crystal Bucephalus by Craig Hinton
  • Lords of the Storm by David A. McIntee
  • Past Doctor Adventures
  • Deep Blue by Mark Morris
  • Imperial Moon by Christopher Bulis
  • The King of Terror by Keith Topping
  • Short stories

  • "Birth of a Renegade" by Eric Saward (Radio Times Doctor Who 20th Anniversary Special)
  • "Zeitgeist" by Craig Hinton (Decalog 3: Consequences)
  • "Qualia" by Stephen Fewell (Short Trips: Companions)
  • "Rome" by Marcus Flavin (Short Trips: The History of Christmas)
  • "Comforts of Home" by Pete Kempshall (Short Trips: The History of Christmas)
  • "One Wednesday Afternoon" by Alison Jacobs (Short Trips: A Day in the Life)
  • "The Assassin's Story" by Andrew Collins (Short Trips: Repercussions)
  • "Observation" by Ian Farrington (Short Trips: Life Science)
  • "Lant Land" by Jonathan Morris (Short Trips: Life Science)
  • "White Man's Burden" by John Binns (Short Trips: Past Tense)
  • "Last Minute Shopping" by Neil Perryman (Short Trips: A Christmas Treasury)
  • "The Misadventure of Mark Thorne" by Andy Frankham (Short Trips: Snapshots)
  • "Piecemeal" by James Swallow (Short Trips: Snapshots)
  • "Do You Believe in the Krampus?" by Xanna Eve Chown (Short Trips: The Ghosts of Christmas)
  • "One Step Forward, Two Steps Back" by Chris Thomas (Short Trips: Defining Patterns)
  • "Gudok" by Mags L Halliday (Short Trips: Transmissions)
  • "The Darkest Corner" by Adrian Middleton (Shelf Life)
  • "Fair Exchange" by Mike Morgan (Shelf Life)
  • Comics

  • "The Lunar Strangers" by Gareth Roberts and Martin Geraghty (Doctor Who Magazine 215–217)
  • References

    Vislor Turlough Wikipedia