![]() but which the Doctor immediately recognises as a Dalek. Claiming to be an expert in aliens, the Doctor is shown van Statten's proudest possession, a living specimen which he has named a Metaltron. The Doctor and Rose Tyler soon trip an alarm when the TARDIS deposits them inside the museum of alien artefacts in the underground lair of the powerful and ruthless Henry van Statten, buried in the depths of Utah in 2012. The sequences in the museum foyer were recorded here, including little Amelia's arrival with her aunt, and also sequences of the Doctor telling his colleagues about the powers of the strange Pandorica box. Next time the BBC team visited the museum was Monday 25 January 2010, with the establishment this time playing the National Museum - home to the Anomaly Exhibition and the Pandorica - in the 2010 series finale, The Big Bang. Writer Richard Curtis was present on location to watch director Jonny Campbell bringing his tale to life on Friday 27 November, and also to catch up with his old friend actor Bill Nighy who was playing Doctor Black. This was visited not only by the Doctor and Amy - played by Matt Smith and Karen Gillan - at the Musee D'Orsay in 2010, but by the end of the tale would have been gazed upon by Vincent himself. Later in the year, Vincent And The Doctor was recorded at the museum, with one of the exhibition areas transformed into a display of artwork by the famous Vincent van Gogh. ![]() Guest star Michelle Ryan was delighted to perform as much of the sequence where she was suspended on wires as possible in her role as the lady thief, telling BBC Three: "The wire work was great. "These places are so kind to us," observed executive producer Russell T Davies of the museum on Doctor Who Confidential, with the location giving a spectacular backdrop to the heist executed by Lady Christina de Souza as she dropped in from the Dome and appropriated the chalice of King Athelstan from its display in the Entrance Hall. This time, the museum was playing the part of the International Gallery in London, with the atrium area given over to the BBC Wales team for a night shoot on Monday 19 January. Production on the Doctor Who Specials began in January 2009 with a night shoot back at the museum for the Easter adventure Planet Of The Dead. With the exterior scenes completed, the BBC Wales team moved inside to record sequences in the West Wing which featured as the laboratory foyer and security station and so wrap up the night shoot. On the evening of Monday 16 October, the Edwardian exterior of the civil complex in Cathay's Park was to feature as the exterior of the Lazarus Laboratories in London, with David Tennant and Freema Agyeman joined by numerous other cast members, and the camera crew of BBC Three's Doctor Who Confidential who appeared as the television team covering Professor Lazarus' monumental demonstration for the media. Christopher Eccleston and Billie Piper were also joined for scenes in the museum by Bruno Langley who played Adam, a short-lived TARDIS traveller with the duo.Ī couple of years later, in The Lazarus Experiment, a new Doctor was back at the museum, accompanied by a new companion in the form of Martha Jones. Glass cases housed props such as the arm of a Slitheen and also a 1970s-style Cyberman head which were studied by Rose and the ninth Doctor when they emerged from the TARDIS upon their arrival. The national archaeology of Wales is housed in the museum's many galleries, with collections of art, geology and natural history telling the story of the country and demonstrating the evolution of its land and people.ĭoctor Who's first visit to the museum was in October 2004 for the episode Dalek, when the then-unused Exhibition Hall became the Exhibit Room of Henry van Statten's collection of alien artefacts, half a mile beneath the surface of Utah in the year 2012. In the heart of Cardiff's civic centre, the National Museum of Wales was officially opened in April 1927 by King George V.
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