The Doctor - Tom Baker
Sarah Jane Smith - Elisabeth Sladen
Sutekh -
Gabriel Woolf
Marcus Scarman - Bernard Archard
Laurence Scarman - Michael Sheard
Dr Warlock - Peter Copley
Collins - Michael Bilton
Ernie Clements - George Tovey
Ibrahim Namin - Peter Mayock
Ahmed - Vik Tablian
Mummies - Nick Burnell, Melvyn Bedford,
Kevin Selway
Assistant Floor
Manager - Paul Braithwaite
Costumes - Barbara Kidd
Designer - Christine Ruscoe
Film Cameraman - John McGlashan
Film Editor - M A C Adams
Incidental Music - Dudley Simpson
Make-Up - Jean Steward
Producer - Philip Hinchcliffe
Production Assistant - Peter Grimwade
Production Unit Manager - George Gallaccio,
Janet Radenkovic
Script Editor - Robert Holmes
Special Sounds - Dick Mills
Studio Lighting - Ron Koplick
Studio Sound - Brian Hiles
Theme Arrangement - Delia Derbyshire
Title Music - Ron Grainer
Visual Effects - Ian Scoones

The future of the
cosmos is at stake when the Doctor faces his most fearsome
adversary in this four part adventure.
Returning to UNIT HQ on Earth, the TARDIS is thrown violently
about by a mysterious force and Sarah and the Doctor arrive
instead at an old priory in the year 1911. The owner, Marcus
Scarman, has been excavating ancient tombs and is possessed by
the spirit of Sutekh, bringer of "the gift of death to all
mankind".
Sutekh has lain for thousands of years in his pyramid prison and
Scarman and his robot mummies plan to release this ancient and
evil power.
Will Sutekh the all-powerful be freed from his bonds and destroy
the world, or will the Doctor manage to bring about his
destruction?

Episode One
Egypt, 1911: Marcus Scarman, Fellow and Professor of Archaeology
at All Souls College, Oxford University, is excavating a blind
pyramid. He finds the door to the burial chamber is inscribed
with the Eye of Horus. The Egyptian assistants flee at the sight
of the glowing hieroglyph, leaving the Professor to enter the
chamber alone. As he holds a light to see the undisturbed tomb,
he is blasted by a green ray that emanates from a seated and
cowled figure.
The Fourth Doctor and Sarah Jane Smith are still on their way
back to UNIT headquarters in the TARDIS. Sarah comes in with a
dress on and tells the Doctor he should be glad to be going
home. The Doctor replies it is time he finds something better to
do than run around after the Brigadier. At the moment the tomb
is disturbed, the TARDIS is forced out of its flight path. Sarah
sees an apparition of an alien, jackal-like face in the console
room. The Doctor comments that a mental projection that could
have this effect on the TARDIS would be powerful beyond
imagination. He follows the energy source back to its point of
origin and lands the TARDIS in the Scarman family home, a former
priory somewhere in England, occupying the future site of UNIT
HQ.
The Doctor and Sarah explore the priory and find what appear to
be Egyptian artefacts in the storeroom in which the TARDIS
materialised. Discovered by the butler, they are told that the
house has been taken over by a mysterious Egyptian gentleman by
the name of Ibrahim Namin. The butler urges them to leave. As he
turns to inspect the room after the Doctor and Sarah's departure
via the window, a sarcophagus lid is seen to be moving.
In another part of the priory, Namin is confronted by Dr.
Warlock, an old friend of Professor Scarman, but their heated
debate is interrupted by a scream. Warlock and Namin find that
the scream came from the butler, who has been crushed to death
in the storeroom. Namin shoots Warlock to prevent him from going
for help. The Doctor, who has witnessed the argument and heard
the scream, prevents the shot from being immediately fatal by
using his scarf to pull the gun in Namin's hand. The three make
their escape onto the grounds of the estate. Instead of
following, Namin removes the lid of another sarcophagus to
reveal a mummy. Holding up his ring, he commands the mummy to
activate and orders it to pursue them.
The Doctor, Sarah and Warlock hide in the woods until the
pursuing mummies are called off the hunt by Namin, who is
summoned to the central room of the house by a blast of organ
music. The three fugitives make their way to a hunting lodge on
the grounds used by Laurence Scarman, Professor Scarman's
brother, as a home. Laurence is an amateur scientist whose
latest invention, the Marconiscope, which the Doctor recognises
as a primitive form of radio telescope, has intercepted a signal
from Mars. The Doctor uses a more portable device to decode the
signal as "Beware Sutekh".
