The BBC have released interviews with the cast of the Doctor Who 50th Anniversary special,The Day Of The Doctor. The 75-minute episode stars Matt
Smith, David Tennant and Jenna Coleman with Billie Piper and John Hurt and will air worldwide on Saturday 23rd November.
Jenna Coleman spoke to the BBC about how lucky she felt to be working with her co-stars and filming the episode
INTERVIEW WITH JENNA COLEMAN – CLARA OSWALD
Back in the TARDIS, Jenna stars as companion to the Eleventh
Doctor, played by Matt Smith. Having met more Doctors than any other companion,
this time she comes face-to-face with more than one Doctor at once.
Question: What is it like starring in the 50th special,
one of the biggest year’s for the show?
Jenna Coleman: It’s fantastic. I feel really spoilt to be
honest and lucky to be in the show in the first place, but also to have come in
at this time. Whilst we were filming it felt very celebratory and special.
Working with David, Billie and John, I feel really pleased to be part of the
whole thing.
Q: What was it like working with David and Billie, was
there any competiveness between the different Doctors and companions?
JC: I think there’s a competitiveness in them that kind of
brings out the best in the Doctor. You see it on set that they are so totally
different Doctors, but they just complement each other. They make fun of each
other mercilessly.
Q: What were your thoughts when you first heard about
John’s character?
JC: So not only do we have David back, we also have John
Hurt starring as the Doctor, which is massively exciting. And again the three
of them complement each other totally, and it utterly works. It’s great to see
all of them together.
Q: There are some big stunts in this episode. What was
it like filming in the TARDIS dangling from a crane in front of crowds in Trafalgar Square ?
JC: It’s one of the major stunts that we did and one of the
big opening sequences at the beginning of the episode. We actually filmed it in
a couple of stages including at St. Athens airfield where me and Matt were in
the TARDIS being swung from side to side. Then in the second half, we were
actually lowered down into Trafalgar
Square . I think it will be quite an iconic image,
it certainly felt like that on the day. Although I didn’t get to the do the
really high stunt in Trafalgar
Square , which I was devastated about and was kind
of stood around begging people to go up, but I got to do the end of it.
I am quite scared of rollercoasters, but when you’ve got a
camera pointing at you and loads of crew then you kind of just tend to be
really brave. That’s one of the thrills of the show.
Q: What differences did you find filming in 3D compared
to 2D?
JC: Loads of differences. Well for a start the cameras are
massive, so you kind of can’t miss them and they’re really heavy for the poor
camera operators. The framing is quite different and when the
Doctor points you can kind of really react to it. I just
think the show lends itself so well and there are so many moments in it that
will work really well in 3D. On the first day I saw Matt in the TARDIS in 3D
and it felt like the world was coming right out at you.
The Day Of The Doctor
The Doctors embark on their greatest adventure in this 50th
Anniversary Special: in 2013, something terrible is awakening in London ’s National Gallery;
in 1562, a murderous plot is afoot in Elizabethan
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