Josephine "Jo" Grant,laterJo Jones,is a fictional character played byKaty Manningin the long-runningBritishscience fiction televisionseriesDoctor Who.Jo was introduced byBarry LettsandTerrance Dicksin the first episode ofDoctor Who'seighth season(1971) as a newcompanionof series protagonistthe Doctor,in histhirdincarnation (Jon Pertwee). After the Doctor's previous companionLiz Shaw(Caroline John), a scientist and intellectual, the production team looked to introduce a less experienced companion to act as anaudience surrogate.Jo appeared in 15 stories (77 episodes).

Jo Grant
Doctor Whocharacter
Promotional image of Jo Grant, as portrayed by Katy Manning onDoctor Who
First appearanceTerror of the Autons(1971)
Last appearanceTales of the TARDIS(2023)
Portrayed byKaty Manning
Shared universe appearancesThe Sarah Jane Adventures(2010)
Duration1971–1973, 2010, 2022-2023
In-universe information
AliasJosephine Grant
Jo Jones
AffiliationThird Doctor
UNIT
Eleventh Doctor
SpouseClifford Jones
ChildrenSeven
RelativesSantiago (grandson)
12 other grandchildren[1]
HomeEarth
Home era20th and 21st centuries

Within the series narrative, Jo is a junior civilian operative forUnited Nations Intelligence Taskforce,an international organisation that defends the Earth fromalienthreats, assigned as an assistant to the Doctor, who is initially stranded on Earth. Once he regains use of his time machine, theTARDIS,she accompanies him in travels across time and space. Jo departs the Doctor's company in the 1973 television serialThe Green Deathhaving fallen in love with a human professor. On television, she next encounters the Doctor over thirty-seven years later in the 2010Sarah Jane AdventuresserialDeath of the Doctor.

Manning and Pertwee enjoyed a close working relationship; Manning felt this added to the success of the partnership between Jo and the Third Doctor. Though her character was criticised for not being a progressive interpretation of a woman, Manning felt both thatfeminismwas not a contemporary concern and Jo had her virtues aside from her intelligence, such as her loyalty. The character's exit is generally considered one of the emotional high points ofDoctor Who's 1963–1989 run;Russell T Daviesfelt pressure to remain true to this exit when re-introducing the character in 2010 forThe Sarah Jane Adventures.[citation needed]

Appearances

edit

Television

edit

Jo first appears in the 1971 serialTerror of the Autons,having been assigned tothe Doctor(Jon Pertwee) as a replacement forLiz Shaw(Caroline John). Apparently, she gained the assignment to UNIT because her uncle, a high rankingcivil servant,had "pulled some strings".Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart(Nicholas Courtney) assigns her to the Doctor, who is initially dismayed when he finds out that she is not a scientist, but accepts her because he does not have the heart to tell her otherwise. An enthusiastic, bubbly and sometimes scatter-brained blonde, Jo soon endears herself to the other members of UNIT, especiallyCaptain Mike Yates(Richard Franklin) andSergeant Benton(John Levene). The Third Doctor is also particularly attached to her, and she is devoted to him, refusing to leave his side even where mortal danger is involved.

There is plenty of danger to go around as well, especially after theTime Lordsrestore the Third Doctor's ability to travel through time and space. Jo faces the hazards and wonders of travel with the Doctor with courage and plucky determination. Together with the Doctor and UNIT, she encounters such perils askiller daffodils,time-eating monsters,and renegade Time Lordthe Master(Roger Delgado). She isminiaturised,hypnotised,flungthrough time,nearlyaged to death,and menaced bygiant maggotsandancient dæmons.Over time, Jo also grows more confident and mature, until she is independent enough to stand up to the Doctor, which she does in her last serial,The Green Deathin May–June 1973. During the events of that story, Jo falls in love with Professor Clifford Jones (Stewart Bevan), a young,Nobel Prize-winning scientist leading an environmentalist group. At the end, she agrees to marry Jones and go with him to theAmazonto study its vegetation, the news of which the Doctor greets with a mixture of pride and sadness.

