Description: ITEM IS BRAND NEW AND SOLD LOOSE. COMES WITH A RECORDER ACCESSORY. "Doctor Who Patrick Troughton Figure" "Doctor Who The Three Doctors Figure" "Doctor Who The Second Doctor Figure" Up for sale is the "2010 Doctor Who Patrick Troughton Figure". AKA "2010 Doctor Who The Second Doctor Figure" This 2010 "Doctor Who The Eleven Doctors Figure Set Figure" is Brand New and sold LOOSE with a Recording Accessory. This "Doctor Who The Three Doctors Figure" is approximately 5.5" tall. This "Doctor Who Figure" was originally included in the "Doctor Who The Eleven Doctors Figure Set" that was released in 2010. It represents "Patrick Troughton" from the 1973 Doctor Who episode "The Three Doctors". . We purchased many Doctor Who Collector Sets and loose figures recently so if you are interested in another set please visit our store. We do combine shipping. The Three Doctors is the first serial of the tenth season of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, first broadcast in four weekly parts on BBC1 from 30 December 1972 to 20 January 1973. In the serial, the solar engineer Omega (Stephen Thorne), the creator of the experiments that allowed the Time Lords to travel in time, seeks revenge on the Time Lords after he was left for dead in a universe made of antimatter. The Time Lords recruit the time travellers the First Doctor (William Hartnell), the Second Doctor (Patrick Troughton), and the Third Doctor (Jon Pertwee) for help when Omega drains their civilisation's power. The serial opened the tenth anniversary year of the series, and features the first three Doctors all appearing in the same serial. This makes it the first Doctor Who story in which an earlier incarnation of the Doctor returns to the show. It was also Hartnell's last appearance as the First Doctor prior to his death in 1975. Plot A superluminal signal is sent to Earth, carrying with it an energy blob that seems intent on capturing the Doctor, but has already mysteriously abducted two individuals; a local game warden, and scientific researcher Dr. Tyler. The homeworld of the Time Lords is also under siege, trapped themselves, and with universal energy being drained through a black hole, threatening to unravel the fabric of time and space. Desperate to send help, the Time Lords do the unthinkable, breaking the First Law of Time by recruiting a previous incarnation of the Doctor from his own past. As the Second Doctor and the present Third Doctor cannot cope with each other's personalities, the Time Lords attempt to retrieve the First Doctor to "keep them in order", but he is trapped in a "time eddy", unable to fully materialise, communicating through a viewscreen. The Doctors investigate, while UNIT headquarters faces an attack by shapeless blob-like creatures. The First Doctor assists both Doctors by correctly surmising that the energy blob is a bridge to another universe. The Third Doctor attempts to go alone, but Jo is abruptly abducted with him. The Second Doctor later allows the TARDIS with himself, the Brigadier, and Benton inside, to be taken by the creature, although this causes UNIT HQ to be stolen as well. As Jo, the Third Doctor, and Dr. Tyler, whom they discover there, assess their situation in this mystery universe made of antimatter, they are accosted by more of the shapeless creatures and taken to an unfamiliar location. When they arrive, they meet the legendary Time Lord Omega, a solar engineer who created the supernova method that powers Time Lord civilisation, but which also supposedly killed him. Omega seeks revenge on the Time Lords, whom he assumes left him stranded alone for centuries in his universe, of which he explains that he willed into existence. Assuming he has been deceived once again by the Time Lords after discovering the Second Doctor and correctly deducing his identity, Omega imprisons both Doctors, Jo, Benton, and Tyler. After the two Doctors help everyone escape through both of their own wills, Omega discovers the getaway, and challenges the Third Doctor to a battle of minds. The Second Doctor convinces Omega to stop, appealing to his desire to escape. Now calmer, Omega explains further to the two that he shaped this reality within the black hole both with his willpower and the power of its singularity. However, due to this, his will is the only support keeping this reality stable. He cannot freely leave without releasing control, but releasing control would collapse the antimatter universe instantly, annihilating everything in it. As he describes it, he is the "...Atlas of [his] world...". Because of this, Omega's intention is for the Doctors to take his place maintaining this reality. As he prepares to leave with the Doctors' help, they are horrified to discover that the extremely prolonged exposure to the singularity has destroyed Omega's physical body; his will also maintains his essence and he will cease to exist if he leaves. Suffering a nervous breakdown from the shock, Omega now seeks to destroy all creation. Taking advantage of his neurosis, the two Doctors escape back to the TARDIS with all of the abductees. With the help of the First, the Second and Third Doctors devise a way to defeat Omega. The two meet with Omega again, claiming they can give him his freedom. Omega, though, retorts that he cannot be freed, and demands that they share his exile. The Doctors agree, on the condition that all of his abductees are sent safely back to Earth. Once done, the two present Omega with the TARDIS' force field generator. In a rage at this paltry offer, Omega knocks it over and the Second Doctor's recorder falls out (having fallen into it earlier during the transference to Omega's universe, thus accidentally remaining unconverted normal matter), annihilating everything it meets in the antimatter universe in a flash, returning the Doctors in the TARDIS, UNIT HQ, and all of its stolen structures and objects, to their proper places in the normal universe. With the Time Lords' power restored, they return the First and Second Doctors to their respective time periods. Forlorn, The Doctor reflects on the recent events, and explains to Jo that death was the only freedom anyone could offer Omega. Out of forgiveness, the Time Lords then send the Third Doctor a new dematerialisation circuit for the TARDIS and restore his knowledge of how to travel through space and time. The Second Doctor is an incarnation of the Doctor, the protagonist of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. He was portrayed by actor Patrick Troughton. 53 of his 119 episodes are missing. Within the series' narrative, the Doctor is a centuries-old alien Time Lord from the planet Gallifrey who travels in time and space in the TARDIS, frequently with companions. At the end of life, the Doctor regenerates; as a result, the physical appearance and personality of the Doctor changes. The transformation into the Second Doctor (originally referred to as a "renewal"), a figure who was the same 'essential' character as the first but with a very different persona, was a turning point in the evolution of the series, and eventually became a critical element of the series' longevity. Preceded in regeneration by the First Doctor (William Hartnell), he is followed by the Third Doctor (Jon Pertwee). Troughton's Doctor was an outwardly scruffy, light hearted and bumbling tramp, a portrayal that was nicknamed the Cosmic Hobo. He hid a more firm and slightly darker side that he would often use to manipulate his enemies and allies for the greater good. His original Swinging Sixties companions were the sophisticated socialite Polly (Anneke Wills) and working class sailor Ben Jackson (Michael Craze), who had travelled with his previous incarnation. They were later joined by 18th century Jacobite Jamie McCrimmon (Frazer Hines), who would become the Second Doctor's most loyal and trusted companion. Following Ben and Polly's departures, the Doctor and Jamie were joined by the Victorian orphan Victoria Waterfield (Deborah Watling) and 21st century astrophysicist Zoe Heriot (Wendy Padbury). Jamie and Zoe stayed with the Second Doctor until the Time Lords sent them back to their own times, with their memories of all but their first encounter with him wiped. Biography The First Doctor grew progressively weaker while battling the Cybermen during the events of The Tenth Planet (1966) and eventually collapsed, seemingly from old age. His body renewed itself and transformed into the Second Doctor. Initially, the relationship between the Second Doctor and his predecessor was unclear. In his first story, the Second Doctor referred to his predecessor in the third person[1] as if he were a completely different person. His companions Ben and Polly are at first unsure how to treat him, though Polly is willing to believe he is the same man, and it is only when a Dalek recognises the Doctor that Ben accepts that he is the Doctor. This all occurred during the new Doctor's first story, The Power of the Daleks (1966). In the second story, The Highlanders (1966–67), Jamie McCrimmon joined the TARDIS crew, and remained with the Second