The Doctor explains that Sutekh is the last of a powerful alien
race called the Osirians, a paranoid megalomaniac who came to
believe that all life was his enemy. He was pursued across the
galaxy by his brother Horus and was finally defeated on Earth by
the combined might of seven hundred forty Osirians. The Doctor
returns to the house in order to formulate a plan to stop
Sutekh, followed by Sarah and Laurence Scarman.
Namin and the mummies — really service robots — greet the
arrival of Sutekh's servant who travels to the priory via a
lodestone, the portal of which is disguised as an upright
sarcophagus. The Servant of Sutekh appears as a dark-helmeted
humanoid figure dressed in black. The Servant ignores Namin's
pleas for his life and kills him, declaring that Sutekh needs no
other servant.
Episode Two
After killing Namin, the Servant transforms into Marcus Scarman,
although he appears to be an animated corpse. Scarman uses the
spacetime tunnel to communicate with Sutekh, immobile in his
pyramid, who orders Scarman to secure the perimeter of the
estate and to construct an Osirian War Missile. After Scarman
and the robots leave to execute their orders, the Doctor, Sarah
and Laurence Scarman enter the main room. The Doctor locates the
space-time tunnel, but accidentally activates it and is nearly
dragged through. He disrupts the tunnel with the TARDIS key and
is knocked unconscious by the energy discharge. Laurence hides
the three of them in a priest hole, fearing discovery by his
brother.
In another part of the estate, a poacher, Ernie Clements, finds
a mummy trapped by one of his snares. He retreats, but is
prevented from escaping the estate by the deflection barrier
Sutekh has ordered to be generated to secure the perimeter. Once
Scarman has finished placing the generators, he finds Warlock
and questions him about the other people within the barrier.
Clements hears Warlock's death scream and tracks Marcus Scarman
to the house.
While in hiding, the Doctor realises that he will be able to
stop Sutekh controlling his Servant and the mummies by using
Namin's ring and Laurence Scarman's scientific apparatus. Marcus
Scarman is prevented from finding them by the sudden appearance
of Clements. Clements fires his shotgun at Marcus Scarman's back
and is amazed to see the explosion reverse and all damage
healed. Clements panics and retreats, pursued by the robots.
The Doctor locates Namin's corpse and retrieves the ring. All
three proceed into the TARDIS to avoid detection. Laurence is
amazed by the dimensionally transcendental nature of the TARDIS.
Sarah suggests they should just leave in the TARDIS, because
they know that the world did not end in 1911. The Doctor
demonstrates otherwise by moving the TARDIS forward in time to
1980. There, the TARDIS doors open onto a blasted wilderness,
with thunder, rain and lightning hammering down on to ash
fields. Sarah understands that they have no choice but to return
to 1911 and stop Sutekh, or the future will be lost.
The TARDIS returns to 1911 and the three retreat to the hunting
lodge in order to jury-rig a jamming unit to prevent Sutekh
controlling his servants. Laurence finds it too hard to deal
with the Doctor's assertion that Marcus Scarman is dead and that
the being with his appearance is just a puppet. Laurence
overhears the Doctor telling Sarah that when the jamming device
is activated, all of Sutekh's servants will stop, Marcus Scarman
included.
At the crucial moment when the device is activated, Laurence
attempts to stop it from happening. The robots overrun the
hunting lodge after finding and killing Clements. They knock
Laurence out and throw the Doctor to the floor.
Episode Three
One of the robots attacks the jamming device and is disabled by
a sudden discharge of power. Sarah is threatened by a robot, but
the Doctor tells Sarah to grab the ring that they took from
Namin and order the robots to return to Control. Sarah does so
and the robots obey.
Surveying the ruined equipment, the Doctor decides that the only
thing that he can do is to blow up the partially-assembled
rocket in the stable courtyard of the priory. Laurence suggests
using blasting gelignite, a supply of which Clements kept in his
hut on the estate. The Doctor and Sarah leave to locate the
gelignite, ordering Laurence to strip the bindings from the now
deactivated robot left in the hunting lodge.
The Doctor finds the energy barrier and, with Sarah's help,
deactivates a generator loop in order to get through. The
deactivation is detected by Sutekh, who orders Marcus Scarman to
investigate. Marcus finds Laurence in the hunting lodge.
