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Davros

Oh, Davros. Yes, I know him. A rather tiresome figure, really. Always with the grand pronouncements and the even grander delusions of grandeur. Don't confuse him with anyone else; he wouldn't appreciate the oversight. And if you think of him as just a "creator," well, that's a rather simplistic, isn't it? He’s more of a… monument to ambition gone spectacularly, irrevocably wrong.


Davros

Davros is a fictional character (Fictional character)) from the labyrinthine, perpetually unfolding saga of Doctor Who. He’s not some fleeting villain of the week; he’s a recurring blight, a persistent shadow cast by the very foundations of the series. The brainchild of screenwriter Terry Nation, Davros first clawed his way into existence in the 1975 serial Genesis of the Daleks. He’s the architect of the Doctor’s most persistent nightmares, the twisted genius who forged the Daleks into instruments of cosmic terror. Davros isn’t merely a scientist; he’s a megalomaniac of the highest order, convinced that through his monstrous creations, he can ascend to a godhood that the universe, in its infinite indifference, simply refuses to grant him. Comparisons to historical figures like Adolf Hitler are… not entirely unfounded. Some have even described him as a grim fusion of Hitler and the late, brilliant scientist Stephen Hawking, a chilling thought experiment in the duality of intellect and malevolence.

Hailing from the desolate, war-torn planet Skaro, Davros is a product of the unending, brutal thousand-year conflict between his people, the Kaleds, and their adversaries, the Thals. His physical form is a testament to this relentless war. He’s horribly scarred, a wreck of a man, a condition often attributed in various spin-off narratives to the catastrophic bombing of his laboratory by a Thal shell. He possesses only one functional hand, and a single, unnerving cybernetic eye, a stark replacement for his own, which he can barely keep open for extended periods. For the greater part of his existence, he's tethered to a self-designed mobile life-support chair, a grotesque necessity that compensates for his absent lower body. This chair, in its functional, utilitarian design, would later serve as a chilling precursor to the very Dalek casings he would engineer. He is physically incapable of surviving outside this apparatus for more than a few fleeting minutes. And his voice, much like the Daleks he commands, is an electronically distorted rasp, a mechanical echo of the man within. His usual cadence is a soft, almost contemplative murmur, but when agitated, it can erupt into the same hysterical, staccatissimo fury that defines his creations.

Concept

Davros made his debut in the 1975 serial Genesis of the Daleks, a narrative penned by Terry Nation. Nation, the visionary behind the Daleks themselves, had already infused them with the chilling echoes of Nazi ideology, and he envisioned their creator as a scientist steeped in fascist fervor. The visual manifestation of Davros was a collaborative effort between visual effects designer Peter Day and sculptor John Friedlander, who ingeniously based Davros’s life-support chair on the lower chassis of a Dalek. Producer Philip Hinchcliffe offered a directive to Friedlander: consider the design of the Mekon from the classic Eagle comic Dan Dare – a large, domed head atop a withered, desiccated body.

The role of Davros was entrusted to Michael Wisher, an actor with a history of diverse appearances within Doctor Who and a past as a voice artist for the Daleks in serials like Frontier in Space, Planet of the Daleks, and Death to the Daleks. Wisher drew inspiration for his portrayal from the philosopher Bertrand Russell. To acclimate himself to the claustrophobic confines of the heavy mask, Wisher practiced wearing a paper bag over his head. [7] Friedlander’s mask, crafted from rigid latex, allowed only Wisher’s mouth to be visible; make-up artist Sylvia James meticulously shaded the mask’s tones and darkened Wisher's lips and teeth to conceal the seamless transition. [8]

In the serial Destiny of the Daleks, Davros is portrayed by David Gooderson, utilizing the same mask originally created for Wisher. This mask had been ingeniously sectioned into interlocking pieces to ensure a more precise fit. [9] When Terry Molloy assumed the mantle of Davros in Resurrection of the Daleks, a new mask was designed by Stan Mitchell.

In a 2023 minisode for Children in Need, titled "Destination: Skaro", Julian Bleach, who had previously embodied Davros in four episodes of the revived series, reprised the role. This iteration depicted Davros in a notably different state: free from disfigurement and his iconic life-support unit. In an interview for Doctor Who: Unleashed, executive producer Russell T. Davies explained this deliberate alteration, stating that future portrayals of Davros would similarly avoid his disfigurement and wheelchair dependency. This decision was a conscious effort to counter the problematic trope of associating disability with villainy in media.

