Peri Brown
Perpugilliam Brown, also known as Peri Brown, is a fictional character played by Nicola Bryant in the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who.
An American college student majoring in botany, Peri is a companion of the Fifth and Sixth Doctors and a regular in the programme from 1984 to 1986. Peri appeared in 11 stories.
Character history
She first appears in the Fifth Doctor serial Planet of Fire, in which she encounters the Doctor and Turlough on the island of Lanzarote. After an encounter with the Master and the shapechanging android Kamelion, Peri asks to join the Fifth Doctor on his travels, while Turlough departs to return to his home planet of Trion.As they are both suffering from spectrox poisoning on Androzani, the Fifth Doctor decides to give what antidote remains to Peri, sacrificing himself to save her. As she looks on, he regenerates into the Sixth Doctor at the end of The Caves of Androzani and she continues to travel with him, despite the temporarily unstable Doctor having tried to strangle her.
Peri is a bright, spirited young woman in her early twenties, who travels with the Doctor because, like many of his companions, she wants to see the universe. Although she shares a more abrasive relationship with the Sixth Doctor, there is an undercurrent of affection in their verbal sparring.
Peri travels with the Doctor for an undisclosed period of time; some sources say she travels with him for mere months, while others say years. Between the events of Revelation of the Daleks and the season-long story The Trial of a Time Lord, the character is shown to have matured somewhat and her relationship with the Doctor becomes less combative.
In the second segment of the Trial story arc, Mindwarp, Peri is abducted by an arthropod-like creature named Kiv, who apparently transplants his brain into her body. Soon after, the Doctor is led to believe that Peri is dead, and is severely distressed by this. It is later revealed at the end of The Ultimate Foe that the evidence of Peri's death was faked by the Valeyard. Peri has, in fact, survived and been saved by, and was marrying, King Yrcanos of Thoros Alpha, a warrior king who had assisted the Doctor and Peri during the Mindwarp incident. It is not known what happens to Peri after she marries Yrcanos.
Other appearances
Peri Brown has the distinction of being the first humanoid television companion to appear in the Doctor Who Magazine comic strip. Her first appearance is in "Funhouse Part 1" in which she appears in two panels as a scantily clad apparition manifested by a villain. Two issues later, in "Kane's Story Part 1", she becomes a regular character in the strip, initially travelling with both the Sixth Doctor and his shape-shifting companion, Frobisher and continuing until the final part of "Up Above the Gods" in DWM #129. "Kane's Story" establishes that Peri at one point during her travels with the Sixth Doctor leaves the TARDIS for reasons left unrevealed and goes to live in New York City where she takes a job in an office, a job she angrily quits for reasons also unrevealed just prior to encountering the Doctor again and voluntarily rejoining him.The epilogue to the Target Books novelisation of Mindwarp by Philip Martin states that Peri returns to the 20th Century with Yrcanos where the latter becomes a professional wrestler. This tongue-in-cheek conclusion is not reflected in any televised story, and is generally ignored by fandom.
In the Marvel Comics graphic novel The Age of Chaos, written by Colin Baker, Peri lives out her life on Krontep as Yrcanos's Queen and has at least three grandchildren, who are principal characters in the story.
The Virgin New Adventures novel Bad Therapy by Matthew Jones reveals that, although becoming Yrcanos's Queen, Peri blames the Doctor for abandoning her. In the novel, the Seventh Doctor makes peace with Peri after she finds her way back to Earth through a temporal rift on Krontep, and returns her to her time.
The Telos novella Shell Shock by Simon A. Forward reveals that Peri had been sexually abused by her stepfather. This is hinted at in the Past Doctor Adventures novel Synthespians™ by Craig Hinton, which also reveals that her parents were Janine and Paul Brown, and that her father died in a boating accident when she was thirteen. She has two step-siblings from her mother's marriage to Foster.
Bryant voiced the character of Peri in several audio plays produced by Big Finish Productions, alongside both Peter Davison as the Fifth Doctor and Colin Baker as the Sixth Doctor. In several of these stories, the Fifth Doctor and Peri are joined by another companion, the Egyptian princess Erimem. The Sixth Doctor audio play The Reaping introduces Peri's mother, Janine Foster, played by American actress Claudia Christian. The play, set in 1984 as the Doctor takes Peri back to her time to attend the funeral of the father of a friend of hers, confirms Peri's late father's name as Paul and mentions that Howard and Janine Foster have gone their separate ways, but does not mention Peri's step-siblings. After the Doctor and Peri thwart a Cyberman attempt to set up a conversion factory in Baltimore, Peri plans to stay with her family, but Janine is subsequently killed due to an accident involving remaining Cyber-technology, cutting Peri's last familial tie to Earth and prompting her to return to her travels with the Doctor when he comes to visit her at her mother's grave.
In the audio play Her Final Flight, the Sixth Doctor finds Peri on a remote planet, where she apparently dies of a virus, although it is revealed that the entire story was part of a fantasy designed to make The Doctor kill himself.
Another audio play, Peri and the Piscon Paradox, states that the Time Lords made several adjustments to her time line, resulting in at least five alternate versions of Peri with different fates, including one that thought she never travelled in the TARDIS but instead moved to California and eventually hosted a talk show called The Queen of Worries after divorcing her abusive childhood sweetheart.
