Doctor who

10 Best Doctor Who Companions (Who Were Too Ambitious for TV)

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Rose Tyler, Amy Pond, and Clara Oswald from Doctor Who

Everyone has their favorite Doctor Who companion, whether it’s an old school throwback like Ace, Astra, or Sarah Jane, or the more modern contenders like Rose Tyler, Martha Jones, and Donna Noble. But some of the best Doctor Who companions don’t even appear on the television show.

As much as Doctor Who is known as a TV property, the lore expands into several high quality comic books, where The Doctor’s adventures continue alongside companions who never made it onscreen. Nonetheless, without a television debut, some of these companions are the most intriguing, captivating, and charismatic The Doctor has encountered in any of his lives. Which means fans deserve to know these Doctor Who companions who never made it onto TV.

10 Josie Day

Debuts in “The Pictures of Josephine Day” by George Mann and Emma Vieceli

Doctor Who cover art featuring the living portrait Lady Josephine "Josie" Day snuggled up to Paul McGann's Doctor

Believe it or not, one of Doctor Who’s best companions was a painting. In The Doctor Who: The Eighth Doctor miniseries, the title incarnation finds one Josephine “Josie” Day in his cottage, painting cryptic pieces of art depicting alien worlds. Further inspection by The Doctor reveals her body is full of particles created by the alien species Artificers of Wrall, as the original Lady Josephine had asked one of the Artificers to paint her portrait, one that would literally take on a life of her own.

After the real Lady Josephine died, her portrait was auctioned off to an older gentleman who turned out to be the Twelfth Doctor. After dropping Josephine’s portrait off at his cottage, she decided to live life anew as Josie in search of purpose and a Doctor to help her.

9 Gabby Gonzalez

Debuts in “Revolution of Terror” by Nick Abadzis ad Elena Casagrande

Gabby Gonzalez produces Vortex Butterflies in front of Cindy Wu in Doctor Who The Tenth Doctor

Doctor Who: The Tenth Doctor introduces Gabby Gonzalez, enrering The Doctor’s life not long after Donna Noble’s exit. She’s an accounting student with bigger dreams of the art life, working out of her father’s laundromat (ironically, Gabby’s encounter with Ten’s laundry system exposes The Doctor costume’s secret origin story). An alien attack in local Brooklyn is how she meets The Doctor and joins his escapades, but her life alters forever in more ways than one.

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Unknowingly to her, Gabby possessed block transfer energy, allowing her to manifest levitating talking mouths and butterflies. As her powers continued to transform and evolve, so did Gabby, who eventually transformed into the Vortex Butterfly, an omnipotent creature possessing reality-warping powers.

8 Olla

Debuts in “A Cold Day in Hell!” by Simon Furman, John Ridgway, and Tim Perkins

Sylvester McCoy as the seventh Doctor wearing a hat in Doctor Who

During The Seventh Doctor’s adventures held in the classic Doctor Who Magazines, he and his literal penguin companion Frobisher (don’t worry, we’ll get to him) visit the planet A-Lux hoping to find pleasure and heat. Instead, they find invading Ice Warriors turning the usually warm planet to snowy cold, and in less pleasurable terms, they run into a heat vampire who attempts to drain the Doctor of his body temperature.

Not the friendliest terms for any companion to meet the Doctor, but they grow friendly by story’s end and she winds up traveling with him. In time, readers learn that she’s actually fleeing A-Lux after stealing money and evading the crimes she’s expected to answer for. A vampire on the run, she lies and schemes her way into the TARDIS, convincing Seven that her cohort was actually a master who enslaved her. The Doctor ends up sending her back on the condition she is given a fair trial.

7 ARC

Debuts in “Whodunnit?” by Al Ewing and Bob Cook

ARC speaks in Doctor Who The Eleventh Doctor

The Doctor is no stranger to having companions of the robotic persuasion, or sporting some kind of technological, artificial intelligence. Characters like K-9 immediately come to mind, but in the comics, The Eleventh Doctor had ARC: Autonomous Reasoning Center. Held within the United System Research Base of SERVEYOUinc, ARC spent years tortured by Dr. Ballard until he finally managed to escape.

In the process, ARC would accidentally send the staff members into comas just in hopes of trying to communicate and read minds. When ARC meets the Doctor, the latter would allow the former to travel with him (after ending the comas). Even by AI robot standards, ARC is one of the more unique companions for The Doctor, with the circumstances of their meeting all the more unique.

6 Kevin The Robotic Tyrannosaurus

Debuts in “When Worlds Collide” by Tony Lee and Matthew Dow Smith

Kevin the robotic tyrannosaurus rex wears an exoskeleton in front of The 11th Doctor in Doctor Who The Eleventh Doctor

Speaking of unique robot companions, it’s hard to get more unique than a combination between advanced technology and the prehistoric era. Kevin wasn’t so much a dinosaur, and didn’t consider himself as such, but an actor pretending to be a dinosaur. An animatronic dinosaur with an advanced brain capacity instilled into his head to give him an actual personality, Kevin decided he was done playing a theme park dinosaur for everyone else’s entertainment.