"We had long conversations about bringing Davros back, because he's a fantastic character, [but] time and society and culture and taste has moved on. And there's a problem with the Davros of old in that he's a wheelchair user, who is evil. And I had problems with that. And a lot of us on the production team had problems with that, of associating disability with evil. And trust me, there's a very long tradition of this.

"I'm not blaming people in the past at all, but the world changes and when the world changes, Doctor Who has to change as well.

"So we made the choice to bring back Davros without the facial scarring and without the wheelchair – or his support unit, which functions as a wheelchair.

"I say, this is how we see Davros now, this is what he looks like. This is 2023. This is our lens. This is our eye. Things used to be black and white, they're not in black and white anymore, and Davros used to look like that and he looks like this now, and that we are absolutely standing by."

— Russell T. Davies

This reimagining of Davros as an able-bodied character elicited a varied response from the fanbase. [11] [12] [13] [14] [15]

Character History

Encounters with the Fourth Doctor

The Fourth Doctor (Tom Baker) first crossed paths with Davros (Michael Wisher) during the events of Genesis of the Daleks. The Doctor and his companions had been dispatched to Skaro with the grim objective of preventing the very genesis of the Daleks. Davros, then the chief scientist and leader of the Kaled's elite scientific division, was orchestrating new military strategies in their millennia-long war against the Thal race, the other dominant species on Skaro. Discovering that his people were undergoing evolutionary changes due to the prolonged exposure to nuclear weapons, chemical weapons, and biological weapons employed in the conflict, Davros took it upon himself to accelerate this process according to his own twisted design. He then housed these mutated, tentacled beings in tank-like "Mark III travel machines," designs that bore a disturbing resemblance to his own wheelchair. These creatures he christened "Daleks," a clever anagram of Kaleds.

Davros soon became utterly consumed by his creations, viewing them as the pinnacle of evolutionary achievement, a stark contrast to the perceived imperfections of other life forms. When members of his own Kaled race attempted to halt his catastrophic project, Davros orchestrated their annihilation, using the Thals as a means to this end, only to later have the Daleks turn on them as well. He then systematically purged his own elite scientific division, ensuring that only the most loyal would remain to witness the Daleks' ultimate triumph. However, his hubris proved his undoing. The Daleks, in their cold, logical progression, ultimately turned on their creator, eliminating his supporters and then firing upon Davros himself as he attempted to halt their relentless production line. [17]

The serial Destiny of the Daleks revealed that Davros had, in fact, survived the onslaught. He had been placed in suspended animation and buried beneath the rubble of his destroyed bunker. The Daleks, in their desperation, unearthed their creator to help them overcome a critical logical deadlock in their protracted war against the android Movellans. However, the Doctor intervened, leading to the destruction of the Dalek force. Davros was subsequently captured by the Doctor and placed into suspended animation once more, intended for a trial on Earth. [18]

The Dalek Civil War

In the Fifth Doctor story Resurrection of the Daleks, Davros (Terry Molloy) was liberated from his space station prison by a contingent of Daleks, aided by human mercenaries and Dalek duplicates. The Daleks required Davros' expertise to devise an antidote for a devastating virus created by the Movellans, which had brought them to the brink of extinction. Suspicious of his creations' inherent treachery, Davros began employing a syringe-like mind control device, concealed within a secret compartment of his wheelchair, on both Daleks and humans. Ultimately, he unleashed a sample of the virus himself, intending to eliminate the Daleks before they could exterminate him. He harbored ambitions of forging a new, superior race of Daleks, but seemingly succumbed to the virus himself, his own physiology proving too similar to that of the Daleks to resist its effects. [19]

The Sixth Doctor encountered Davros again in Revelation of the Daleks. It was revealed that Davros had managed to escape his fate at the conclusion of Resurrection and had gone into hiding on the planet Necros, posing as "The Great Healer" at a funeral and cryogenic preservation center known as Tranquil Repose. There, he engineered a clone of his own head to serve as a decoy, while simultaneously modifying his physical form to allow him to project bolts of electricity and enabling his chair to hover. Davros utilized the more intelligent frozen bodies for his own ends, creating a new breed of white-armored Daleks, fiercely loyal to him. The less intellectually gifted frozen bodies were repurposed as sustenance for the galaxy, ostensibly ending a widespread famine. However, he was eventually captured by the original Daleks and returned to Skaro to face judgment. [20]

