I guess he got tired of the same question asked over and over again? 🤣

Since it’s unlikely the BBC will be sacking the show runner and exec producer, nor severing ties with Bad Wolf, Eccleston’s ninth Doctor is indefinitely benched…

Update:

@[email protected] supplied a link to a recording of the panel, and Eccleston provides a few more details, transcribed below. Just a few minutes in, Eccleston reminisces about looking out for Piper, this being her first big acting gig:

CE: This was pre MeToo, it was pre BlackLivesMatter, it was pre all this mental awareness stuff, wasn’t it?

BP: Yeah. […] It was more lawless.

CE: It was lawless, as we found out subsequently.

On the shooting experience of one episode:

CE: We were filming an episode, and because the director was atrocious we ran three hours late. You know, the crew were not happy, we weren’t happy.

He says he and Piper were late for the read-through of Dalek because of this, so if anyone is privy to the production schedule they can probably figure out if this is the same guy who was to blame for the exploding sofa…

On the circumstances of Eccleston’s departure:

BP: I don’t know if you remember this, but when you said you were going, I wanted to go as well.

CE: I didn’t know that […] The whole thing was politically manipulated by others. It interfered with our relationship, but that’s another story.

On what would be required for him returning to the character of the Doctor:

CE: (without hesitating) Sack Russell T Davies, sack Jane Tranter, sack Phil Collinson, sack Julie Gardner, and I’ll come back. So can you arrange that?

Q: Did you find it hard to be associated with the character, given —?

CE: (breaks in) Not at all. I love being associated with the character, just don’t like being associated with those people and the politics that went on in the first series. The first series was a mess, and it wasn’t to do with me or Billie. It was to do with the people who were supposed to make it, and it was a mess. And the first series of any show […] First series, nobody wants to know. The BBC were like, “We’re gonna keep a big distance from this”. And then as soon as it was a success, they were all up close going, “I was responsible for that!” but they were all like… at a distance, like “This is a folly” — “Eccleston’s folly”, “Piper’s folly”, “Russell T Davies’ folly” […] They wouldn’t come anywhere near us, and then they’d jump on the bandwagon. Those kind of politics I’m not very good at handling. I can’t swallow that shit.

When an audience member expresses hia sympathy at what Eccleston went through on the set:

CE: Listen, it wasn’t like being down the pit. It’s just politics! Everybody’s got a job, you all work with people you don’t like. Whether you’re an actor, [in] a plastic moulding factory or… You know, a boozer. Listen — I was getting paid a lot of money. It’s fine. (Laughs) Please don’t feel sorry for me!

Whatever problems existed with some directors on the first series, it was definitely not the case with Joe Ahearne, whose work and aesthetic both Eccleston and Piper wax poetic about; Eccleston has continued working with him and they still have projects in development.

edit — removed the link to the second hand source which was, admittedly, a trash site.

  • Ech@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    Eccleston was 40 by this time, a seasoned professional, and a socially conscientious one too. According to the same rumours, he was furious with the conditions of the first block shoot and went to management — which would be Davies, Tranter, Collinson and Gardner, the same foursome that are running the show again now. Whatever he demanded of them, whatever their response was, we don’t know for sure — but it appears that wass the straw that broke the camel’s back for him.

    As he says in the panel recording, there were genuine highlights later in the production but apparently they couldn’t outweigh the damage that was done to his working relationship with the showrunner and producers.

    That’s interesting. From this it sort of sounds like it’s mutual bad blood between them, not just Eccleston. Regardless, it’s a shame that all this happened. Though I don’t judge him for being soured on the work environment, he really was great.

    Add to all the above that it has since come to light how John Barrowman made it a running joke to get naked on set and come up behind others to put his penis on them. As a prank, sure, but it probably riled up an actor like Eccleston, who has gone on to deny working with “that prick” again.

    More seriously Noel Clarke has been accused of sexual harrasment by a score of female crew and colleagues — actions that have taken place on productions such as Doctor who. I’m pretty sure that and Barrowman’s nude pranks is what Eccleston refers to when he talks about “pre MeToo” lawlessness on the production.

    Big YIKES. I had no idea about all of that. And while John’s “antics” are maybe not surprising, I do feel it’s a discredit to everyone else to dismiss those actions as simple pranks. Sexual freedom is all well and good, but it still requires consent, which was clearly not given here. Without that, it’s sexual harassment. Period.

    • Handles@leminal.spaceOP
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      11 months ago

      Can’t disagree with you that touching others with your junk falls under sexual harassment, even if you mean it as a joke. I only meant to emphasise that it’s a whole other degree of severity when it comes to Noel Clarke levels of predation.

      • RampantParanoia2365@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        I can chalk one up to being a severely stupid and misguided frat boy type joke that he hopefully regrets after growing up a bit. The other is just plain predatory.

        • Handles@leminal.spaceOP
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          11 months ago

          Don’t think that Barrowman has done this just once. It was so common and well-known that it’s referenced it in a farewell tribute song to RTD and Julie Gardner when they left Doctor who in 2009. This was a public webcast, it was common knowledge.

          Nor has he regretted it enough to stop or improve his behaviour. This 2017 tweet has a video clip of him recounting how he sent an Arrow co-star pictures of himself posing naked around her trailer while she was busy on set and couldn’t intervene.

          He never stopped, and he never stopped bragging about it.

          • RampantParanoia2365@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            God fucking dammit. Well, at least photos aren’t physical contact? He probably wouldn’t pull that shit if she was still Ruby.