Laurence tries to make Marcus remember his childhood in order to
revive his humanity, but fails, and Marcus tortures Laurence in
order to find out more about the Doctor.
The Doctor and Sarah find the gelignite and hide it near the
rocket before returning to the lodge. There they find Laurence
in a rocking chair, strangled, and a robot stripped of its
bindings. The Doctor asks Sarah to disguise him in the bindings
in order for him to place the gelignite on the rocket without
being detected.
However, when Sarah detonates the gelignite by shooting it with
a hunting rifle, they see the explosion pause, then retreat back
upon itself. The Doctor realises that Sutekh is holding back the
detonation using mental power alone and that the only way to
destroy the missile is travel to Sutekh's prison using the
space-time tunnel and distract him. As he enters the chamber and
calls out Sutekh's name, the last of the Osirians turns in
response. On Earth, the explosion consumes the rocket. Angered,
Sutekh paralyses the Doctor with a blast of mental force.
Episode Four
Sutekh interrogates the Doctor and discovers that he is a Time
Lord from Gallifrey. He then locates the TARDIS and decides to
use it to transport Scarman to the Pyramids of Mars in order to
deactivate the Eye of Horus, the force that is trapping him. The
Doctor avoids being killed by claiming that the TARDIS controls
are isomorphic, meaning they respond to him alone. Sutekh
subjects the Doctor to mind control and returns him to the
priory as another of his servants. He then orders Scarman to
bring a robot and Sarah into the TARDIS to travel to Mars.
On Mars, Sutekh orders Scarman to dispose of the Doctor and the
robot strangles him. Scarman and the robot then find the way out
of the first chamber beneath the pyramid and leave Sarah weeping
over the Doctor. The Doctor then wakes up, revealing that his
respiratory bypass system allowed him to avoid death, and they
then set off in search of Scarman.
The Eye of Horus is located at the end of a corridor beneath the
pyramid. The corridor is divided into a series of chambers and
progress through the chambers is dependent upon solving logical
and philosophical problems. Sutekh navigates Scarman and the
robot through each problem with no deliberation but the Doctor
and Sarah are slower. At the last puzzle, a transparent cylinder
materialises around Sarah. The voice of Horus tells the Doctor
that the chamber has two switches and that he is allowed to ask
one question of one Guardian of Horus. The Guardians materialise
at the same moment as the Crucible and are mummy robots swathed
in gold bindings. There is not much time as Sarah has a limited
air supply within the chamber and will suffocate unless the
Doctor can find out from them which is the right switch to
activate. One robot will always tell the truth and the other
always lie, but which is which?
Since the Guardians are contra-programmed so that one will
always give a false answer, the Doctor asks one Guardian, if he
were to ask the other Guardian which was the life switch, which
would the other indicate? The Doctor reasons that if the
Guardian he asks tells the truth then it must indicate the death
switch; if it is the liar, then it would still indicate the
death switch. The Doctor presses the other switch and the
chamber and Guardians disappear, freeing Sarah.
Scarman and the robot reach the chamber containing the Eye of
Horus. Another Guardian of Horus appears and does battle with
Sutekh's robot. Sutekh realises that he is moments away from
freedom and channels all of his power through Scarman in order
to destroy the Eye of Horus. Scarman momentarily transforms into
the jackal creature Sarah saw earlier in the TARDIS and destroys
the Eye before falling to the floor and decaying to dust in an
instant. Arriving too late, the Doctor looks back and sees the
bulkhead doors open one by one, revealing the TARDIS at the end
of the corridor. He realises that the time factor can still save
them.
Back in the priory, the Doctor exits the TARDIS at a run,
holding a piece of the TARDIS console. He runs to the main room
of the priory and attaches the device to the space-time tunnel.
Sutekh appears in the tunnel, travelling towards the exit, but
he cannot seem to reach it. He pleads with the Doctor to release
him, but the Doctor simply turns the dial and Sutekh recedes
screaming. The Doctor declares that Sutekh lived for about 7000
years. The Doctor explains that time control from the TARDIS
shifted the mouth of the space-time tunnel into the far future,
which Sutekh could never hope to reach. They had two minutes to
return to Earth from Mars and set the trap because this is the
amount of time that it takes for radio waves to propagate
between the two planets.