Davros' final appearance in the classic series was as the Emperor Dalek in Remembrance of the Daleks. [21] By this point, his white and gold Daleks, now designated as "Imperial Daleks", were based on Skaro and engaged in conflict with the grey "Renegade Dalek" faction, who answered to the Dalek Supreme. Davros' physical form had been transplanted into a specialized Dalek casing, and his identity as the Emperor was only revealed in the series' concluding episode. The destruction of both Skaro and the Imperial Dalek mothership was apparently orchestrated (in the future) by the Seventh Doctor, who tricked Davros into utilizing the Time Lord artifact known as the Hand of Omega. This artifact caused Skaro's sun to go supernova, subsequently targeting their mothership. Davros managed to escape the ensuing cataclysm in an escape pod just as the ship detonated.

The Time War and the Reality Bomb

During the revived series, Davros was referenced in the 2005 episode "Dalek". The Ninth Doctor (Christopher Eccleston) explained to Henry Van Statten that the Daleks were the creation of "a genius... a man who was king of his own little world." [22] Later, in the 2007 episode "Evolution of the Daleks", the Tenth Doctor (David Tennant) alluded to the Daleks' creator, stating that he believed "removing emotions makes you stronger." [23] Davros made his physical return in the 2008 episode "The Stolen Earth", portrayed by Julian Bleach. The episode revealed that Davros was believed to have perished during the initial year of the Time War, when his command ship was reportedly destroyed at the Gates of Elysium, despite the Doctor's futile attempts to rescue him. However, Davros had been extracted from the time lock of the war by Dalek Caan (voiced by Nicholas Briggs), who used his own genetic material to construct a "new empire" of Daleks. These Daleks then imprisoned Davros in the Vault, leveraging his knowledge for their own purposes. Under Davros' tutelage, the Daleks proceeded to steal 27 planets, including Earth, concealing them within the Medusa Cascade, a location existing a second out of sync with the rest of the universe. [24]

The subsequent episode, "Journey's End" (2008), unveiled the purpose of the stolen planets: to serve as the power source for Davros' ultimate creation, the Reality Bomb. This weapon was designed to emit a specific wavelength capable of disintegrating the atomic bonds of all life outside the Crucible, effectively reducing everything in existence to nothingness across multiple realities. However, Davros discovered too late that Dalek Caan, having experienced a profound realization of his race's atrocities following his decision to save Davros, had manipulated events. Caan used his prophetic insights and influence to ensure the Daleks' eventual destruction, orchestrating the convergence of the Tenth Doctor and Donna Noble (Catherine Tate) to fulfill a crucial role. Despite the Doctor’s earlier attempts to intervene, Davros, having taunted the Doctor about turning his companions into killers and being responsible for countless deaths throughout his travels, furiously rejected the Doctor's offer of assistance. He accused the Doctor of being the architect of this destruction, screaming, "Never forget, Doctor, you did this! I name you forever: You are the Destroyer of Worlds!" Forced by these circumstances, the Doctor abandoned Davros to his presumed fate as the Crucible self-destructed. [25]

Remembering the Twelfth Doctor

Davros reappeared in the two-part Series 9 opener, "The Magician's Apprentice" and "The Witch's Familiar" (2015). Having escaped the Crucible's destruction, he found himself on a restored Skaro, his life sustained by the Daleks. However, as the aged Davros' health began to deteriorate, he recalled his own childhood, portrayed by Joey Price, encountering the Twelfth Doctor (Peter Capaldi) during the Kaleds' protracted war, prior to the events of Genesis of the Daleks. The young Davros, lost on the battlefield and surrounded by deadly handmines, was presented with the Doctor's sonic screwdriver as a means of survival. The Doctor, upon learning the boy's name, departed, leaving him to his fate. Davros, seeking a final act of vengeance against the Doctor, dispatched the serpentine Colony Sarff (Jami Reid-Quarrell) to bring him to Skaro. [26] When it appeared that the Doctor had lost his companion Clara Oswald (Jenna Coleman) to the Daleks, Davros manipulated the Doctor into using his regeneration energy to heal him, extending his own lifespan while simultaneously infusing every Dalek on Skaro with this potent energy. However, the Doctor exposed Davros' scheme, revealing that this infusion had also revitalized the decaying Daleks left to rot in Skaro's sewers, inciting a rebellion that led to the city's destruction. The Doctor then discovered the Daleks' capacity for mercy, a concept that had been allowed to exist in their vocabulary when he encountered Clara, who had been placed within a Dalek casing by Missy (Michelle Gomez). The Doctor and Clara managed to escape, the Doctor experiencing a profound realization that Davros had somehow imbued the Daleks with a sliver of compassion. He then returned to the battlefield of Davros' childhood, utilizing a Dalek weapon to neutralize the handmines, a direct result of the single instance of compassion within Davros' life, now embedded within the Daleks' design, ensuring Clara's safety. [27]