Jo Grant (now Jo Jones) returned in two episodes of the fourth series ofThe Sarah Jane AdventuresinDeath of the Doctor(2010), meeting her replacement companionSarah Jane Smith(Elisabeth Sladen) for the first time, and subsequently theEleventh Doctor(Matt Smith). The two attend a memorial service for the Doctor, but later learn aliens faked his death in order to steal the TARDIS using Jo and Sarah Jane's memories. Jo is still married, has seven children and twelve grandchildren, and travels with her grandson Santiago (Finn Jones); she is envious of Sarah Jane for having had several Doctor encounters since her departure, but has herself led a fulfilling life travelling the world promoting humanitarian and ecological causes. Ultimately, Jo and Sarah Jane's memories of their time with the Doctor are what defeat an alien plot to steal the TARDIS. After returning her to London, the Doctor discloses to Jo that he secretly visited her during the events of "The End of Time,"having checked on all of his previous companions before regenerating into the Eleventh Doctor.

Manning reprised the role of Jo in a cameo in "The Power of the Doctor"(2022), as part a support group of previous companion that start sharing their experiences of The Doctor.[2]

Other media

edit

TheSeventh Doctorencounters an alternate version of Jo in theVirgin New AdventuresnovelBlood Heatin an alternate timeline where the Third Doctor was killed and theSilurianshave conquered Earth (Doctor Who and the Silurians). A middle-aged Jo is featured in thespin-offnovelGenocide,byPaul Leonard,where she and Jones have a son named Matthew and are divorced, Jo collaborating with theEighth Doctorand his current companionSamantha Jonesto avert a plot to erase the human race from history. Alternatively, text stories in a UNIT-orientated special issue ofDoctor Who Magazine,written as in-universe articles, state that Jo, her husband Clifford and their eight-year-old daughter Katy "now" live in North Wales[3]and she is standing for Parliament as aGreen Partycandidate.[4]Jo's appearance inGenocidewas highlighted in a trailer for the re-launchedDoctor Whorange which was included on a number of BBC videos in 1997–78. The trailer used a clip fromFrontier in Spaceto illustrate Jo. She briefly appears in the novelSometime Never...as one of several companions abducted by current villains the Council of Eight, who sustain themselves by draining energy from the potential timelines of the Doctor's friends, the novel depicting her abduction and return to Earth after the Doctor defeats the Council.

Manning has also reprised the role of Jo in three "announcement trailers" for theBlu-rayreleases of theeighth,ninthandtenthseasons ofDoctor Whoon the series' official YouTube channel.[5][6][7]Each trailer depicts Jo in the present day as she encounters an iconic monster from each season: the giant maggots fromThe Green Deathin the season 10 trailer, theAutonsin the season 8 trailer and theSea Devilsin the season 9 trailer. Stewart Bevan also returns as Clifford in the season 8 and 10 trailers; however, after Bevan's death in 2022, Manning appears alone in the trailer for season 9, in which Jo mourns the loss of her husband.

Conceptual history

edit

Doctor Who(1971–73)

edit

For his first series, producerBarry Lettshad primarily worked on stories inherited from the previous production team. When it came to assessing his and script editorTerrance Dicks' approach to the next series, they identified a need to replace the Doctor's assistant, for the purposes of exposition and audience identification. Previous companionLiz Shawhad been conceived as a brilliant scientist who could discuss matters with the Doctor on an equal footing; the replacement would be younger and more naive, someone who could ask, "Doctor, what's all this about?" An early memo described Grant as "Not a scientist, though with enough basic background to understand what's going on.[8]Other sources, including Barry Letts, have said there was an initial idea to make the character more 'exotic' with a tougher, sexier edge, but not academically brilliant, so as to give the Doctor the much-wanted (by Pertwee) chance to play the father figure.[9][10]Along with the Brigadier's new second in command,Captain Mike Yates,the character of Jo Grant was inspired by the male–female companion pairing ofJamie McCrimmonandVictoria Waterfield,whom Letts had previously directed, with the intention of a possible romantic subplot for the two.[citation needed]Manning stated in a 1998 interview withSFXhowever, that "With Jon and I there was no need to put any love interests into the show because there was this closeness between Jo and the Doctor, and there was no room for them to have anything else going."[11]

Jon Pertwee reportedly identified Katy Manning (pictured) as the "perfect actress" for the role.

