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Jago & Litefoot Series 1
- Narrated by: Christopher Benjamin, Trevor Baxter, Conrad Asquith, Lisa Bowerman
- Length: 5 hrs and 11 mins
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Summary
The continuing adventures of Henry Gordon Jago and George Litefoot, characters first introduced on television in Doctor Who: The Talons of Weng-Chiang (1977), who have become Infernal Investigators, solving mysteries involving paranormal or alien phenomena in 1880s London.
This release features four full-cast audio dramas plus a behind-the-scenes documentary:
1.1 'The Bloodless Soldier', written by Justin Richards and directed by Lisa Bowerman. Featuring Alex Lowe, John Banks, Robin Bowerman and Alex Mallinson. A group of soldiers return from overseas service - but they have brought a terrible evil back with them. As death strikes on the streets of London, Sergeant Quick calls upon the help of Professor Litefoot while an old enemy lurks in the shadows.
1.2 'The Bellova Devil', written by Alan Barnes and directed by Lisa Bowerman. Featuring Stephen Thorne, Duncan Wisbey and Alex Mallinson. A body is found on the Circle Line wearing full dress uniform. It is identified as Reginald Colville - a man who was certified dead some six weeks ago! In an attempt to solve the mystery, Jago and Litefoot become unwilling bodysnatchers....
1.3 'The Spirit Trap', written by Jonathan Morris and directed by John Ainsworth. Featuring Janet Henfrey and Lex Shrapnel. Ellie Higson believes that spiritualist Mrs Vanguard can hear the voices of the dead, but Henry Gordon Jago thinks it's all superstition and theatrical trickery. But if Vanguard is a harmless fake, then why have some of those who have attended her seances disappeared so mysteriously?
1.4 'The Similarity Engine', written by Andy Lane and directed by Lisa Bowerman. When Jago takes a tumble on an unseasonably icy road, he ends up in hospital. But this is no ordinary medical establishment, and the patients are suffering from no ordinary illnesses. At last, the fiendish scheme of Dr Tulp is drawing to its cataclysmic climax.
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What listeners say about Jago & Litefoot Series 1
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- S. Morris
- 30-10-17
Nostalgic Characters From A Golden Age
Jago and LLitefoot were two supporting characters from the 1977 Doctor Who story "The Talons of Wen Chiang" which featured TomBaker as the Doctor and Louise Jameson as his assistant Leela. Personally speaking, the Tom Baker era was the golden age of Doctor Who but that's not relevant here and I'm just drifting off into nostalgia again.
I had heard rumours that the Jago and Litefootcharacters were going to get their own TV series at one point years back as a spin-off no doubt. They proved to be interesting, endearing and seemingly popular to warrant this and I'd have to agree. The Victorian London of circa 1888 proved to be an evocative setting for the two unlikely heroes and so it came as no surprise to me to eventually come across this audio series of 4 short stories.
My love of that classic Doctor Who episode that introduced these two characters is what immediately made me purchase this book. The first thing that struck me was how each actors voice has remained unchanged after the 30 odd years since their Doctor Who TV appearance. This is in sharp contrast to the terribly aged sounding Gareth Thomas as Blake and Paul Darrow's Avon in the recently released Blake's 7 audio series. I barely recognized Thomas's voice as Blake when I first heard it and poor Paul Darrow sounds as if his dentures are slipping on the "S" sounds in words. however, Trevor Baxter as Professor Litefoot and Christopher Benjamin as Henry Gordon Jago sound just as they did back in 1977 which helps immerse the listener back into their world as if this series had been produced soon after their appearance on Doctor Who.
The stories themselves are definitely in the vein and style of a Doctor Who episode of the period so are not darker departures from that style. As such, they are suitable for the younger listener. All stories are entertaining and are fairly light fare and are firmly aimed at the adventure side of the horror genre. The production quality is excellent with plenty of atmospheric effects to pull you into the narrative set in Victorian London circa 1892 I gather.
There is an extensive behind the scenes feature at the end which provides interesting insights into the making of this series as well as interviews with all the voice actors and is a quality and worthwhile addition to this book.
It's no surprise that Jago and Litefoot are somewhat like the classic Holmes and Watson in their ability to crack weird cases in addition to the very different characters each duo are compared to one another. Holmes is the sophisticated intellectual thinker while from what I know of Watson, he is rather less so but each acts as a foil to the other. This is similar to the Litefoot and Jago partnership with Jago being the Victorian equivalent of a second hand car salesman while Litefoot is the educated, upper middle class gentlemen who works as a pathologist for the Police and has a logical mind. The opposites of character works well as both men bring something to the table and their partnership is what makes the stories as entertaining as interesting.
