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John Lucarotti (1926–1994)

Author of Doctor Who: Marco Polo

10+ Works 917 Members 9 Reviews

Works by John Lucarotti

Doctor Who: Marco Polo (1984) — Author — 310 copies, 3 reviews
Doctor Who: The Aztecs (1984) 281 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Massacre (1987) 186 copies, 1 review
Doctor Who: The Aztecs [videorecording] (2003) — Writer — 60 copies, 2 reviews
Doctor Who: The Doctors Revisited: 1-4 (2013) — Writer — 24 copies

Associated Works

Doctor Who Yearbook 1992 (1991) — Contributor — 26 copies
The Avengers - The Lost Episodes: Volume 7 (2017) — Contributor — 5 copies
In●Vision: The Ark in Space (1988) — Contributor — 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Lucarotti, John Vincent
Birthdate
1926-05-20
Date of death
1994-11-20
Gender
male
Occupations
screenwriter
novelist
radio scriptwriter
Organizations
Royal Navy
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
Short biography
[from Penguin Random House website]
John Lucarotti was born in England and spent nine years in the Royal Navy during and after the Second World War. He then went to North America to work for Imperial Oil. It was here that he began writing. Later, he scripted an eighteen-part radio series about the life of Marco Polo for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, but at one point found himself earning more money as an encyclopedia salesman than as a writer. Consequently he decided to focus on the US market. By the late Fifties he had taken Canadian citizenship, and then returned to England, where he became involved in TV work.

He had recently moved to Majorca when, at Syndey Newman's suggestion, David Whitaker approached him to write for Doctor Who. Remembering his CBC series, he chose Marco Polo as his subject. Throughout the Sixties and Seventies, Lucarotti continued a successful TV career, creating the shows Operation Patch and The Ravelled Thread, among others, and contributing scripts to The Avengers, Doctor Who, Ghost Squad, Joe 90, The Man in Room 17, Murder Bag, New Scotland Yard, The Protectors, Moonbase 3, The Onedin Line, Star Maidens and Into the Labyrinth, his last credited screen work in 1981. He novelised his 1976 serial Operation Patch (Target, 1976) and the 1979/1980 series The Ravelled Thread (Puffin Books, 1979). He contributed the first "Brief Encounter" short story for Doctor Who Magazine in 1990, in which the author met the First Doctor in a French bar. The story was reprinted in the 1992 Doctor Who Yearbook (Marvel, 1991). John Lucarotti died in Paris, France, on 20 November 1994 aged 68.
Cause of death
spinal cancer
Nationality
UK (birth)
Canada (naturalized)
Birthplace
Aldershot, Hampshire, England, UK
Places of residence
Majorca, Spain
Place of death
Paris, Île-de-France, France

Members

Reviews

11 reviews
This is a novelization of one of the First Doctor’s entirely missing serials (at least at the time of this review). It’s one of the “historical” stories, with the Doctor, Susan, Ian, and Barbara. The crew are stranded on the roof of the world when Marco Polo comes upon them and rescues them—but for a price: he wants to give the TARDIS to Kublai Khan as a gift because a “flying caravan” will make him the most powerful ruler in the world. Naturally the Doctor and crew don’t show more want that. And meanwhile, the war lord Tegana is also interested in keeping the TARDIS for himself. From what I’ve read online, the novelization differs in some ways from the original story, most notably in the ending, but I liked the book ending better. Overall this is a good retelling. show less
http://nhw.livejournal.com/1015730.html?#cutid1

Doctor Who - Marco Polo is certainly the best of John Lucarotti's three Who books (the other two being Doctor Who - The Aztecs and Doctor Who - The Massacre). Possibly the need to be fairly concise - cutting down from a seven episode story, rather than writing up from four - made a difference. It's a cracking good story anyway, and the fact that we have only sound rather than video records of it makes Lucarotti's presentation all the more show more valuable. He has a rather peculiar fascination with detailing the various different Chinese prawn dishes that the Tardis crew consume en route, but this of course just adds to the depth of the setting. Really rather a good one. show less
http://nhw.livejournal.com/871029.html

I was disappointed by Lucarotti's novelisation of The Massacre, which stuck much more closely to his original script than the show as broadcast. Here again he has added bits and pieces which presumably were in his original concept, and I was again disappointed, but for a different reason: the narration is strangely flat, and you really miss the performances of the actors breathing life into Lucarotti's lines back in 1964. One cannot help but feel that show more the production team on the whole did Lucarotti a favour by editing his material. Also he has a really annoying habit of mixing indirect speech with direct speech, which reads like a desperate attempt to make a novel out of a TV script. show less
http://nhw.livejournal.com/825455.html

The novelisation of The Massacre strays some way from the story as broadcast: we experience it as a flashback from the First Doctor's point of view, at a moment when he has temporarily made his peace with the Time Lords and is relaxing in the garden from which he is wrenched for The Five Doctors. Rather than the Doctor disappearing from the scene as he does in the TV story, here he and Steven get completely sucked into the Protestants' attempts to show more discredit the Doctor's double, the Abbot of Amboise, and to be honest it is all rather confusing; apparently the story had to be rewritten to allow for Hartnell's health (or the unusability of Lucarotti's original script, depending what version you believe). We get the impression that because of the Doctor's interference to save Anne Chaplet, the Time Lords get grumpy with him again. Dodo Chaplet, who appears in the last few minutes of the TV version, does not appear at all here except in that her arrival is referred to by the Time Lords in the epilogue. show less
½

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Statistics

Works
10
Also by
3
Members
917
Popularity
#27,978
Rating
½ 3.3
Reviews
9
ISBNs
25

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