Long lost Doctor Who episodes found in Nigeria

Nine missing 1960s episodes of cult BBC science fiction drama Doctor Who have been found in a television station storeroom in Nigeria.

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Doctor Who actor Tom Baker poses with his fictional enemy the Daleks, circa 1975. (AAP)

Nine missing episodes of cult BBC science fiction drama Doctor Who have been found in a television station storeroom in Nigeria, nearly half a century after they were last seen.

Among the recovered 1960s footage is most of the classic story The Web of Fear, a black and white adventure in which the Time Lord, then played by Patrick Troughton, battles a robot yeti in London's underground train system.

The tapes were found gathering dust in a television station in Jos, a central Nigerian city plagued by chronic sectarian violence.

The trove, which is being described by the BBC as the "largest haul of missing episodes recovered in the last three decades", also includes six-part story The Enemy of the World.

"It's thrilling," said Mark Gatiss, author of recent Doctor Who episodes.

"Every single avenue seemed to have been exhausted, every now and then something turns up - but to have two virtually complete stories out of the blue is absolutely incredible."

The BBC destroyed many of the drama's original tapes in the 1960s and 1970s but some were copied for sale to foreign broadcasters.

Despite the find, 97 episodes remain lost.

The episodes were uncovered by Phillip Morris, director of Television International Enterprises Archive.

"The tapes had been left gathering dust in a storeroom at a television relay station in Nigeria," he told the BBC, adding that they were "just sitting on the shelf".

"I remember wiping the dust off the masking tape on the canisters and my heart missed a beat as I saw the words, Doctor Who. When I read the story code I realised I'd found something pretty special," he added.

The tapes originally went from Britain to Hong Kong and then on to a series of television stations in Nigeria as part of the distribution systems that operated at the time.

Morris said he had been "lucky" to find the tapes intact given the high temperatures in Nigeria.

"Fortunately in this case they had been kept in the optimum condition," he said.

Morris added that it was "probably the largest haul of missing episodes recovered in the last 25, 30 years."

The new programs will be made available on iTunes and be released on DVD later.


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Source: AAP


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