Jamie McCrimmon
James Robert McCrimmon, usually simply called Jamie, is a fictional character played by Frazer Hines in the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. A piper of the Clan McLaren who lived in 18th-century Scotland, he was a companion of the Second Doctor and a regular in the programme from 1966 to 1969. The spelling of his surname varies from one script to another; it is alternately rendered as Macrimmon and McCrimmond.
Character history
James Robert McCrimmon was the son of Donald McCrimmon—a piper, like his father and his father's father. Jamie first appears in The Highlanders, encountering the Doctor, Ben and Polly in the aftermath of the Battle of Culloden in 1746. At the end of the story, Polly suggests that the Doctor take Jamie along with them. Jamie continues to travel with the Doctor even after Ben and Polly leave the TARDIS at the end of The Faceless Ones. He appears in all but the very first Second Doctor serial, The Power of the Daleks, and in more episodes than any other companion, although Tegan Jovanka served with the Doctor for the longest continuous period in terms of years on the series.Jamie shares a lively, bantering relationship with the Doctor, and during his time in the series sees the arrival and departure of first Victoria Waterfield and finally Zoe Heriot. Jamie, being a product of his time, is always solicitous and gentlemanly towards the women who travel with him. Jamie does not have the background to always understand the situations his adventures with the Doctor take him into, but is quick enough to translate high technology and concepts into equivalents he can understand and deal with. His relationship with the Doctor is not always smooth and in The Evil of the Daleks he comes close to leaving the Doctor whom he feels has been manipulating him and Victoria to discover the human factor for the Daleks, without thinking about the consequences. His battle cry Creag an tuire, in Scottish Gaelic, translates to "The Boar's Rock." It is similar to Creag an tuirc, the motto of the MacLaren Clan of Scotland.
Together with the Doctor, Jamie encounters Cybermen, Daleks, the Yeti in the London Underground, the Ice Warriors, and many other dangers. Jamie is particularly fond and protective of Victoria, due in part to her being an elegant Victorian lady. For example, in The Ice Warriors Jamie's first priority is to rescue Victoria despite being injured to the point where he can't walk. Jamie is heartbroken when Victoria decides to stay with the Harris family at the end of Fury from the Deep, to the point of even being briefly angry with the Doctor for allowing her to leave. Jamie initially finds Zoe's more modern attitudes and bossy nature irritating, but eventually adopts the same protective attitude disguised by the same bantering he engages in with the Doctor. Often Jamie's simple common sense beats Zoe's strict logic, such as in The Dominators where Jamie realises that the erupting volcano is going to threaten the TARDIS, while the Doctor and Zoe are still congratulating themselves on defeating their enemies.
as Jamie
During the filming of The Mind Robber, Frazer Hines contracted chickenpox and was replaced for part of the serial by Hamish Wilson. This was written in as part of the story when Jamie is turned into a cardboard cut-out and has his face removed by the Master of the Land of Fiction. The Doctor's first attempt to reconstruct his face is unsuccessful. Eventually Jamie's real face is restored when Hines recovered.
Jamie's travels with the Doctor come to an end on the battlefields of The War Games, when the Time Lords finally put the Doctor on trial for interfering with the universe. For his offences, the Doctor is forced to regenerate and exiled to Earth. Jamie and Zoe are returned to their own times, their memories of the Doctor wiped, save for their first encounters with him. When last seen, Jamie is fighting an English redcoat back on the fields of Scotland.
Frazer Hines returned to Doctor Who as an illusory image of Jamie in the 20th-anniversary special The Five Doctors. He also reprised the role in the 1985 serial The Two Doctors alongside Patrick Troughton and Colin Baker as the Second and Sixth Doctors, respectively, with the Sixth Doctor remembering that he was always rather fond of Jamie when they travelled together.
Other mentions
He is mentioned by the Fifth Doctor in Castrovalva when he calls Adric Jamie, by the Sixth Doctor in The Two Doctors and Attack of the Cybermen, and by the Seventh Doctor in The Curse of Fenric. A vision of Jamie is seen along with every other companion aside from Leela on the scanner screen in Resurrection of the Daleks.In Tooth and Claw, the Tenth Doctor uses the alias Doctor James McCrimmon together with a Scottish accent.
Other appearances
Jamie's ultimate fate remains unclear within the generally accepted canonicity of the various Doctor Who spin-off media.In the comic strip story "The World Shapers" with the Sixth Doctor, published in Doctor Who Magazine #127–#129, an elderly Jamie remembers his time with the Doctor, explaining that the Doctor had taught him tricks to ensure the Time Lords would not really wipe his memories. In this story, written by Grant Morrison, Jamie sacrifices himself to stop the titular world shaper machine which was evolving aliens into Cybermen. Jamie's death outside the television series was controversial due to his status as a prominent companion, and the fact that story offers an origin story for the cybermen than contradicts almost everything else about them to have been produced.
In the Virgin New Adventures novel , writer Paul Cornell omitted Jamie from the group of deceased companions encountered by the Seventh Doctor. In "Planet of the Dead", a race of shapeshifters known as the Ganzalum impersonate the Doctor's dead companions, including Jamie.
