‘Doctor Who’ Showrunner Russell T. Davies Admits The Topics He Writes About Are “Being A Gay Man”

June 22, 2024  ·
  John F. Trent

Russell T. Davies via DWhoUnreleased YouTube

Doctor Who showrunner Russell T. Davies recently admitted that the topics he writes about for television are “being a gay man or being a queer person.”

Russell T. Davies via BBC Newsround YouTube

As reported by Radio Times, Davies appeared at a BAFTA event called A Life in Pictures: Russell T. Davies, where he stated, “It’s not so much that there’s unexplored topics, but the topics I do write about keep changing – like being a gay man or being a queer person in society is changing now.”

He continued, “Ten years ago, or even [when we did] Queer as Folk 25 years ago, we were on the up, it was like, ‘Good times are here.’ Now they’re absolutely not. That wave coming from America where they’re trying to have legislation banning drag queens… that’s absolutely going to come here.”

Jinkx Monsoon in Doctor Who (2024), BBC

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Davies went on, “I think our rights are paper thin. The world is becoming unsafe, so I will always keep writing about that, I will always keep writing about male gay-ness, if people will have me!”

Davies then confirmed that his next show after Doctor Who will be focused on this, “The world has changed. The world changes around you. So, whatever I do next, after Doctor Who, I hope is about that, absolutely, because we’re in a very strange world now.”

Millie Gibson as Ruby Sunday in Doctor Who (2024), BBC

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These comments are unsurprising. Davies told Deadline it was his job to push transgender and queer stories. He said, “I know I was part of a rising tide of gay, lesbian, and other writers, all of us contributing to the soaps and chipping into primetime dramas, all of us slowly and then rapidly, increasing the visibility of queer characters on screen. And I’m lucky that I was one that burst through and got that onscreen.”

He continued, “I’m always aware, especially as time marches on, that I carry this legacy of being white, male and gay. And it’s my job to look beyond that because there’s no point in sitting still. I have to look at myself and be certain that I’ve moved on. I look to society and try to listen to what’s going on and open gateways.”

Davies then declared, “When you become a senior figure in television, it’s your job to open doors and let the next people through and to let trans and queer stories through and to become familiar with this language myself instead of settling into middle age.”

Alexander Devrient as Colonel Ibrahim, Ncuti Gatwa as The Doctor, and Lenny Rush as Morris Gibbons in Doctor Who (2024), BBC

Davies’ most recent comments come in the wake of him claiming that he was unsure about the future of Doctor Who following the show’s disastrous viewership ratings. Davies attempted to spin the ratings telling Radio Times, “I’m very proud of it! You know, they might not be the ratings we’d love. We always want higher. But they are building over the 28-day period. Episode 1, Space Babies, is already up to 5.6 million and counting. So it is getting there.”

He added, “I was brought back in to bring in a youthful audience. That’s been massively successful.”

Davies explained, “The audience no one ever gets are the under-30s. They just don’t watch television anymore. But those figures are astronomic for Doctor Who, it’s their top programme in that bracket.”

However, he went on to admit that following the show’s second season, which was already greenlit along with the first, the show’s future was “still up in the air.”

Ncuti Gatwa as The Doctor and Bonnie Langford as Mel in Doctor Who (2024), BBC

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Davies had previously informed SFX Magazine via Games Radar that he had plans for both a third and fourth season.

He told the outlet, “I’m planning season 3 now, there’s plans for season 4.”

Ncuti Gatwa as The Doctor and Millie Gibson as Ruby Sunday in Doctor Who (2024), BBC

What do you make of Davies’ comments?

NEXT: Report: ‘Doctor Who’ Showrunner Russell T Davies Redesigned The Sonic Screwdriver Because It Too Closely Resembled A Gun

 

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Sam

Russell T. Davis is a vivid example of how the lack of creative control and political engagement turns the work of a talented author into horrific garbage. As they say in the professional wrestling world, “never let wrestlers have too much influence over their stories.”

PavelH

These people live in their own reality. If you want to get shagged by another dude, go for it, do you really need to brag to the rest of world about your “bravery”? Isn’t the point of entertainment to entertain? Why are these sex-obsessed gays thinking the world revolves around them? No one else has that type of ego. Same as Lesley Hadland.

I recently watched some old TV shows like Married with Children where one of the main actresses was a lesbian. They didn’t bring it up in the show and she gave her best performance and she made a great couple with her second husband. The actors performed well and entertained the audience and there was none of that socio-political agenda, even if they brought up some gays in some of the episodes and they made great and funny side characters.

Until the BBC has its mandatory license fee taken away, this stuff won’t change, the last good TV show they made was Sherlock which also starred a gay actor with gay producers and the show was absolutely fantastic and they were smart enough to focus on the story and not who they shag at home. If there’s no financial penalty we’ll never get back to good TV, vote with your wallets.

CleatusDefeatus

jank monsoon is nothing but a poor man’s John Candy from “Armed and Dangerous”.

corvinus

I warned anyone that would listen about Davies’ return – many rejoiced instead. Apparently everyone forgot the gay agenda in his work from the beginning; perhaps they were too busy swooning over seeing David bloody Tenant again. I never could understand the cultishness of the American fanbase for nuWho.