Description: ITEM IS BRAND NEW AND REMOVED FROM BOX WITH PLASTIC CASING. THIS FIGURE COMES WITH THE SONIC SCREWDRIVER. "Doctor Who Christopher Eccleston Figure" "Doctor Who The Parting of the Ways Figure" "Doctor Who The Thirteen Doctors Collector Figure" Up for sale is the "2016 Doctor Who Christopher Eccleston Figure". AKA "2016 Doctor Who The Thirteen Doctors Ninth Doctor Figure" This 2016 "Doctor Who The Thirteen Doctors Collectors Figure Set Figure" is brand new please see all pics. This "Doctor Who The Parting of the Ways Figure" is approximately 5.5" tall. This "Doctor Who Figure" was originally included in the "Doctor Who The Thirteen Doctors Collectors Set" and it is a variant figure, like all of them in set. it features the Purple T-Shirt, Dark Grey Trousers and Brown Shoes. This came as a Limited Number Set of only 3,000 i believe and was released at the SDCC 2016. It represents "Christopher Eccleston" from the 2005 Doctor Who episode "The Parting of the Ways". We purchased many Doctor Who Collector Sets and loose figures recently so if you are interested in another set please visit our store. We do combine shipping. "The Parting of the Ways" is the thirteenth episode and the season finale of the revived first series of the British science fiction television programme Doctor Who. The episode was first broadcast on BBC One on 18 June 2005. It was the second episode of the two-part story. The first part, "Bad Wolf", was broadcast on 11 June. In the episode, the Dalek race invades the human satellite Satellite Five in the year 200,100, intending to make more Daleks by harvesting dead humans. The alien time traveller the Ninth Doctor (Christopher Eccleston) plans to use the satellite's transmitter to try to destroy every Dalek, while at the same time sending his travelling companion Rose Tyler (Billie Piper) home to keep her safe. The episode featured Eccleston making his final appearance as the Ninth Doctor and marks the first appearance of David Tennant as the Tenth Doctor. Plot The Ninth Doctor uses the extrapolator on the TARDIS to generate a protective shield around it as he pilots the TARDIS to rescue Rose from the Daleks. The Doctor discovers the Daleks' Emperor survived the Time War and escaped to Earth in a crippled ship, where it rebuilt the Dalek race by harvesting DNA material from humanity. Returning to Satellite Five, Jack uses the extrapolator to shield the top six floors of the station and sets up defensive positions. The Doctor attempts to create a delta wave generator which will destroy the Daleks, but also life on Earth. The Doctor tricks Rose into going inside the TARDIS, and remotely directs the TARDIS to return Rose to her home time to keep her safe. The Daleks invade the station, killing everyone in their path. Rose notices the words "Bad Wolf"—words which also exist on Satellite Five — on her estate and realises that they are a message rather than a warning. She convinces Mickey and Jackie to help her open the heart of the TARDIS. Mickey uses a truck borrowed by Jackie to pull the panel on the console open and Rose is bathed in the light of the TARDIS. The Daleks reach the top of Satellite Five, killing Jack and Lynda in the process. They file into the control room while the Doctor contemplates firing the delta wave, eventually deciding he cannot do it. Before the Daleks can kill the Doctor, Rose arrives in the TARDIS, wrapped in the glow of the time vortex. She declares that she is the "Bad Wolf", spreading the words "Bad Wolf" throughout time and space as a message to lead her there. Rose disintegrates the Dalek fleet. The Doctor begs her to relinquish her new power, but instead she resurrects Jack. Rose begins to suffer the effects of the power, and the Doctor kisses her, absorbing the entire power of the vortex into his own body to save her life. He releases it back into the TARDIS and carries an unconscious Rose back inside. They leave in the TARDIS before Jack can get back to them. As a result of absorbing the energy of the time vortex, every cell in the Doctor's body begins to die. He reassures