Omega (Doctor Who)

Omega (Doctor Who)
Doctor Who character
Omega (Arc of Infinity).jpg
Omega in Arc of Infinity
Omega
Affiliated Rassilon, the Other
Species Time Lord
Home planet Gallifrey
Home era Rassilon Era
First appearance The Three Doctors
Last appearance Arc of Infinity
Portrayed by Stephen Thorne
Ian Collier
Peter Davison

Omega is a fictional character from the long-running British science fiction television series, Doctor Who. In the context of the series, Omega is known as one of the founding fathers of the Time Lords of the planet Gallifrey, and is a revered figure in Time Lord history together with the equally legendary Rassilon; the Third Doctor refers to him as the Time Lords' "greatest hero". He first appeared in the 10th anniversary story, The Three Doctors.[1]

The character was portrayed in The Three Doctors by actor Stephen Thorne[1] and in Arc of Infinity by both Ian Collier and Peter Davison.[2]

Contents

Character history

Omega was a stellar engineer and High Council member on Gallifrey who developed the Hand of Omega, a remote stellar manipulator which could be used to control the reactions within a star.[3] Using the Hand, Omega performed adjustments on a star near Gallifrey's in an attempt to provide a power source for the time travel experiments he conducted with Rassilon. However, Omega was thought killed in the resulting supernova, which then collapsed into a black hole.

Rassilon subsequently captured the nucleus of the black hole and used its power to perfect time travel technology. Rassilon then took control of Gallifrey as Lord President. The nucleus eventually became known as the Eye of Harmony,[4] and Omega's name passed into heroic legend.[1]

Millennia later, during the events of the Doctor Who serial The Three Doctors, it was revealed that Omega had not died, but had rather been sent through the event horizon into an antimatter universe and had been trapped there since then; although he was able to shape that universe according to his will, it meant that he could not leave that universe. His exile and solitude turned him quite insane, and he sought revenge on the Time Lords for "abandoning" him. Despite the Third Doctor's assurances that he was revered among the Time Lords and still remembered fondly, Omega still sought retribution.[1] He made two attempts in the television series to re-enter the positive matter universe, in The Three Doctors where he attempted to force the Doctor to take his place in the antimatter universe so that he could depart it, and in the serial Arc of Infinity where he attempted to create a new body for himself using the Doctor's biological data.[2] Both attempts were thwarted by the Doctor, with his universe being destroyed in The Three Doctors when he was tricked into touching the Second Doctor's recorder- which had remained matter when the others were converted into antimatter-, and his new body was seemingly destroyed in Arc of Infinity before it could convert back to antimatter and destroy Earth.

Other appearances

The audio play Omega featured Omega as a central character[5] and revealed that Omega's real name was Peylix, "Omega" being the grade he received at the Time Lord Academy — the lowest possible grade — which stuck to him as a cruel nickname. However, in addition to issues concerning the canonicity of the spin-off media and the fact that in most media, Time Lord society was founded after the supposed death of Omega, the story is largely told from the point of view of an insane Omega with confused memories. This makes the accuracy of this information uncertain.

Omega in The Three Doctors.

In the spin-off novels, the partnership of Rassilon and Omega in Time Lord history is rounded off by the shadowy figure of the Other. Some accounts suggest that Rassilon misled Omega into believing that he would survive the stellar experiment. The Doctor Who Monthly comic strip Star Death by Alan Moore (DWM #47) attributed the supernova to an attack by the Order of the Black Sun, an enemy of the Time Lords from 30,000 years in their future, the first strike (from the Time Lords' point of view) of a time war. The same story also identified the star as Qqaba.

Omega also appears in the 1998 BBC Books Doctor Who novel The Infinity Doctors by Lance Parkin [6] (which also mentioned Qqaba), although as it is never quite specified if the novel takes place in the actual Doctor Who universe or an alternate reality, whether this was the "real" Omega or an alternative version is unclear. The novel reprises various events from both television appearances, although it creates an original story from them. In this story Omega exists behind a locked door inside the light year long spacestation, the Needle, which sticks out of a Blackhole at the end of the universe. The Needle was formed from the remains of a TARDIS originally owned by the Time Lord Savar, who had been trying to rescue Omega from the anti-matter universe. However, once Savar arrived, Omega offered him his heart's desire. Savar panicked and tried to leave, but his TARDIS couldn't escape. Savar abandoned it in an escape unit. From the Needle, Omega learns how to create and control "the effect" a space/time anomaly that allows him to rewrite history. The novel also established the existence of Omega's wife, who after his accident became the Doctor's wife and the mother of his thirteen children. After she was shot in the matter universe (in Parkin's Virgin Missing Adventures novel Cold Fusion), Omega rescued her and brought her to his universe.

Omega appears as a nemesis to the Sixth Doctor in the Make your own adventure with Doctor Who (Find Your Fate in the United States) book Search for the Doctor by Dave Martin. In this book, the reader must make the right choices in order to rescue the Sixth Doctor from Omega. Earlier, the first of Martin's juvenile novels starring his own creation, the robot dog K-9, featured a character called Omegon, whose back story and role in Time Lord history is very similar to that of Omega, and who also claims to have previously met the Doctor.

In Chris Roberson's short story "Annus Mirabilis" from the second volume of Tales of the Shadowmen, it is strongly indicated that the French science fiction character Doctor Omega is the First Doctor, with him assuming the name Omega as a reference to Omega the Time Lord.

References

  1. ^ a b c d "BBC episode guide for The Three Doctors" (in British English). BBC website: British Broadcasting Corporation, written by Paul Cornell, Martin Day, Keith Topping, David J. Howe and Stephen James Walker. pp. 1. http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/threedoctors/detail.shtml. Retrieved 3 January 2010. 
  2. ^ a b "BBC episode guide for Arc of Infinity" (in British English). BBC website: British Broadcasting Corporation, written by Paul Cornell, Martin Day, Keith Topping, David J Howe and Stephen James Walker. 1995, 1998. http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/arcinfinity/detail.shtml. Retrieved 3 January 2010. 
  3. ^ "BBC episode guide for Remembrance of the Daleks" (in British English). BBC website: British Broadcasting Corporation, written by Paul Cornell, Martin Day, Keith Topping, David J. Howe and Stephen James Walker. pp. 1. http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/remembrancedaleks/detail.shtml. Retrieved 3 January 2010. 
  4. ^ "BBC episode guide for The TV Movie" (in British English). BBC website: British Broadcasting Corporation, written by Paul Cornell Martin Day, Keith Topping, David J. Howe and Stephen James Walker. pp. 1. http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/classic/episodeguide/tvmovie/detail.shtml. Retrieved 3 January 2010. 
  5. ^ "Big Finish Productions page on Omega". Big Finish Productions website: Big Finish Productions. http://www.bigfinish.com/47-Doctor-Who-Omega. Retrieved 3 January 2010. 
  6. ^ Parkins, Lance (1998). The Infinity Doctors (35 ed.). BBC Worldwide. pp. 280. ISBN 05634059109780563405917. http://books.google.com/books?id=O0UJAAAACAAJ&dq=the+infinity+doctors&cd=1. Retrieved 3 January 2010. 

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