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Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker says she will be ‘filled with grief’ after leaving the show

Jodie Whittaker said she was “crying her eyes out” during her final days on the Doctor Who set.

The actor, who has played the Time Lord since 2017, announced in the summer that she will be leaving the sci-fi drama after the upcoming series and a trio of specials in 2022.

Showrunner Chris Chibnall is also set to leave the programme and will be replaced by Russell T Davies, who was behind the show’s revival in 2005.

Whittaker will do one more series before leaving the show. Pic: BBC Studios/James Pardon
Image:
Whittaker will do one more series before leaving the show. Pic: BBC Studios/James Pardon

Speaking during a Q&A, the 39-year-old actress said: “You have to honour the show and to honour everything. Me and Chris, there was this thing of like ‘We want to do three seasons’.

“But no one holds you to that so there was always a conversation, it was always fluid. But when you commit to that decision.

“This Doctor is Chris’s Doctor so for me it is right, but if everyone comes up to you forever going ‘I’m a Doctor Who fan’ then that is an absolute joy because it has been such a pleasure.

“But it is also letting go of it. I feel like I will be filled with a lot of grief for it because I kind of… Even thinking about it, it makes me upset. But this show needs new energy.

More on Doctor Who

“The Doctor, the joy of this part is you hand on your boots – and you hand them on. And I don’t know who, but whoever that is, what a thing to go, ‘You are going to have a right time’.”

The 39-year-old British actress became the first woman to take on the title role in 2017, taking over from Peter Capaldi
Image:
The 39-year-old British actress became the first woman to take on the title role in 2017, taking over from Peter Capaldi

Whittaker, who previously starred as Beth Latimer in Broadchurch, recalled crying during her final days on set.

“You know what I’m like – I’m a crier. I had to do my final (backstage interview) today. We haven’t finished filming so I can avoid the thoughts a bit more,” she said.

“But obviously with the behind-the-scenes stuff, it was in that slightly concluding way and, ‘Can you tell us how you feel about the crew?’ and then I just lost it.

“I was just crying my eyes out, absolutely gone. I always knew this is the best time I will ever have on a job. I have felt like that from the start of it.”

Rochenda Sandall, who played Lisa McQueen in Line Of Duty and Sam Spruell from The North Water will be joining the cast as guest stars, while Ripper Street star Craige Els, Steve Oram from The End Of The F****** World, The One actress Nadia Albina and Jonathan Watson of Two Doors Down will also feature.

It was previously announced Robert Bathurst, Thaddea Graham and Blake Harrison would be appearing in the upcoming series.

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The first Doctor Who special will air on 1 January, a second will be released in spring and a third special episode, when the Doctor will regenerate, will air next autumn.

The new series of Doctor Who begins on 31 October.