Is Susan Twist Playing a Major Role on Doctor Who?

Russell T Davies’ return to Doctor Who has already unleashed a wave of new mysteries in the sci-fi series. The new era penned by Davies, who originally served as Doctor Who’s showrunner when the show first returned to television in 2005, started with November’s 60th anniversary specials and continued in the Christmas special, “The Church on Ruby Road,” starring Ncuti Gatwa as the Fifteenth Doctor. Across these four initial specials, Davies has dropped hints to a range of plot lines that fans can expect to see play out in the upcoming renumbered Season 1 of the revitalized Doctor Who.Several moments from these first four specials of the new era have teased a time-twisting storyline coming to Doctor Who. After David Tennant’s Fourteenth Doctor and Catherine Tate’s Donna Noble accidentally rewrote Isaac Newton’s discovery of gravity — or “mavity” — in “Wild Blue Yonder,” Neil Patrick Harris’ Toymaker later teased that his “legions” were coming to Earth from beyond the universe in “The Giggle.” Then, Millie Gibson’s Ruby Sunday — the Doctor’s new companion — almost had her own personal history erased by time-bumbling goblins in “The Church on Ruby Road.” Amid all this talk of changing timelines and powerful villains, Doctor Who fans think they have spotted a subtler story playing out in the multiple characters played by Susan Twist.Susan Twist’s past credits include various other British TV series, such as Coronation Street (on which Millie Gibson also appeared before making her Doctor Who debut) and In The Flesh and Brookside. At first glance, there is very little in either of her Doctor Who appearances to suggest she is playing a character of great importance. However, the fact that she has appeared as two separate characters in such quick succession, in episodes penned by showrunner Russell T Davies, when either character could have quite easily cast a different actor suggests that there is more to Twist being recast than first meets the eye.

Russell T Davies’ return to Doctor Who has already unleashed a wave of new mysteries in the sci-fi series. The new era penned by Davies, who originally served as Doctor Who‘s showrunner when the show first returned to television in 2005, started with November’s 60th anniversary specials and continued in the Christmas special, “The Church on Ruby Road,” starring Ncuti Gatwa as the Fifteenth Doctor. Across these four initial specials, Davies has dropped hints to a range of plot lines that fans can expect to see play out in the upcoming renumbered Season 1 of the revitalized Doctor Who.

Several moments from these first four specials of the new era have teased a time-twisting storyline coming to Doctor Who. After David Tennant’s Fourteenth Doctor and Catherine Tate’s Donna Noble accidentally rewrote Isaac Newton’s discovery of gravity — or “mavity” — in “Wild Blue Yonder,” Neil Patrick Harris’ Toymaker later teased that his “legions” were coming to Earth from beyond the universe in “The Giggle.” Then, Millie Gibson’s Ruby Sunday — the Doctor’s new companion — almost had her own personal history erased by time-bumbling goblins in “The Church on Ruby Road.” Amid all this talk of changing timelines and powerful villains, Doctor Who fans think they have spotted a subtler story playing out in the multiple characters played by Susan Twist.

Susan Twist’s past credits include various other British TV series, such as Coronation Street (on which Millie Gibson also appeared before making her Doctor Who debut) and In The Flesh and Brookside. At first glance, there is very little in either of her Doctor Who appearances to suggest she is playing a character of great importance. However, the fact that she has appeared as two separate characters in such quick succession, in episodes penned by showrunner Russell T Davies, when either character could have quite easily cast a different actor suggests that there is more to Twist being recast than first meets the eye.

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