elisi: Playing poker (Girl Doctor)
elisi ([personal profile] elisi) wrote2014-12-15 06:53 pm

Well, that didn't last long...

Steven Moffat on Clara Becoming the Doctor in DOCTOR WHO Series 8.


"The thing about Clara is she thinks the show is called Clara. She really does. She has no idea she’s number two in the credits, which is why we did that joke in “Death in Heaven.” She’s got a high opinion of herself, not in a conceited way, but in a correct way. She knows she’s extremely clever and capable, and she doesn’t feel like she particularly fits in the world that she lives in.
[...]
When I first wrote Clara, I thought, “Oh, this is fun. If the Doctor were a young woman living in contemporary Britain, it’d be a bit like her.”
[...]
So, Clara’s not the Doctor; she’s not the same person as the Doctor, but – the traditional thing is to say the hero and the archenemy are mirrors of each other. Are they? Are they though? Not really. I think it’s more likely that friends are mirrors of each other. If you watch any close friendship, the extent to which they start to duplicate each other is quite interesting, even with Dr. Watson and Sherlock Holmes. While they’re different people, they have similar appetites.


So, that's my lovely theory out the window, but at least I wasn't far wrong...

[identity profile] claudiapriscus.livejournal.com 2014-12-16 01:03 am (UTC)(link)
It's an interesting question. I think maybe the difference is that Amy was more about not wanting to fit in, and when she was older, being afraid of settling down, committing etc. But when she finally does...I mean, look at The Power of Three. She still loves the Doctor, still enjoys the traveling, but she's no longer driven, the way she was before. She's not wanting to miss out on "real life". So Amy stops running...and the thing with Clara is that I don't think she ever was running from anything.

Clara also does seem to have a somewhat unusual approach to life (and other people). And just the fact that she's picked up traveling through all space and time as a *hobby* says a lot about her. For Amy, it seemed more like an escape (from making choices about her life)- you know, neverneverland- and eventually she no longer needs to escape. But Clara's motives...she does seem a lot more like the Doctor, just caught on the wonder and adrenaline and curiosity.

[identity profile] purplefringe.livejournal.com 2014-12-17 12:14 pm (UTC)(link)
So Amy stops running...and the thing with Clara is that I don't think she ever was running from anything.

Mmmmm. Yes, that is the key difference between them, you're right. Their journeys go in opposite directions. I just found some really great meta unpicking that a bit here: http://aflawedfashion.tumblr.com/post/105358530418 (you may have already seen it)

I think also possibly it's a matter of Moffat's perspective as an older, married, settled man vs the perspective of younger fans growing up in the economic crisis? Maybe? As a 20-something with no real idea of what I want to "do" with my life, I really strongly identified with Clara back in BOSJ - she had employment, of sorts, at the Maitlands, but was basically putting off 'real life' (getting a steady job, getting her own place, etc) and treading water. She was a bit bored, and procrastinating, but didn't feel so *completely* hopeless about it all that she had to ditch everything and run away, as Amy did.

To me, that feels absolutely accurate. It's not that she *doesn't fit* into the world she lives in, it's that she hasn't worked out HOW she fits into that world as yet...that's how I read it anyway. That's how I feel a lot of the time, and why I think she's such a great character.

Interestingly, by the time of the 50th anniversary ep, she's both more settled in the world - steady job, own flat, soon to get a boyfriend etc - and also LESS attached to it, as the adventure addiction is really starting to take hold and she always has one foot in the Tardis. By the end of S8 there's really very little holding her to her real life on Earth (besides her dad and her gran), and this is why I would love to see her ending up on Gallifrey...

[identity profile] purplefringe.livejournal.com 2014-12-17 12:21 pm (UTC)(link)
Oooh, and another thought, actually: Clara certainly doesn't think that going to the shops is an 'adventure' (do you REALLY think that, Moffat? Really?! I don't) but I don't think that makes her unusual. Again, perhaps a difference of perspective from Moffat, but I think most people get worn down at times by the mundane chores of daily life, and long for something more exciting. I don't think that makes Clara especially unusual.

What I DO think Moffat has got bang on is that Clara secretly wants to be the Hero Of The Story - we KNOW she grew up reading Amelia Williams books, we know she's genre-savvy as a result ('good guys don't have zombie creatures') and I can well imagine that she would have daydreamed as a child about being Harry Potter, or Frodo or Lyra Silvertongue or any other fictional character with an Epic Destiny to fulfill. (again, I did. my childhood dream was to be Aladdin. Or Harry Potter.)

Amy, by contrast, had her whole childhood warped by the Doctor's crash landing in her garden, and we know that SHE grew up playing at having adventures *with* her Raggedy Doctor. But the difference is - she made Rory be the Raggedy Doctor. She would have seen herself as the friend of the Doctor, and probably at some point when she was older, the girlfriend of the Doctor. Whilst I have no doubt whatsoever that it was Amy rather than Rory who made up the narratives and the rules in their games, and she probably rescued the Raggedy Doctor a great deal, but he always featured. Her was her imaginary friend and hero. Whereas I doubt there was any magic space hero in Clara's childhood daydreams - *she*, the literature-loving bossy control freak would be the hero. That's how she reads to me. And so when she gets the chance, through the Doctor, to actually BE that hero...it's no wonder she gets hooked.
Edited 2014-12-17 12:28 (UTC)