Letts and Dicks also intended that Jo Grant would be cast so as to go beyond the stereotype of a "pretty doll... who can just stand there and scream." They settled on young actress Katy Manning, whose personality had impressed in an otherwise shambolic audition. Others shortlisted for the part includedYutte Stensgaard,Shakira Baksh,Jenny McCracken,Cheryl Hall,andGabrielle Drake.[10]According to the commentary provided by Letts for the DVD release ofTerror of the Autons,Rula LenskaandAnouska Hempelalso auditioned for the role. The same DVD notes that Pertwee himself had spotted Manning in the lobby of the BBC TV Centre, but had not known who she was. He told Letts he had seen the "perfect actress" for the role, but Letts was unaware of who he was extolling. When Letts cast Manning and introduced her to the show's star, Pertwee was delighted and said "I told you she was the girl for the part".[12]Both Jenny McCracken andCheryl Hallexplain on the DVD commentary for the "Special Edition" ofCarnival of Monsters,that they were on the final shortlist of six actresses for the part of Jo, losing out to Manning. Barry Letts cast them both inCarnival of Monstersas a direct consequence of their auditions.[13]

Like previous companions, Manning's character was clothed in contemporaneous fashions and attitudes, providing reference points for the audience of a science fiction series that could not incorporate events of the day. Similar to Pertwee's Doctor, Jo Grant was an "action-style" character, with the actress performing some of her own stunts — understandably so, given that her diminutive stature could not easily be doubled by a male stunt performer — though it is debatable whether the character fully broke any stereotypes.[14][15]Reflecting on her appearances, Manning stated that feminism "wouldn’t have been discussed around my era" and was not a concern in the depiction of Jo. She felt Jo provided a good contrast to the Doctor's intellectual confidence; she is able to handle a situation one moment before acting irrational the next, this made it "exciting for everybody". Manning felt that though "academia was not her strong point...loyalty was" stating that the character would "go through hell and high water for any of the UNIT group".[11]Piers D. Britton, a writer of reference works ofDoctor Whofelt that Jo's characterisation posited her as subordinate to the Doctor; for example she encourages "the assumption that she is his ward". Jo's romantic interest, Clifford Jones, inThe Green Deathis posited both as "a younger counterpart to the Doctor" and "his 'appropriate' replacement within theheteronormative order".[16]

The Sarah Jane Adventures(2010)

edit

In April 2010, it was announced in a press release that the character would return in an episode of the fourth series of theDoctor Whospin-offThe Sarah Jane Adventures,also guest-starringMatt Smith(theEleventh Doctor).Elisabeth Sladen,who portrayed the lead role ofSarah Jane Smithin the spin-off, indicated that she was "delighted to be working with [Manning]", having known the actress for a very long time. Manning was surprised but very pleased to be asked to appear in theDoctor Whospin-off; playing Jo again was something she had "never really considered".[17]Doctor Who2005–2010 executive producer and creator ofThe Sarah Jane AdventuresRussell T Davieslater indicated in an interview withDoctor Who Magazinethat Jo's return would be more than a "cameo", and a "full-blooded" appearance.[18]

Davies felt pressure to remain true to the original character of Jo. In an interview withSFXhe stated that he watched old episodes of the show "for the first time ever" in planning a story within theDoctor Whouniverse. He wanted to "preserve the absolute beauty of what Barry Letts and Terrance Dicks did" with Manning's lastDoctor Whostory,The Green Death.[19]Manning was "surprised at how it all came back" and felt that Davies had "done a wonderful job of showing how Jo has developed over the years". She felt that Jo was still "the young and awestruck girl she was" but "tempered by experience and maturity."[20]Davies expressed his contention that the character had been left "with the promise of happiness, of adventure, of love and joy" and it would be wrong to interfere with that.[19]At the officialDoctor WhoConvention 'Panopticon' organized by theDoctor Who Appreciation Societyto celebrate the show's 30th anniversary in 1993, Manning was interviewed on stage withJon Pertweeand insisted that Jo would have divorced Dr Jones, stating "I tell you what, she's left him! The one she went.. no way! She definitely left him. She got half way up the Amazon and said 'this is not going to work'. So I would only come back if she wasn't still married". However, in the commentary for the DVD releases of bothThe Green Death(revised edition) andDeath Of The Doctor,Manning contradicted this statement, stressing that Jo would never have divorced and would have remained with Jones.[21]