Kevin wanted more with his life than to roar like some Neanderthal of a creature. So, when he meets The Doctor, Amy, and Rory Pond, he decides to tag along onto the TARDIS in his search for something more. Even to a T-Rex sized actor, he was amazed that it was bigger on the inside.

5 The Sapling

Debuts in “The Scream” Rob Williams, Leandro Casco, and Wellington Diaz

Alice Obifune The 11th Doctor and The Sapling look at TARDIS monitors in Doctor Who The Eleventh Doctor

A virus called The Planting would produce actual saplings that would slowly be birthed into fully grown adults. One such sapling, officially known as ‘The Sapling,’ was destined to produce genocide until its development was interrupted by an advanced member of The Silence calling himself The Scream. The Scream implemented memories of both The Doctor and one Alice Obiefune (another companion to The Eleventh Doctor) in hopes of inhabiting The Sapling’s body, thus using its virus potential to take over and consume entire planets.

Perhaps The Doctor’s influence was enough to get through to The Sapling. In helping Sapling escape The Scream, Eleven would allow Sapling to travel with him and Alice.

4 Frobisher

Debuts in “The Shape Shifter” by Steve Parkhouse and John Ridgway

Frobisher in a Doctor Who cartoon

As promised earlier, it’s time to talk about an actual talking penguin resident of the TARDIS. Frobisher had the pleasure of assisting both the Sixth and Seventh Doctors, but he and The Doctor actually have something in common: both are more alien than meets the eye. This so-called penguin Frobisher is actually an alien shapeshifter from the planet Xenon. This member of the Whifferdill race could transform into form he pleased… he just felt most pleased being a penguin.

He was also pleased to join The Doctor on his adventures when they met during the 82nd Century, when Frobisher was masquerading as Avan Tarklu hoping to collect a bounty on The Doctor’s head. However, Six’s personality was too likable to turn in. Instead, they stole the bounty money, split it, and decided to keep hanging out.

3 Anubis

Debuts in The Sands of Time by Justin Richards

The 10th Doctor (David Tennant) looking perplexed in Doctor Who

Yes, this is about the Anubis, but not the Anubis that audiences may be most familiar with. Not to be confused with the classic depiction of the Egyptian deity, this version of Anubis (nicknamed Newbis) was an alien member of the Osirian race, who possessed god-like abilities and, thus, was praised as such in ancient Egypt on Earth. Anubis’ father, Sutekh the Destroyer, lived up to the name by wishing to destroy all life in the universe. But his son didn’t want to walk down the same path as his father.

Against his will, though, his father’s essence would take control of Anubis’ body until he was destroyed by The Doctor. The Tenth Doctor would resurrect Anubis before gifting him the opportunity to travel the galaxy with him.

2 Kroton the Cyberman

“Throwback: The Soul of a Cyberman” by Steve Moore and Steve Dillon

The Eighth Doctor in Doctor Who and Izzy meets Kroton the Cyberman

The Doctor has spent several centuries and incarnations battling the wicked Cybermen, but Kroton might have the distinction of being the only Cyberman who The Doctor would call a friend. Speaking of distinctions, Krotons has still retained his feelings and emotions after becoming a Cyberman. He came to the realization when he saw his higher-ups targeting resistance fighters and spontaneously decided to turn against them. After sacrificing himself, he travels the galaxy helping those in need and saving people.

He eventually catches the attention of the Eighth Doctor while on the Qutrusian Cargo Freighter X-703 when they were in need of assistance. Afterward, he’d join Eight and his then-companion Izzy in their travels. He would eventually move on to becoming a guardian to the omniverse, leaving The Doctor as a hero.

1 Destrii

Debuts in “Ophidius” by Scott Gray, Martin Geraghty, and Robin Smith

Doctor Who's Eighth Doctor and Izzy meet Destrii

Destrii (or Destriilantos) is an Oblivioner from the Oblivion alien race, whom have been genetically modified into human-animal forms. When the Doctor’s TARDIS gets sucked inside of the Ophidius, Eight meets the ship’s owner to be Destrii. Initially, as she was on the run herself, she tried to trick The Doctor into allowing her to run away with him by transferring her mind into that of his companion, Izzy’s. The Eighth Doctor would reverse the trickery when he learned the truth, but as it turns out, he might’ve let Destrii on board if she had just asked.

She manages to change The Doctor’s mind about her when she helps him stop the Zeronites. He offers her a spot on the TARDIS only if she abides by his rules. She agrees, and in times, The Doctor’s more positive character traits rubs off on Destrii, solidifying her as one of the best companions in Doctor Who history.

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