Big Finish Productions have reunited Jamie with the Sixth Doctor in a series of audio plays starting with City of Spires, where he appears to have become a rebel leader known as 'the Black Donald'. However, in the final story, Legend of the Cybermen, it is revealed that this Jamie is simply a fictional construct within the realm seen in The Mind Robber, created by an older Zoe, based on her memories of the real Jamie, to protect the Doctor until he could come to her aid, making him older and creating his 'Black Donald' identity to give him a heroic backstory in the Doctor's absence. Jamie and Zoe also meet the Sixth Doctor in the later audio Last of the Cybermen, when an unknown enemy causes the Sixth Doctor to swap places with the Second just after the Second Doctor discovered a Cybermen base and a plan to change the history of the Cyber-Wars to avert their final defeat, the Sixth Doctor and Jamie attempting to change history so that Jamie and Zoe can escape the Time Lords and retain their memories before the Sixth Doctor returns to his time and his companions lose all memory of these events. The Companion Chronicles audio "The Glorious Revolution" sees a Time Lord agent briefly restore the memory of an older Jamie to help resolve an incident where he nearly changed history while travelling with the Doctor, the Time Lord sending energy to Jamie's past self to keep him stabilized until the Doctor can avert the consequences of Jamie's actions, but in the end Jamie chooses to have his memory of the Doctor erased once again, reasoning that it would just make him sad to remember what he had with the Doctor despite his good life now.
The Doctor Who Adventures comic strip gives the Tenth Doctor a companion from 21st century Scotland named Heather McCrimmon, who is a descendant of Jamie.
Influence
The character of Jamie McCrimmon inspired author Diana Gabaldon to set her Outlander series in Jacobite Scotland, and to name its protagonist "Jamie".The story Gabaldon was watching was The War Games.
List of appearances
Television
;Season 4- The Highlanders
- The Underwater Menace
- The Moonbase
- The Macra Terror
- The Faceless Ones
- The Evil of the Daleks
- The Tomb of the Cybermen
- The Abominable Snowmen
- The Ice Warriors
- The Enemy of the World
- The Web of Fear
- Fury from the Deep
- The Wheel in Space
- The Dominators
- The Mind Robber
- The Invasion
- The Krotons
- The Seeds of Death
- The Space Pirates
- The War Games
- The Five Doctors
- The Two Doctors
Audio drama
- Fear of the Daleks
- Helicon Prime
- The Great Space Elevator
- Resistance
- The Three Companions
- The Glorious Revolution
- The Emperor of Eternity
- Echoes of Grey
- Prison in Space
- The Forbidden Time
- Tales from the Vault
- The Memory Cheats
- The Selachian Gambit
- The Jigsaw War
- The Uncertainty Principle
- The Rosemariners
- The Queen of Time
- Lords of the Red Planet
- The House of Cards
Sixth Doctor audio dramas
- City of Spires
- Night's Black Agents
- Wreck of the Titan
- Legend of the Cybermen
Short Trips audios
- Seven to One
- The Five Dimensional Man
- Penny Wise, Pound Foolish
Novels
- The Menagerie by Martin Day
- Twilight of the Gods by Christopher Bulis
- The Dark Path by David A. McIntee
- The Roundheads by Mark Gatiss
- Dreams of Empire by Justin Richards
- The Final Sanction by Steve Lyons
- Heart of TARDIS by Dave Stone
- Independence Day by Peter Darvill-Evans
- Combat Rock by Mick Lewis
- The Colony of Lies by Colin Brake
- The Indestructible Man by Simon Messingham
- Foreign Devils by Andrew Cartmel
- The Wheel of Ice'' by Stephen Baxter
Short stories
- "Fallen Angel" by Andy Lane
- "Vortex of Fear" by Gareth Roberts
- "Aliens and Predators" by Colin Brake
- "War Crimes" by Simon Bucher-Jones
- "uPVC" by Paul Farnsworth
- "Please Shut the Gate" by Stephen Lock
- "Twin Piques" by Tony Keetch
- "Constant Companion" by Simon A. Forward
- "Face-Painter" by Tara Samms
- "The Astronomer's Apprentice" by Simon A. Forward
- "One Small Step" by Nicholas Briggs
- "That Time I Nearly Destroyed The World Whilst Looking For a Dress" by Joseph Lidster
- "The Age of Ambition" by Andrew Campbell
- "The Farmer's Story" by Todd Green
- "Screamager" by Jacqueline Rayner
- "The Last Emperor" by Jacqueline Rayner
- "Goodwill Towards Men" by J. Shaun Lyon
- "That Which Went Away" by Mark Wright
- "Undercurrents" by Gary Merchant
- "Visiting Hours" by Eddie Robson
- "Mercury" by Eddie Robson
- "All of Beyond" by Helen Raynor
- "The Cutty Wren" by Ann Kelly
- "The Christmas Presence" by Simon Barnard & Paul Morris
- "Lepidoptery for Beginners" by John Dorney
- "One Step Forward, Two Steps Back" by Chris Thomas
- "Homework" by Michael Coen
- "The Slave War" by Una McCormack
- "On a Pedestal" by Kathleen O. David
- "The Monster Factory" by Alec Daniels
- "Relative Dimensions" by Andrew Cheverton
- "The Nameless City" by Michael Scott
Comics
- "Invasion of the Quarks" by John Canning
- "The Killer Wasps" by John Canning
- "Ice Cap Terror" by John Canning
- "Jungle of Doom!" by John Canning
- "Father Time" by John Canning
- "Martha the Mechanical Housemaid" by John Canning
- "Freedom by Fire" by David Brian
- "Atoms Infinite" by David Brian
- "The Vampire Plants" by David Brian
- "The Robot King" by David Brian
- "The World Shapers" by Grant Morrison, John Ridgway and Tim Perkins
- "Planet of the Dead" by Lee Sullivan and John Freeman, although technically that isn't Jamie, but someone pretending to be him.
- "Bringer of Darkness" by Warwick Gray and Martin Geraghty
- "Land of the Blind" by W. Scott Gray and Lee Sullivan