As the Doctor and Sarah pack up and prepare to leave, a thermal
imbalance in the time tunnel causes it to catch fire. The Doctor
remembers that the UNIT headquarters was built on the remains of
a burnt priory and the two decide to leave it alone, re-entering
the TARDIS and dematerialising. Outside, the priory is consumed
in flames.
[Source: TARDIS Wikia]

Working
Title(s):
■
N/A
Things to look out for:
■
This is one of several stories in
which everyone The Doctor and his companion meet are dead by the
end of the story. Another such story is Horror of
Fang Rock. The only character who does not die
(well, not on-screen anyway) is Ahmed, who is not present for
anything except the opening scene in Egypt and never meets the
Doctor. (Although Ahmed appears to survive on-screen, according
to Terrance Dicks's novelisation of the story
he and the other Egyptian labourers are killed by Namin's men on
fleeing the tomb.)
■
This is the only serial in the classic series to depict Mars. To
date, the only other televised stories to feature the planet are
The Christmas
Invasion and
The Waters of Mars.
Archive:
■ All 4 Episodes exist in
the BBC Archives.
Bloopers:
■ When Sutekh stands for the first
time, the hand of a stagehand can be seen on the seat of the
throne.
■ Just before Marcus Scarman is shot by the poacher, as he
approaches the priest hole, the square outline of the metal
plate (to protect the actor from the explosive squib) can be
seen underneath his jacket.
■ As The Doctor taps on Sarah Jane's head while she is weeping
over him, the following shot reveals the edge of a camera
quickly pulling back out of view from the upper left hand
corner, as a startled Sarah Jane looks in the other direction.
■ The Doctor talks to Laurence Scarman in the hunting lodge,
goes outside and leaves his hat behind, yet he is wearing it
again in the next scene.
■ When attacking Sarah Jane in the lodge, a mummy smashes the
Marconiscope to pieces and an explosion ensues, yet the
telescope is all in one piece in the very next shot.
■ Episode 4 - At 12:22 there is a man standing in the darkness
behind the door.

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Pyramids Of Mars
Manufactured by: BBC DVD / 2|Entertain
(cat.#1350)
Format: DVD -
Region 2 & 4 - PAL UK Episodic
RRP:
£19.99
Rating: U
Released:
1st March 2004
Special Features:
■ Commentary by Elisabeth Sladen, Michael Sheard and
producer Philip Hinchcliffe.
■ 'Osirian Gothic' - interviews with director Paddy
Russell, Elisabeth Sladen, Michael Sheard, Philip Hinchcliffe,
Bernard Archard, Peter Copley, Gabriel Woolf and designer
Christine Ruscoe.
■ 'Serial Thrillers' - documentary about Philip
Hinchcliffe's tenure as producer.
■ Now and Then: The Locations of Pyramids of Mars.
■ Deleted scenes.
■ 'Oh, Mummy' comedy sketch.
■ Photo gallery.
■ Production notes.
■ Easter egg.
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Doctor Who And The Pyramids Of Mars
Manufactured by: BBC Audio
Format: Audio
CD
RRP:
£13.99
Released:
14th August 2008
Notes:
Novelisation. Read by Tom
Baker. Released as a 4-CD set.
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Pyramids Of Mars: Classic Music From
The Tom Baker Era
Manufactured by: Silva Screen Records (cat #FILMCD
134)
Format: CD
Soundtrack
RRP:
£TBC
Released:
June 1993
Notes:
Released as a 1-CD set.
Tracks:
1-5 - The Ark in Space
6-13 - Genesis of the Daleks
14-18 - Pyramids of Mars
19-22 - Planet of Evil
23-30 - The Brain of Morbius
31 - The Doctor's Theme
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Doctor Who And The Pyramids Of Mars
Manufactured by: Target
Format:
Paperback Book
Written by:
Terrance Dicks
RRP:
£0.45p
Published:
16th December
1976
Notes:
No.50 in the Target Doctor Who Library.
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Doctor Who And The Pyramids Of Mars
Manufactured by: Target
Format:
Paperback Book
Written by:
Terrance Dicks
RRP:
£1.35
Published:
1983
Notes:
No.50 in the Target Doctor Who Library.
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Doctor Who And The Pyramids Of Mars
Manufactured by: Target
Format:
Paperback Book
Written by:
Terrance Dicks
RRP:
£3.50
Published:
21st March
1993
Notes:
No.50 in the Target Doctor Who Library.
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