On the 18th of February, 1993, too soon did
another of Doctor Who’s stars blink out of the sky. Jacqueline Hill, best known
for her wonderful portrayal of one of Doctor Who’s best and brightest, Barbara
Wright, died on this day, 23 years ago. In memory of such a sad passing, this
article celebrates the accomplishments of Jacqueline Hill during her time on
Doctor Who, in which she defeated the Daleks, outwitted the Aztecs, escaped
from the Zarbi and even stood up to the Doctor himself. With such a strong
character that Jacqueline brought to life, Barbara’s courage and independence
set the stonework for the modern Doctor Who companion.

There is a common idea that Doctor Who, whilst in its early
years featured female companions known to scream far too much and do far too
little, but Barbara easily does not fit that bill. With only a few screams
during her entire run (which when done, struck terror for that very reason),
Barbara is a display of strong female independency, a rare sight in 1960s
Sci-Fi, standing up to various enemies and the Doctor many times. Most notably
as an example of this: Jacqueline’s performance in The Aztecs, but also an example of pure acting brilliance. In
performing, Jacqueline lights up the room, – or rather, the set – bringing
redeemable values to even the poorest quality stories (I’m looking at you Web Planet) and, I found, episodes
without her presence lacked some gravitas in the performances, not to insult
other members of the main cast, but rather the extras, who are known to be
generally rubbish in 60s Who.
Beautiful, clever, compassionate, loving and strong-willed,
Jacqueline Hill perfectly portrayed the character of Barbara Wright, who’s
acting accomplishments remain to this day to be enjoyed over and over again or
for the first time and aided Doctor Who to get on to its feet in its beginning,
bringing enjoyment to even the worst episodes, and bringing much, much more to
the very best. If Hartnell’s frosty but loveable Doctor and amazing story
telling aren’t enough to convince you the Hartnell era is worth your time,
Barbara Wright is sure to be that. Jacqueline Hill, while gone, is definitely
not forgotten, providing the template for all companions to follow, her legacy
echoing endlessly throughout Doctor Who.
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