The Fourteenth Doctor

In the Children in Need sketch "Destination: Skaro" (2023), which is set during an earlier phase of the Kaled-Thal war, Davros (Julian Bleach) – still unscarred and without his cybernetic eye – is shown presenting a prototype Dalek, equipped with a robotic claw, to his assistant, Castavillian. When Davros briefly departs to attend to an urgent matter, the Fourteenth Doctor materializes in his TARDIS, accidentally destroying the robotic claw. Inadvertently, he suggests the name "Dalek" for the prototype and utters its infamous catchphrase, "exterminate." He then provides Castavillian with a plunger-tipped arm as a replacement for the damaged claw. Upon realizing the gravity of his unwitting contribution to the creation of his greatest nemesis, he hastily departs, proclaiming he was "never here." Davros returns, and after a moment of contemplation, approves of the new plunger arm.

Other Appearances

Comic Strips

Doctor Who Magazine has featured numerous comic strip narratives involving Davros. The initial installment, "Nemesis of the Daleks" (#152–155), alongside the Seventh Doctor, presented an appearance of a Dalek Emperor. When the Doctor addressed the Emperor as Davros, the response was a chilling "Who is Davros?" The Doctor initially surmised that Davros’s personality had been entirely subsumed. However, in the later strip "Emperor of the Daleks" (#197–202), this Emperor was revealed to be a distinct entity from Davros. Set chronologically prior to Remembrance of the Daleks in Davros' timeline, but after this event in the Doctor's timeline, the Doctor, accompanied by Bernice Summerfield, and with assistance from the Sixth Doctor, ensured Davros’s survival against the Daleks’ wrath. This allowed him to assume the title of Emperor, thus permitting history to unfold as it was destined. "Up Above the Gods" (#227), a brief vignette following this event, depicted the Sixth Doctor and Davros engaged in a conversation within the TARDIS.

Audio Plays

Terry Molloy reprised his role as Davros in the spin-off audio plays produced by Big Finish Productions. Notably, in Davros, which is set during the Sixth Doctor's era, flashbacks explored the scientist's life before his debilitating injury, an injury that was attributed to a Thal nuclear attack—an idea first introduced in Terrance Dicks' novelization of Genesis of the Daleks.

Davros , which does not feature the Daleks, purportedly fills the narrative gaps between Resurrection of the Daleks and Revelation of the Daleks. [28] In this audio drama, the scientist attempts to manipulate the galaxy's economy towards a war footing, mirroring Skaro's own militaristic society. The Sixth Doctor manages to thwart his plans, and Davros is last heard as his ship explodes, an event obliquely referenced in Revelation. However, the Doctor harbors the belief that he survived. Davros also alludes to a future plan to address famine, a plot point that ties into Revelation of the Daleks.

The Davros Mission is an original audio adventure (without the Doctor's involvement) included in The Complete Davros Collection DVD box set. It is set immediately after the television story Revelation, during Davros' departure from the planet Necros and the commencement of his trial. At the conclusion of Davros Mission, he successfully manipulates the Daleks, compelling them to carry out his commands. The Big Finish miniseries I, Davros also features trial sequences, but primarily delves into his early life. Across these four installments, his journey is traced from his boyhood to the period just preceding Genesis of the Daleks.