Tales of the Tardis(2023)

edit

Drawn into a Memory Tardis, Jo reunites withClyde Langer(Daniel Anthony), whom she met during her appearance onThe Sarah Jane Adventures,to discuss her time with the Doctor and the events ofThe Three Doctors,comparing her friendship with the Third Doctor to Clyde's with Sarah Jane Smith. The off-screen voice of Stewart Bevan at the end of the episode suggests Jo's late husband Cliff has now joined her.

Media impact and reception

edit

In his 2005 book,Inside the Tardis: The Worlds of Doctor Who,James Chapman described Jo as a reversion to "the screaming bimbo type" as a "well-meaning but accident prone dolly bird". He claims however, that Manning's "engaging personality and 'kooky' sex appeal... made her one of the most popular Doctor Who companions". The character remains remembered for this sex appeal, particularly in light of a naked photoshoot in the magazineGirl Illustratedwith a Dalek prop which Chapman states "gave her an extra-diegetic significance in the popular history ofDoctor Who".[22]Lester Haines from the British technology news and opinion website,The Register,stated in light of a similar (clothed) photoshootKylie Minoguedid in 2007 to promote her role asAstrid Peththat she was "unlikely to replace Katy Manning in veteran fans' affections".[23]

In an online poll conducted by theRadio Timesin 2010, with over 3,000 participants, Jo was voted the ninth most popular companion out of forty-eight options.[24]Gavin Fuller ofThe Daily Telegraphlisted Jo as the eighth best companion inDoctor Whohistory, describing her as a "perfect foil" and "insanely loyal". He additionally felt that she and the Third Doctor had "one of the warmest Doctor-companion pairings of the original series, as clearly seen in her leaving scene".[25]In 2011, Mark Harrison of Den of Geek listed the character's exit as the third greatest companion farewell scene, stating it to be "the most emotional in Jon Pertwee's era" and "a bittersweet exit for one of the most popular companions."[26]Will Salmon ofSFXsimilarly listed Jo's departure as the fourth greatest farewell, noting how it was the first time the Doctor was "truly upset" since leavingSusan.[27]Russell T. Davies believed that emotional moments such as Jo's departure were strongly defined inDoctor Who'original 1963–89 run; being "so memorable [to fans] simply because they are the only tiny emotional moments in the entire output".[28]

Fraser McAlpine, reviewing Jo's appearances as companion forBBC America's Anglophenia blog felt to succeed as a foil to the "aloof" Third Doctor, having "the charm of nowadays on her side". He felt that Manning portrayed Jo's "mixed up innocence beautifully" and felt that her departure illustrated the Doctor's innate loneliness.[29]The A.V. Club'sChristopher Bahn stated that Jo was "one of [his] favorites", but that, despite her "sweet and daffy charm", she was "a big step backwards" from her predecessor Liz Shaw in terms of pairing the Doctor with someone equal.[30]Discussing Jo's return inThe Sarah Jane AdventuresserialDeath of the Doctor,Ian Berriman ofSFXmagazine thought that "Davies nails the character the moment she walks through the door – clumsy, babbling, sweet-natured". He felt that "It’s really good to have her back" and stated the interaction between Jo and Sarah Jane to be "a treat".[31]