Rose, before regenerating into the Tenth Doctor. The Ninth Doctor is an incarnation of the Doctor, the protagonist of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. He is portrayed by Christopher Eccleston during the first series of the show's revival in 2005. Within the series' narrative, the Doctor is a centuries-old alien Time Lord from the planet Gallifrey who travels in time and space in the TARDIS, frequently with companions. At the end of his life, the Doctor regenerates into a new version of himself, with a changed physical appearance and personality. Eccleston's incarnation of the Doctor is a war-torn loner who is more pragmatic and less eccentric than his previous selves, fiercely determined to protect the innocent at all costs, and prone to using humour to mask the trauma he suffers from as a result of the Time War. To fit in with a 21st-century audience, the Doctor was given the primary companion Rose Tyler (Billie Piper), who was designed to be just as independent and courageous as the Doctor. The Doctor and Rose also briefly travels with Adam Mitchell (Bruno Langley) and are later joined by Captain Jack Harkness (John Barrowman), a reformed con man from the 51st century. The Doctor, Rose, and Jack form a close team but are separated in the series finale in which each character has to make difficult choices and face sacrifice. Television The Ninth Doctor first appears in the episode "Rose" where he rescues 19-year-old shop worker Rose Tyler (Billie Piper) from an Auton attack in the department store where she works. After Rose helps the Doctor defeat the Nestene Consciousness, he invites her to travel with him in the TARDIS.[1] On their first trip in "The End of the World", the Doctor takes Rose to witness the destruction of planet Earth in the year five billion. It is revealed that the Doctor's own species, the Time Lords, have been destroyed and the Doctor is the last of his kind.[2] Following from this, they visit Cardiff in 1869 in "The Unquiet Dead", where they encounter author Charles Dickens, of whom the Doctor claims to be a big fan. When faced with a near-death situation, the Doctor tells Rose that he was glad to have met her.[3] In "Aliens of London", when taking Rose home, the Doctor accidentally returns to Earth 12 months after they left. Because of his actions, he is treated like an Internet predator by Rose's mother Jackie (Camille Coduri) and Rose's boyfriend Mickey (Noel Clarke) has become Rose's murder suspect.[4] After Mickey helps the Doctor and Rose defeat the Slitheen by firing a missile at their base at 10 Downing Street in "World War Three", the Doctor offers Mickey a place in the TARDIS with them but he refuses.[5] In the episode "Dalek", the Doctor encounters a Dalek, though he had believed the race to be extinct as the Time War between the Time Lords and Daleks concluded with the mutual annihilation of both races—an event for which the Doctor himself was responsible. The Doctor tortures the surviving Dalek and at the end of the episode prepares to kill it in cold blood. He refrains once Rose calls him out on this.[6] Adam Mitchell (Bruno Langley) joins the Doctor and Rose as companion at the end of "Dalek".[6] However, when he tries to smuggle future knowledge from Satellite Five in the year 200,000 back to his own time in "The Long Game", the Doctor expels him from the TARDIS.[7] The Doctor is angry at Rose after he takes her to the event of father Pete Tyler's (Shaun Dingwall) death and she saves his life, causing a paradox in "Father's Day". However, when Pete dies to restore the timeline he shows compassion and encourages her to sit by his side as he passes away.[8] In "The Empty Child", after encountering Captain Jack Harkness (John Barrowman) (a con artist and former Time Agent from the 51st century) in 1941, the Doctor realises Jack had caused a deadly nanotechnological plague to sweep through the human race, turning humans into gas-mask zombies. Following the resolution of the situation, Jack prepares to sacrifice himself in "The Doctor Dances", but the Doctor saves him and invites him on board the TARDIS.