In the later audio The Widow's Assassin, the Doctor travels to Krontep to attend Peri's wedding, only be locked up for abandoning her. However, despite apparently spending five years in prison, the Doctor actually spends that time carrying out a complex long-term investigation into the death of King Yrcanos shortly after the wedding, eventually learning that 'Peri' is actually possessed by Mandrake the Lizard King, the Doctor's childhood imaginary enemy, who was 'extracted' from the Doctor's mind when he was exposed to Crozier's equipment. After transferring himself into Peri's body to expel Mandrake, the Doctor and Peri return to their true bodies and resume their travels together. In Masters of Earth, they arrive on Earth during the Dalek occupation, a year before the events of The Dalek Invasion of Earth from Earth's perspective, forcing the Doctor to help a future famous rebel figure escape without compromising history. In The Rani Elite, the Doctor and Peri visit a famous university and are nearly caught in a trap set by a version of the Rani who has already experienced the events of Time and the Rani; the crisis ends with Peri receiving an honorary degree in Botany to accompany the Doctor's honorary degree in moral philosophy.
Future show runner Steven Moffat mentions an unnamed "Warrior Queen on Thoros Beta" in his 1996 short story, "".
Bryant played the role of "Miss Brown" in the first three installments of the BBV video series The Stranger, opposite Colin Baker as the Stranger; although the character is never explicitly identified as being Peri there are nonetheless similarities in the two characters, with one major difference: Bryant uses her natural English accent for Miss Brown rather than affecting an American one as she did with Peri.
List of appearances
Television
;Season 21- Planet of Fire
- The Caves of Androzani
- The Twin Dilemma
- Attack of the Cybermen
- Vengeance on Varos
- The Mark of the Rani
- The Two Doctors
- Timelash
- Revelation of the Daleks
- The Mysterious Planet
- Mindwarp
- The Ultimate Foe
- Dimensions in Time
Audio dramas
- Slipback
;Fifth Doctor
- Red Dawn
- The Eye of the Scorpion
- The Church and the Crown
- Nekromanteia
- The Axis of Insanity
- The Roof of the World
- Three's a Crowd
- The Council of Nicaea
- The Veiled Leopard
- The Kingmaker
- Exotron & Urban Myths
- Son of the Dragon
- The Mind's Eye & Mission of the Viyrans
- The Bride of Peladon
- Whispers of Terror
- ...ish
- Her Final Flight
- The Reaping
- Year of the Pig
- The Nightmare Fair
- Mission to Magnus
- Leviathan
- The Hollows of Time
- Paradise 5
- Point of Entry
- The Song of Megaptera
- The Macros
- Peri and the Piscon Paradox
- Recorded Time and Other Stories
- The Guardians of Prophecy
- Power Play
- The First Sontarans
- Trouble in Paradise
- The Widow's Assassin
- Masters of Earth
- The Rani Elite
- Memories of a Tyrant
- Emmisary of the Daleks
- Harry Houdini's War
Short Trips audios
- Seven to One
- Wet Walls
- Murmurs of Earth
- To Cut a Blade of Grass
- Under Odin's Eye
Novels
- Crisis in Space by Michael Holt
- State of Change by Christopher Bulis
- Burning Heart by Dave Stone
- Bad Therapy by Matthew Jones
- The Ultimate Treasure by Christopher Bulis
- Players by Terrance Dicks
- Grave Matter by Justin Richards
- Superior Beings by Nick Walters
- Palace of the Red Sun by Christopher Bulis
- Warmonger by Terrance Dicks
- Blue Box by Kate Orman
- Synthespians™ by Craig Hinton
- Shell Shock by Simon A. Forward
- Blood and Hope by Iain McLaughlin
Short stories
- "Fascination" by David J. Howe
- "Timeshare" by Vanessa Bishop
- "Moon Graffiti" by Dave Stone
- "Hot Ice" by Christopher Bulis
- "A Town Called Eternity" by Lance Parkin and Mark Clapham
- "Turnabout is Fair Play" by Graeme Burk
- "Reunion" by David Carroll
- "Vigil" by Michael Collier
- "Five Card Draw" by Todd Green
- "The Stabber" by Alison Lawson
- "The Canvey Angels" by David Bailey
- "Light at the End of the Tunnel" by Mark Wright
- "The Ruins of Heaven" by Marc Platt
- "CHAOS" by Eric Saward
- "Graham Dilley Saves The World" by Iain McLaughlin and Claire Bartlett
- "A Star is Reborn" by Richard Salter
- "The Reproductive Cycle" by Matthew Griffiths
- "The Gangster's Story" by Jon de Burgh Miller
- "Categorical Imperative" by Simon Guerrier
- "Trapped!" by Joseph Lidster
- "Telling Tales" by David Bailey
- "A Life in the Day" by Xanna Eve Chown
- "Far Away in a Manger" by Iain McLaughlin
- "The Stars Our Contamination" by Steven Savile
- "Methuselah" by George Mann
- "See No Evil" by Steve Lyons
- "Return on Investment" by Rachel Steffan
- "Of Eden Stood Disconsolate" by Rachel Simpson Hutchens
- "Something Borrowed" by Richelle Mead
Comics
- "Kane's Story" / "Abel's Story" / "The Warrior's Story" / "Frobisher's Story" by Max Stockbridge and John Ridgway
- "Nature of the Beast" by Simon Furman and John Ridgway
- "Time Bomb" by Jamie Delano and John Ridgway
- "Salad Daze" by Simon Furman and John Ridgway
- "Changes" by Grant Morrison and John Ridgway
- "Profits of Doom" by Mike Collins, John Ridgway and Tim Perkins
- "The Gift" by Jamie Delano, John Ridgway and Tim Perkins
- "The World Shapers" by Grant Morrison, John Ridgway and Tim Perkins
- "Emperor of the Daleks" by Paul Cornell, John Freeman and John Ridgway
- "The Curse of the Scarab" by Alan Barnes and Martin Geraghty
- "Ground Zero" by Scott Gray, Martin Geraghty and Bambos Georgiou