References

edit
  1. ^"Twelve grandchildren, thirteenth on his way. He's dyslexia, but that'll be fine, great swimmer" - The Doctor,Death of The Doctor.
  2. ^Hegarty, Tasha; Opie, David (23 October 2022)."Doctor Who Boss breaks down that secret reunion scene".Digital Spy.Retrieved23 October2022.
  3. ^Leith, Tim,"Yates Speaks Out",Doctor Who MagazineWinter Special,1991,Marvel Comics Ltd.,p.21.
  4. ^Dylan, Andrew,"An Army of Shadows",Doctor Who MagazineWinter Special,1991,Marvel Comics Ltd.,p.6.
  5. ^Jo Grant Returns | The Collection: Season 10 Announcement Trailer | Doctor Who,16 April 2019,retrieved26 January2023
  6. ^Jo Grant vs the Autons... Again?! | The Collection: Season 8 Announcement Trailer | Doctor Who,25 November 2020,retrieved26 January2023
  7. ^Defenders of Earth! | The Collection: Season 9 Announcement Trailer | Doctor Who,26 January 2023,retrieved26 January2023
  8. ^"Archived copy".bbc.co.uk.Archived fromthe originalon 16 April 2010.Retrieved17 January2022.{{cite web}}:CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. ^Rigelsford, Adrian(1994).The Doctors: 30 Years of Time Travel.Boxtree Limited. pp.79–80.ISBN0-7522-0959-0.
  10. ^abAlvarado, Manuel; John Tulloch (1983).Doctor Who: The Unfolding Text.Macmillan Education Ltd. pp.211–212.ISBN0-333-34848-6.
  11. ^abGolder, Dave (25 June 1998)."SFX Issue 39".SFX.Retrieved25 July2012.
  12. ^Terror of Autons DVD
  13. ^Doctor Who: Carnival of Monsters (Special Edition) (2012). BBC Warner. ASIN: B005SJGI90
  14. ^Alvarado, Manuel; Tulloch, John (1983).Doctor Who: The Unfolding Text.Macmillan Education Ltd. pp.101–104.ISBN0-333-34848-6.
  15. ^"Star Profile: Katy Manning".Doctor Who Monthly(52). May 1981.
  16. ^Britton, Piers D. (April 2011). "I'm not his Assistant!".Tardisbound: Navigating the Universes of Doctor Who.I.B.Tauris.p. 116.ISBN978-1845119256.
  17. ^"The Doctor and Jo Grant join CBBC's The Sarah Jane Adventures in special episodes written by Russell T Davies".BBC Press Office.BBC. 19 April 2010.Retrieved19 April2010.
  18. ^Jeffrey, Morgan (22 September 2010)."'SJA' execs: 'Jo return more than cameo'".Digital Spy.Retrieved30 June2012.
  19. ^abGolder, Dave (17 September 2010)."Russell T Davies On Jo Grant's Return In The Sarah Jane Adventures".SFX.Retrieved20 June2012.
  20. ^Harp, Justin (13 September 2010)."Manning 'loved playing Jo Grant for SJA'".Digital Spy.Retrieved30 June2012.
  21. ^"YouTube".YouTube.Retrieved20 April2020.
  22. ^Chapman, James (28 April 2006). "Earthbound (1970–1974)".Inside the Tardis: The Worlds of Doctor Who: a Cultural History(1st ed.).I.B.Tauris.p. 79.ISBN1-84511-163-X.
  23. ^Haines, Lester (12 December 2007)."Kylie wraps herself round Dalek".The Register.Retrieved1 July2012.
  24. ^Jones, Paul (16 November 2010)."Billie Piper's Rose Tyler voted the best Doctor Who companion".Radio Times.Retrieved30 June2012.
  25. ^Fuller, Gavin."Doctor Who — the top ten female assistants".The Daily Telegraph.Retrieved30 June2012.
  26. ^Harrison, Mark (20 September 2011)."Doctor Who: 10 great companion farewell scenes".Den of Geek.Retrieved24 March2012.
  27. ^Salmon, Will (26 September 2012)."10 Best Doctor Who Companion Departures (And 5 Worst)".SFX.Retrieved7 October2012.
  28. ^Russell, Gary(2006).Doctor Who: The Inside Story.BBC Books. p. 30.ISBN978-0-563-48649-7.
  29. ^McAlpine, Fraser (2 July 2011)."A Companion To The Doctor's Companions: Jo Grant".BBC America.Retrieved1 July2012.
  30. ^Bahn, Christopher (14 August 2011)."The Time Warrior".The A.V. Club.Retrieved25 July2012.
  31. ^Berriman, Ian (20 April 2010)."Witnessing Jo Grant's return".SFX.Retrieved1 July2012.
edit