[9] In "Boom Town", when the Doctor encounters Blon (Annette Badland), the only Slitheen to survive the Downing Street explosion, in present-day Cardiff he has doubts over whether or not to send her home to be executed. During this episode, the Doctor first notices that he and Rose had kept coming across the words "Bad Wolf".[10] In "Bad Wolf", the Doctor, Rose and Jack find themselves at the mercy of the Bad Wolf Corporation based on Satellite Five. However, the true enemy is revealed to be the Daleks, as the Dalek Emperor had also survived the Time War and had rebuilt the Dalek race.[11] In "The Parting of the Ways", the Doctor sends Rose back to the 21st century to protect her before attempting to destroy the Dalek army. When he realises that doing this would destroy most of planet Earth he is unable to do so, proclaiming he would rather be a coward than a killer. Having absorbed the energies of the time vortex, Rose is able to return to the Doctor and destroy the Daleks. To save Rose from being killed by harbouring the time vortex, the Doctor removes the harmful effects by kissing her. However, the damage to his cells causes him to regenerate and the Tenth Doctor (David Tennant) takes his place.[12] The Ninth Doctor's origins were not explored during Eccleston's tenure in 2005, but were given in the show's 50th anniversary special "The Day of the Doctor" in 2013. This episode also revealed that the Ninth Doctor was actually the Doctor's tenth incarnation; as explained in the short episode "The Night of the Doctor", a companion episode to "The Day of the Doctor", the Eighth Doctor accepted aid from the Sisterhood of Karn after a spaceship crash to ensure that he would regenerate into an incarnation suited to fight in the war. This incarnation (played by John Hurt) would have been the Ninth Doctor, but instead took on the moniker of the War Doctor because his involvement in the war made him feel unworthy of his usual numbered title. In the aftermath of the Time War, the War Doctor succumbs to old age. The regeneration scene is cut short just before a CGI rendition of Eccleston's likeness can be fully seen, as he declined to return for the episode and showrunner Steven Moffat wished to honour his decision. Eccleston does, however, appear in stock footage and stills alongside the first eight Doctors in promotional material for the special.
Price: 35 USD
Location: Vista, California
End Time: 2025-01-14T20:37:16.000Z
Shipping Cost: 4.5 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Convention/Event: SDCC 2016
Doctor Who Christopher Eccleston Figure: Doctor Who, Christopher Eccleston, Figure, The Ninth Doctor, SDCC
Items Included: Sonic Screwdriver
Year Manufactured: 2016
Item Length: 5.5 in
TV Show: Doctor Who The Parting of the Ways
Personalize: No
Doctor Who The Parting of the Ways Figure: Doctor Who, Christopher Eccleston, Figure, The Ninth Doctor, SDCC
Item Height: 5.5 in
Features: 1st Edition, Exclusive, Limited Edition, Special Edition, Unboxed
Featured Person/Artist: Christopher Eccleston
Movie: Doctor Who The Parting of the Ways
Doctor Who Variant Figure: Doctor Who, Christopher Eccleston, Figure, The Ninth Doctor, SDCC
Character: The Ninth Doctor, The 9th Doctor
Signed: No
Doctor Who The Ninth Doctor Figure: Doctor Who, Christopher Eccleston, Figure, The Ninth Doctor, SDCC
Color: Multicolor
Vehicle Type: Dalek
Material: ABS Plastic
SDCC Exclusive Doctor Who Figure: Doctor Who, Christopher Eccleston, Figure, The Ninth Doctor, SDCC
Age Level: 5-7 Years
Franchise: Doctor Who
Doctor Who Thirteen Doctors Collectors Set: Doctor Who, Christopher Eccleston, Figure, The Ninth Doctor, SDCC
Brand: Character Options, Underground Toys
Series: Doctor Who Series 1
Type: Action Figure
Doctor Who The Thirteen Doctors Collectors Set: Doctor Who, Christopher Eccleston, Figure, The Ninth Doctor, SDCC
Theme: TV, Movie & Video Games
Doctor Who The Parting of the Ways: Doctor Who, Christopher Eccleston, Figure, The Ninth Doctor, SDCC
Time Period Manufactured: 2010-2019
Country/Region of Manufacture: China
Character Family: Doctor Who