Showing posts with label Doctor Who. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Doctor Who. Show all posts

Monday, September 24, 2007

The Key to Tamm

Warning: the following post will mean nothing, or at most very little, to anyone unfamiliar with the (entire history of the) BBC's Doctor Who. It does, however, have a tangible Estonian connection, so bear with me.

British actress Mary Tamm was interviewed on BBC Radio today in a shameless plug for the release of the box set containing her entire body of work on the sixteenth series of Doctor Who in 1978. Eagle-eyed viewers may already have spotted the clue to where the Estonian connection comes into this story: the actress' surname, Tamm, which is pretty much the local version of Smith (although it means 'oak tree').

I had always wondered - that is, since coming to Estonia - whether there was anything to her name linking her to the country, but had never bothered to check. What was revealed to me as I listened to the interview has probably been common knowledge for at least thirty years, and it is rather a blot on my fandomness to only discover it now. But, well, whatever really.

Turns out our Mary, who was born and raised in Bradford in England, was the daughter of Estonian refugees who fled the country after World War II. She spoke Estonian as her first language right up until she started school, and claims to still speak the language today, although not all that often, as she doesn't know that many Estonians.

I say 'claims to speak' because at the beginning of the interview the host attempted to greet her in Estonian with the phrase 'meeldiv teiega kohtuda' (i.e. 'pleased to meet you', as you might reasonably guess), and while it ended rather badly, it had started rather well - and yet our Mary asserted that whatever the host was trying to say, it certainly wasn't Estonian. I mean come on, even I could tell what the woman was getting at.

I wonder if I should write a long letter to Mary in Estonian and see if she replies. I could ask her all sorts of things about about her time on Doctor Who, since the DVD box set she was there to promote, The Key To Time, is currently winging its way to me courtesy Amazon.co.uk (and I've seen the episodes in question a million times before). I'd have to brush up on my science fiction/fantasy vocabulary a bit, but then I suspect if I did it might all be for nought.

At the very least, Estonia now has another actress with a tenuous link to the country it can parochially claim as its own.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Last but by no means least

Doctor Who
ABC, 7.30 pm, Saturday 22 September

Saturday, September 8, 2007

Here come the drums

Doctor Who
ABC, 7.30 pm, Saturday 15 September

Monday, September 3, 2007

It doesn't really exist, you know

Doctor Who
ABC, 7.30 pm, Saturday 8 September

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Blink and you'll miss it

Doctor Who
ABC, 7.30 pm, Saturday 1 September

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Bloody families

Doctor Who
ABC, 7.30 pm, Saturday 25 August

Sunday, August 12, 2007

It's just not in his nature

Doctor Who
ABC, 7.30pm, Saturday 18 August

Saturday, August 4, 2007

Let the sunshine in

Doctor Who
ABC, 7.30 pm, Saturday 11 August

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

The name's Who. Doctor Who.

Doctor Who
ABC, 7.30 pm, Saturday 4 August

Sunday, July 22, 2007

You too can look this pretty

Doctor Who
ABC, 7.30 pm, Saturday 28 July

Monday, July 16, 2007

Speaking of which...


Doctor Who
ABC, 7.30pm, Saturday 21 July

Does it get any better than this?

Doctor Who + Kylie Minogue :)

Monday, July 9, 2007

Those two words again

Doctor Who
ABC, 7.30 pm, Saturday 14 July

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

The same two words

Doctor Who
ABC, 7.30pm, Saturday 7 July

Friday, June 29, 2007

Two more words:

Or rather the same two repeated:
Doctor Who
ABC, 7.30pm, Saturday 30 June

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Two words:

Catherine Tate

Two more words:

Doctor Who

ABC, 8.35pm tonight

Monday, June 25, 2007

"Either past it or a bit dull"


According to The Economist, there are only two interesting heads of state in post-Communist Europe, and Estonia has one of them. (The other is Russia's Vladimir Putin.) Labelled 'brainy' and well-travelled, Toomas Hendrik Ilves is seemingly elevated to the ranks of much better known senior statesmen Lech Walesa of Poland and Vaclav Havel of the Czech Republic (but interestingly, not Estonia's former president, the late Lennart Meri). Perhaps he will attain the same status in time. He probably deserves to.

The article is ostensibly about the newly elected Latvian president, Dr Valdis Zatlers, whom the unidenitified author portrays as "an orthopaedic surgeon [who] admits collecting thousands of dollars in tips from grateful patients, on which he is now hurrying to pay tax" whilst decrying the fact that he doesn't even hold a wick, let alone a candle, to the country's outgoing leader, Vaire Vike-Freiberga, "a steely-minded émigré polyglot". He (for I am assuming the author is a he) clearly holds the multilingual in great stead. Especially those lucky enough to have been raised and educated in the West.

Not that I'd begin to argue the point. Toomas Hendrik Ilves' outright victory in the funny handshakes round of the presidential election last year - something no one was really predicting - was the most enthralling edge-of-your-seat television since Turkey won the Eurovision Song Contest in 2003 with the second last set of points from Slovenia. I hadn't been so chuffed about anything in Estonia in a long time. I actually jumped up and down, cheering madly. (Much as I had when Turkey won Eurovision.)

There's good reason for this, of course: he's the best thing to happen to the Estonian political scene in a long time. The president may only be a figurehead in this country, but with Ilves at the helm, there's no 'only' about it. And when you ponder the alternative, and look at other examples around Europe... well, take Poland, for instance. The writer from The Economist says its "ruling twins are refreshingly honest, but prickly and provincial". I'm sorry, but if you ask me, there's something fundamentally wrong about having two brothers as president and prime minister. Especially twins. And it's not exactly like they (or, by extension, their government) have made a name for themselves recently with their progressive attitude.

Fair dos, the article does single them (and others) out as exceptions. "A lot more typical," it continues, "are such political leaders as Slovakia's prime minister, Robert Fico, or Hungary's Ferenc Gyurcsany: wily political operators with [...] a populist touch. They show little interest in restarting reforms or in foreign policy." The irony is that these couple of lines could just as easily describe Estonia's prime minister, Andrus Ansip - who is head of the Reform Party. I'm not aware of any use for laurels other than to be rested on, and sadly, neither is the country's recently re-elected government. But again, given the alternative...

Thank goodness we have Toomas Hendrik Ilves at the tiller.

Oh, I almost forgot: tha article naturally also gets the thumbs up for being entitled Doctor Who?