Susan Foreman

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Template:Doctorwhocharacter Susan Foreman is a fictional character in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. She is played by actress Carole Ann Ford.

Susan is the granddaughter and a companion of the Time Lord known as the Doctor. Her last name of Foreman is an alias taken from the junkyard, owned by an "I.M. Foreman" at 76 Totter's Lane where she and the Doctor lived during their time in London in 1963. The production team of the programme did not originally intend for the pair to be related, but writer Anthony Coburn created the family tie as he was disturbed by the possible sexual connotations of an old man travelling alone with a teenaged girl.

The Doctor explained in "An Unearthly Child" (the very first episode of Doctor Who) that he and Susan are exiles from their own people, and Susan added, "I was born in another time, on another world" (presumably Gallifrey). Susan claimed to have coined the name for the TARDIS, the Doctor's time machine, though later episodes seemed to indicate that it was a widely used term among Time Lords. (The unbroadcast pilot version of An Unearthly Child contained different dialogue including a statement that Susan was born in the 49th century.)

It is not even known if Susan is the character's real name, or another alias to make her appear more human. What is certain is that the Doctor and Susan had been already travelling for a time before they decided to settle in London to make repairs on the TARDIS; evidently this took longer than expected, as Susan states that she and her grandfather had been in London for five months. Susan began to attend the Coal Hill School in Shoreditch, where her advanced knowledge of history and science attracted the attention of schoolteachers Ian Chesterton and Barbara Wright. Attempting to solve the mystery of the "unearthly child", Chesterton and Wright followed Susan back to the junkyard, where they heard her voice coming from what appeared to be a police box. When they investigated further, they discovered that the police box exterior hid the much larger interior of the TARDIS, and were whisked away on an adventure in time and space with the Doctor and Susan.

Susan's age is given as 15 in An Unearthly Child though it is also not known if this is her actual age.

Susan continued to travel with the Doctor and her two teachers until the 1964 serial, The Dalek Invasion of Earth. During the events of that story, Susan fell in love with David Campbell, a freedom fighter in the 22nd century. However, Susan felt that she had to stay with and take care of her grandfather. The Doctor, realising that Susan was now a grown woman and deserved a future away from him, locked her out of the TARDIS and left after a tearful farewell. Carole Ann Ford had expressed a desire to leave the series as she felt the character of Susan was too limiting. Ford reprised the role of Susan on television in the 20th anniversary special The Five Doctors (1983), but no mention of David, or what became of him, was made.

In The Curse of Fenric (1989), the Seventh Doctor stated that he did not know if he had any family, which may indicate uncertainty of Susan's whereabouts. In 2005's The End of the World the Ninth Doctor stated that his homeworld had been destroyed and that he was the last of the Time Lords. Whether this included Susan, however, is uncertain, although in Father's Day the Doctor said his "whole family" died, and in The Empty Child he implied that he was no longer a father or grandfather.

Other appearances

A version of the character Susan, portrayed by Roberta Tovey, appears in the two Doctor Who film adaptations Dr. Who and the Daleks and Daleks - Invasion Earth 2150 AD. That version of Susan is much younger than her televsion portrayal. The film Doctor is a human inventor, so one may infer that version of Susan is also human.

On 9 July 1994, BBC Radio 4 broadcast Whatever Happened to Susan Foreman?, a humourous investigation into Susan's background. In this radio drama, Susan was portrayed by Jane Asher.

The character of Susan reappeared in the Eighth Doctor Adventures novel Legacy of the Daleks by John Peel, which took place after the events of The Dalek Invasion of Earth. At the end of that novel, Susan came into possession of the Master's TARDIS after he tried to capture her, and was once again able to roam time and space.

According to the Telos novella Frayed by Tara Samms, which takes place prior to 100,000 BC, Jill, a young girl in a besieged human medical facility on the planet Iwa, met and named the Doctor's granddaughter Susan, after Jill's mother. The canonicity of these stories, like all Doctor Who spin-offs, is unclear.

Ford played an alternate version of Susan in the Big Finish Productions Doctor Who Unbound audio plays Auld Mortality and A Storm of Angels. In the Doctor Who Unbound play Exile, an alternate Doctor, whose latest regeneration was female (played by Arabella Weir), settled on Earth in 2003 using the identity and 1963 school records of Susan Foreman

Relation to the Doctor

Susan and the Doctor regularly refer to each other as "grandfather" and "granddaughter", and it is clear that the original programme-makers' intent was that the two were biologically related. However, some later fans of Doctor Who were uncomfortable with the implications of this, suggesting as it does that the Doctor was sexually active at one point. Susan is therefore generally assumed to be Gallifreyan like the Doctor, although it has never been explicitly established whether she can regenerate. She does however display telepathic abilities on one occasion, in The Sensorites.

In the commentary to the BBC's DVD release of An Unearthly Child, actress Carole-Ann Ford makes the point that these suggestions that Susan was not the Doctor's real granddaughter were only first put forward in the 1990s. She reveals that little background information on Susan's character or past history was provided to her by the production team, and so to inform her performance, she would often discuss and invent ideas about Susan with co-star William Hartnell.

In 1983, Doctor Who's then-script editor Eric Saward wrote a short story dealing with the Doctor's departure from Gallifrey for the Radio Times Doctor Who 20th Anniversary Special. This story, "Birth of a Renegade", depicts Susan as a descendant of Rassilon, unrelated to the Doctor. Later Doctor Who spin-offs have generally ignored this account.

A later script editor, Andrew Cartmel, had another explanation of Susan's origins. This account, part of the "Cartmel Masterplan", was not used in the programme, but was used as background for several of the Virgin New Adventures novels, most notably Lungbarrow by Marc Platt. In this version, Susan was the granddaughter of the mysterious Gallifreyan founder known as the Other, who may have been reincarnated as the Doctor. The Doctor had traveled back to the dawn of Time Lord civilisation and rescued Susan, who recognised him as her grandfather. The Doctor did not initially recognise her, but knew that this was somehow true. This version of Susan's origins is reflected in many other Doctor Who spin-offs, which are of unclear canonicity.