The Curse of Davros begins with Davros and the Daleks collaborating to alter the outcome of the Battle of Waterloo. They employ Davros's newly developed technology, which allows for the transposition of minds, enabling him to swap soldiers in Napoleon's army with his own Daleks. His ultimate objective is to replace Napoleon with a Dalek after the victory at Waterloo, thereby reshaping history to foster an alliance between humanity and the Daleks. The plan encounters complications with the arrival of the Sixth Doctor, who utilizes the mind-swapping device to exchange bodies with Davros. His intention is to subvert the Daleks' agenda from within. However, Davros, now inhabiting the Doctor's form, eventually manages to convince the Daleks of his true identity, planning to remain in the Doctor's healthy body while trapping the Doctor in his original, infirm state. In the climax, Davros and the Doctor are restored to their respective bodies with the assistance of the Doctor's new companion, Flip Jackson. The Doctor exposes Davros's true intentions to Napoleon, leaving Davros with an army of Daleks whose minds have been wiped. These Daleks are presumed to be the precursors to the "Imperial Daleks," first encountered in Remembrance of the Daleks.

In The Juggernauts, Davros is on the run from the original Dalek hierarchy. He devises a scheme to augment robotic Mechanoids with human tissue, intending to use them, alongside his own Daleks, to obliterate the originals. However, the Doctor uncovers the truth behind this plan. His companion, Mel Bush—who had unknowingly assisted in programming the new Mechanoids—exploits a backdoor she had incorporated into their programming, turning them against Davros. At the story's conclusion, the self-destruct mechanism of Davros's life-support chair detonates after he is attacked by the Mechanoids, resulting in the destruction of an entire human colony. The precise circumstances of Davros's survival to become the Dalek Emperor, as depicted in Remembrance, remain ambiguous. However, in the DVD documentary Davros Connections, director Gary Russell posits that the explosion of Davros's life-support chair leaves the listener to infer that little of Davros would remain. This aligns chronologically with Remembrance, which portrays Davros as merely a head contained within the Emperor Dalek casing. [29]

In Daleks Among Us, set after Remembrance, Davros returns to Azimuth, a planet previously subjected to a Dalek invasion. He presents himself as a victim of Dalek oppression to infiltrate an underground resistance movement opposing the planet's repressive government. This government, desperate to prevent riots stemming from individual actions during the Dalek occupation, has enacted a policy declaring that the Dalek invasion never occurred. Davros seeks the remnants of an experimental project he initiated on the planet. This experiment is revealed to be Falkus, a clone of Davros's original body intended to serve as a new vessel for his consciousness. Falkus has developed an independent personality since the Daleks' departure from Azimuth. Falkus attempts to acquire the Persuasion Machine, a dangerous device that the Seventh Doctor has been tracking with his companions Elizabeth Elizabeth Klein and Will Arrowsmith. However, the Doctor skillfully manipulates Falkus into using the reprogrammed Persuasion Machine to destroy himself and his Daleks, while Davros escapes in an escape pod. Davros is last seen stranded on the planet Lamuria, confronted by the spectral apparitions of the planet's former inhabitants, who seek to punish all criminals in the universe.

By the time of the Eighth Doctor audio play Terror Firma (set after Remembrance), Davros is commanding a Dalek army that has successfully subjugated Earth. His mental instability has escalated to the point where "Davros" and "the Emperor" exist as distinct personalities within him. His Daleks, recognizing this instability, rebel against him. By the story's conclusion, the Emperor personality has become dominant, and the Daleks agree to follow him, departing Earth.

In the fourth volume of the Time War series, which chronicles the Eighth Doctor's involvement in the Time War, after The Valeyard employs a Dalek weapon to erase the Daleks from history, the Dalek Time Strategist escapes this erasure by retreating into a parallel universe. In this alternate reality, the Kaleds and Thals have coexisted peacefully for centuries, and Davros remains fully human, married to a Thal woman. The Dalek Time Strategist manipulates this alternate Davros, persuading him to utilize his dimensional portal technology to merge various alternate versions of Skaro. The goal is to recreate the Daleks in the prime universe, convincing Davros that the Doctor is an enemy of the Kaleds, rather than the Thals. The narrative references the 'prime' Davros having been killed in the first year of the War (as mentioned in "The Stolen Earth"). The process of merging with his alternate selves causes the alternate Davros to acquire the injuries and memories of his counterparts, to the extent that he forgets his wife and the peace with the Thals. Ultimately, his presence restores the Daleks in the prime universe. However, the Dalek Emperor orders Davros to be placed in stasis, preventing his influence from igniting another civil war by causing division among the Daleks between loyalty to the Emperor and Davros.