If you haven't seen them in the aforementioned Doctor Who story then it doesn't matter as each story in this series is not dependant on anything to do with that episode. So, if you like the thought of some fairly lightweight mystery and adventure set in the colourful Victorian era then this is a fun way to spend a few hours.
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10 people found this helpful
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- Highlight
- 26-02-17
A REAL GOOD LAUGH
This long series from the past (original Dr WHO) is a good old laugh. At over 5 hours per series, well worth the credit and at five shows, we have hours of rumbling Victorian fun as they are shifted through one odd dimension to another.
Two great British actors make this show : Thank you guys!
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5 people found this helpful
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- Susi Moffat
- 25-02-21
New Fan
I hadn’t heard of Jago and Lightfoot before I came across this audiobook, and I don’t think that was a problem- I thoroughly enjoyed these stories, and I plan to look for more stories in the series. The audio clip is a terrible example of the stories which are funny and engaging.
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2 people found this helpful
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- Reginald Cockwell
- 24-01-19
Spoilt by it's background
Always a fan of the doctor who universe, unfortunately big finish adds music and effects which are off-putting
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1 person found this helpful
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- Bob Doe
- 10-03-17
Gothic Doctor who at its best
having been scared stiff by the Tallons of Wing chiang as a kid, I thought I would watch it again for my birthday . the Gothic victorian setting was superb and avoided some of the some of the rather thread bare special effects present in many of the other doctor who adventures (washing up gloves sprayed silver, in the Robots of death!). the characters of Jago and Lightfoot were really compelling and endearing. very happy to report that this audio series is a little jem containg superb performances and great stories.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Lee
- 26-12-23
Jago and Lightfoot
Bought these dramas in a BOGOF deal.and it’s not bad. Not too taxing on the brain, bit of escapism while dog walking. Might buy the next in the series.
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- Howard Shaw
- 12-03-23
Weak drama, and not quite comedy.
I came to this through the "Scarifiers", and was hoping for more of the same.
I quite like Dr. Who spinoffs. Touchwood is slightly more adult and "The Sarah Jane Adventures" are pure children's. I'm sure that a comedy spinoff would work, but this isn't it. As a Dr. Who spinoff It is both not as dramatic and also not as funny. Rather disappointing realy. I'll try "Counter-Measures" next.
PS: There is one technical issue - The 5 hours is divided into 86 chapters, so every few minutes my player stutters for a moment as it changes chapters. There are four episodes, so why not just four chapters?
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- lorna mcdonald
- 25-10-21
Excellent series
I really enjoyed this series especially how the two get along. I would recommend this to anyone who is a fan of the doctor who universe.
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- Prester Jim
- 19-07-21
Lawd save me! Look at 'is fingers! Like worms...
The Big Finish universe, to paraphrase one Doctor Who old-boy, is big. Mind-bogglingly big! And tucked away within their many hundreds of Whovian audio dramas, amidst all the lost, found, resurrected and parallel iterations of every character that ever trod the Tardis boards, there can be found an eye-watering 13 series of adventures featuring wayward impresario, Henry Gordon Jago, and his best friend, the eminent Professor, George Litefoot.
Originally appearing in the Tom Baker-era classic 'The Talons of Weng-Chiang', it would be 30 years before Jago & Litefoot crossed back over to our universe to resume their antics in a sequence of gothic, High Victorian escapades featuring vampiric beasts, suicide scams, ghosts from the future and Lovecraftian horrors from the outer darkness. Villain of the piece is the diabolical Doctor Tulp, who seems to be a cross between Humpty Dumpty and Herbert Lom.
These are intimate, small-cast affairs. Production values and sound design are good. The first of the four episodes here suffers from that modern Who flaw of not really knowing if it's aimed more at adults or children but the rest crack on at a tidy pace with a consistent atmosphere and coherent plot-arc. My favourite was 'The Bellova Devil' which channels the spirits of 'The Avengers' and 'Sapphire & Steel' to fine effect.
Of course, what really makes these shine are the tremendously engaging performances of Christopher Benjamin and the late Trevor Baxter, who skip back into their old television roles like no time has passed at all.
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- C. Middleton
- 22-02-21
Return of the characters from the 4th Doctor.
Big Finish radio drama using the original actors from the classic Dr Who TV show. this excellent series of linked stories follows the adventures of Jago and Lightfoot after the departure of The Doctor.
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