Doctor for the rest of his travels. At the conclusion of The Faceless Ones (1967), Ben and Polly left together when the TARDIS landed at Gatwick Airport on the same day they originally left with the First Doctor, after they had stopped the mass kidnapping of tourists by shape shifting aliens. In the following story The Evil of the Daleks (1967), the Doctor and Jamie became involved in a plot by the Daleks to gain both the "Human and Dalek Factors" when the TARDIS was stolen, which led to them meeting Victoria Waterfield in the 19th century. The Doctor used the situation to engineer a Dalek civil war that seemingly destroyed the Daleks forever. However, Victoria's father was among the casualties. Now an orphan, Victoria chose to accompany the Doctor and Jamie on their travels. Although she felt great affection for the Doctor and Jamie, she was never able to completely come to terms with life in the TARDIS and the constant danger that resulted. She eventually chose to leave after the events of Fury from the Deep (1968) and was adopted by Mr. and Mrs. Harris in the 20th Century. After the events of The Wheel in Space (1968), the Doctor and Jamie were then joined by Zoe Heriot, an extremely intelligent woman from the 21st century, who helped defeat the Cybermen attack on a space station known as the Wheel. She then stowed away in the TARDIS and, despite the Doctor's warnings about what she might encounter, chose to remain. During his second incarnation, the Doctor confronted familiar foes such as the Daleks and the Cybermen, as well as new enemies such as the Great Intelligence and the Ice Warriors. It was during The Web of Fear (1968) that he first met Colonel Alistair Gordon Lethbridge-Stewart, in the tunnels of the London Underground.[2] Following the defeat of the Great Intelligence, Lethbridge-Stewart was promoted to Brigadier and became the leader of the British contingent of UNIT, a military organisation tasked to investigate and defend the world from extraterrestrial threats. In The Invasion (1968), the Doctor reteamed with him to defeat an invasion of Cybermen in league with industrialist Tobias Vaughan. In his final story The War Games (1969), the Second Doctor's time came to an end when the TARDIS landed in the middle of a warzone, created by a race of alien warlords who, with the help of another renegade Time Lord the War Chief, progressively kidnapped and brainwashed humans into becoming soldiers for them, hoping to use the ones who survived to conquer the Galaxy. Although the Doctor was able to defeat their plan, he realised he would be unable to return the human subjects to their various original points in Earth's history. He therefore contacted the Time Lords, sacrificing his own freedom in the process, and despite an attempt to escape was forced to return to his home planet. He was then put on trial by the Time Lords, for breaking their laws of non-interference. Despite the Doctor's argument that the Time Lords should use their great powers to help others, he was sentenced to exile on 20th century Earth, the Time Lords forcing his regeneration into the Third Doctor in the process. Jamie and Zoe were returned to their own time, with their memories of all but their first encounter with the Doctor wiped and the secret of the TARDIS was also taken from the Doctor.
Price: 30 USD
Location: Vista, California
End Time: 2024-10-14T16:24:24.000Z
Shipping Cost: 4.5 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Doctor Who Patrick Troughton Figure: Doctor Who, Patrick Troughton, Figure, The Second Doctor, 2010
Year Manufactured: 2010
Item Length: 5.5 in
TV Show: Doctor Who The Three Doctors
Vintage: No
Personalize: No
Doctor Who The Three Doctors: Doctor Who, Patrick Troughton, Figure, The Second Doctor, 2010
Original/Licensed Reproduction: Original
Item Height: 5.5 in
Featured Person/Artist: Patrick Troughton
Doctor Who The Three Doctors Figure: Doctor Who, Patrick Troughton, Figure, The Second Doctor, 2010
Doctor Who The Second Doctor Figure: Doctor Who, Patrick Troughton, Figure, The Second Doctor, 2010
Character: The Second Doctor, The 2nd Doctor
Signed: No
Color: Multicolor
Vehicle Type: Dalek
Material: ABS Plastic
Age Level: 5-7 Years
Franchise: Doctor Who
Doctor Who The Eleven Doctors Figure set: Doctor Who, Patrick Troughton, Figure, The Second Doctor, 2010
Brand: Character Options, Underground Toys
Series: Doctor Who Season 10
Type: Action Figure
Theme: TV, Movie & Video Games
Time Period Manufactured: 2010-2019
Country/Region of Manufacture: China
Character Family: Doctor Who