Novels

The events of Terror Firma may potentially contradict original research? the narrative presented in the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel War of the Daleks by John Peel. In this novel, an unmerged Davros is put on trial by the Dalek Prime, a hybrid entity combining the Dalek Emperor and the Dalek Supreme. The Dalek Prime asserts that the planet Antalin had been terraformed to resemble Skaro and was subsequently destroyed in its place. This ruse was designed to eliminate Daleks loyal to Davros, both on Skaro (Antalin) and those who remained concealed within the Dalek ranks on the original Skaro. Despite uncovering evidence of a threat to Skaro through findings on 22nd-century Earth concerning Davros's mission to 1960s Earth, and observing the event via time-tracking equipment, the Dalek Prime permitted the destruction of Skaro to eliminate Davros’s allies. The Dalek Prime also claimed that the Dalek/Movellan war (and indeed most of Dalek history prior to the destruction of "Skaro") was fabricated for Davros's benefit. This was, in fact, another ploy designed to bait Davros into incriminating himself during his trial. Skaro is later depicted as intact and undamaged. One character observes that it is entirely plausible the Dalek Prime is lying to undermine Davros's claim to leadership of the Daleks, while simultaneously using foreknowledge of events to destroy and entrap Davros and his followers.

At the conclusion of War, Davros was seemingly disintegrated by a Spider Dalek under the Dalek Prime's orders. However, Davros had previously recruited one of the Spider Daleks as a sleeper agent for precisely such an eventuality. Even Davros himself was uncertain at the end whether he was being disintegrated or teleported to safety, leaving open the possibility of his return.

Short Fiction

Paul Cornell's somber vignette in the Doctor Who Magazine Brief Encounters series, "An Incident Concerning the Bombardment of the Phobos Colony," takes place at some point between Resurrection of the Daleks and Davros's assumption of the title of Emperor.

Theatre

In 1993, Michael Wisher, the original Davros, alongside Peter Miles, who had portrayed his associate Nyder, reprised their roles in an unauthorized, one-off amateur stage production titled The Trial of Davros. The play's plot centered on the Time Lords putting Davros on trial, with Nyder appearing as a witness.

Terry Molloy subsequently played Davros in a remounting of the play, again with Miles, for another one-off production in 2005. During this performance, specially filmed footage depicted Dalek atrocities.

In 2008, Julian Bleach appeared live as Davros at the Doctor Who Prom, dramatically declaring the Royal Albert Hall his new palace and the audience his "obedient slaves." [30]

Unofficial BBC Representation

BBC staff have a tradition of creating parodies of their own programming for internal Christmas events and parties. The BBC's 1993 Christmas tape satirized the perceived robotic, dictatorial, and ruthless management style of its then Director-General, John Birt, by portraying him as Davros taking over the BBC. The parody depicted him orchestrating bizarre departmental mergers, awarding himself a bonus, and singing a song to the tune of "I Wan'na Be Like You (The Monkey Song)" detailing his ambitious plans. [31]

List of Appearances

Television
Comic Strips
  • Nemesis of the Daleks (Doctor Who Magazine) (implied)
  • [Emperor of the Daleks]
  • Up Above the Gods (Doctor Who Magazine)
Audio Plays

Played by Terry Molloy, except where noted.

Short Fiction
  • "An Incident Concerning the Continual Bombardment of the Phobos Colony" by Paul Cornell, Doctor Who Magazine No. 168
Original Novels
Video Games
  • Dalek Attack (later revealed to be a fabrication by the Doctor in the Land of Fiction)
  • Lego Dimensions Doctor Who level expansion pack "The Dalek's Extermination of Earth" features Davros and the Daleks as the primary antagonists.
Theatrical Productions
  • The Trial of Davros , 14 November 1993, 16 July 2005 (played by Michael Wisher in 1993 production, Terry Molloy in 2005 production)
  • Doctor Who Prom, 27 July 2008 [30] [32] (played by Julian Bleach)

Other Media

On 26 November 2007, a DVD box set was released compiling all of Davros's appearances from the show's original run, including Genesis of the Daleks, Destiny of the Daleks, Resurrection of the Daleks, Revelation of the Daleks, and Remembrance of the Daleks.

See Also