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Reply Subj: Re: RIP Sarah Jane Smith. You will be missed. Posted: Wed Apr 20, 2011 at 08:44:43 am EDT (Viewed 6 times) | |||||||
Here's what I've just written for SF Revolutions: Liz Sladen's main contributions to the Doctor Who mythos are the qualities she infused her character with and her personal qualities as a gentle, kind, and gracious actor. Sarah Jane was one of the first female companions envisaged as being "liberated"; but of course any "assistant" to the Doctor is going to end up as second fiddle, bumbler, and hostage at some point. Sladen's genius was in making Sarah Jane the ultimate point-of-view companion, winning our sympathy and support in the trials she endured, rather than our contempt and disappointment that she wasn't doing as good a job as we might in her place. Sarah was in turns michievous, adventurous, smart, worried, compassionate, moral, determined, and loyal. She wasn't fearless; her bravery came in facing things that very much scared her and still doing the right thing. Her relationships with Pertwee and Tom Baker's Doctors were slightly different, testimony to Sladen's nuanced and generous performance. During the character's "wilderness years" outside the main series, Sladen continued to care about the character, appearing in some probably-not-canon audio plays that offered an older, wiser Sarah. Her return to "main continuity" in "School Reunion" clevery wrote her as someone who has suffered post-TARDIS trauma yet who continued to fight the good fight. She realises in this episode that the best parts of her time with the Doctor are still in her. This sets up The Sarah Jane Adventures series in which this pre-eminent companion graduates to be defender of the Earth with young assistants of her own. Again Sladen plays Sarah Jane as a flawed but likable - and watchable - character, in turns sentinel of our world, parent and mentor, reckless investigator, vulnerable older woman, and citizen of the universe. Sladen's always-generous performances offer a fine platform for the younger actors to develop their own characters and performance skills. Her ability to bring emotional resonance to domestic and fantastic scenes alike helps ground the series so that even the most bizarre concepts feel real. The actress herself was by every account I've heard as gracious and ladylike as her fictional avatar. People who have met her at conventions speak of her with unreserved affection and admiration. Her on-set professionalism seems to have been matched by her off-screen integrity and kindness. Her enthusiasm for Doctor Who gave her common ground with the army of fans for whom she became an icon. Her benevolent influence on set has been a blessing to harassed production teams since her early role controlling Tom Baker's excesses. She has been a true companion to Doctors and to the actors who played them, to the crew and casts she has worked with, and to very many viewers who she took to strange worlds with her to stand beside the Doctor. | |||||||