I've had more fan mail from 'Doctor Who' than anything. People love the show so passionately.

I wake up in the morning, and I go, 'I'm Doctor Who! I'm playing Doctor Who. I'm Doctor Who.'

Music's not like becoming a doctor, who can walk into a community and find people who need him.

I have no regrets about being 'Doctor Who'. It was the greatest thing that ever happened to me.

I once went to a 'Star Trek' convention by mistake - I thought I was going to a 'Doctor Who' one.

But being in 'Doctor Who' is a dream come true. I've been a fan since I can remember watching TV.

I often look at a lot of Doctor Who stuff that's about now, which no one has approached me about.

I'm a huge 'Vampire Diaries' fan. My sister got me into 'Doctor Who.' Those are my biggest things.

You don't want to take over the universe. You wouldn't know what to do with it beyond shout at it.

Having made other shows, the thing with 'Doctor Who' is that you're doing everything, all at once.

It was lovely to do The Knock because I haven't done anything really significant since Doctor Who.

I know what 'Doctor Who' fans are like because I am a 'Doctor Who' fan myself. They're good people.

Every viewer who ever turned on 'Doctor Who' has taken him into his heart. He belongs to all of us.

To be honest, 'Doctor Who' fans are a mixture of crazies plus solid citizens, but they're relentless.

What I'd love to do is every now and then go, 'Oh my God, I've got this amazing idea for 'Doctor Who.'

I'm so excited to be working on 'Doctor Who,' as it's such a big and important part of British culture.

'Doctor Who' rewrites your brain because at first when you watch it, you think, 'That doesn't make sense.'

That's what I love about 'Doctor Who' - it takes you back to being the age you were when you first saw it.

I'd kill to be 'Doctor Who.' Maybe they could make the Doctor two people? He has got two hearts, after all.

Now I have the voice of a 16-year-old. I'm looking for a doctor who could give me the body of a 16-year-old.

'Doctor Who' was my first telly job, and before that I did a lot of theatre in education, children's theatre.

'Doctor Who' is one of those things that stays with you throughout your career, and I'm very happy with that.

It would be extraordinary if the BBC were to make me the first black 'Doctor Who;' it would be extraordinary.

My fantasy is, if I wasn't on 'Dexter,' I would move my family to London and work for the BBC on 'Doctor Who.'

Doctor Who' is the best show to write for, because of the actors and the scale of imagination that it demands.

'Doctor Who' is really close to my heart, and I felt like I was a part of it at the best time, with Russell T.

The thing about 'Doctor Who' is it's chased around the world, so there's 50 fans hanging out at every location.

I love what they do with 'Doctor Who,' where they have the series, and then they do a big Christmas movie special.

I don't subscribe to the 'Doctor Who' magazine and we've only got the normal amount of 'Doctor Who' fridge magnets.

'Doctor Who' would be overnight fame that would last for three years, and then what? I'm in this for the long term.

'Doctor Who' was the first mythology that I learned, before ever I ran into Greek or Roman or Egyptian mythologies.

As a doctor who took care of patients for 25 years, I saw the problems with America's health care system every day.

The doctor who diagnosed me with ALS, or motor neuron disease, told me that it would kill me in two or three years.

I think 'Doctor Who' is the greatest idea television has ever had, and our job is to convince the rest of the world.

Would still love to do something with the 'Doctor Who' franchise at some point because I know they have a lot of fun.

The range of 'Doctor Who' is, I would argue, bigger than the range of any other television program or movie franchise.

Lis Sladen was very important to me, you know. When I joined the little world of 'Doctor Who', Lis was already a star.

I wanted to be a surgeon, possibly influenced by the qualities of our family doctor who cared for our childhood ailments.

I am perhaps unusual in that I came to 'Doctor Who' through the numerous novelisations and not through the television show.

Whether people watch Doctor Who or not over here, everybody knows about it. It's a British icon, it's so part of the nation.

I do think it's well over-time to have a female Doctor Who. I think a gay, black female Doctor Who would be the best of all.

I think it's not misplaced in 'Doctor Who' to have someone who is little bit edgy and maybe a little volatile and dangerous.

I started watching some 'Doctor Who' recently on my own and got too scared. I had to watch it in the daytime - I'm pathetic.

Oh my God, I'd love to meet the other Masters in 'Doctor Who'. They're such fantastic actors I'd be slightly in awe of them.

In an ideal world, 'Doctor Who' makes the whole nation eight years old, with that excitement and engagement and wide-eyedness.

It's funny: when I first started getting vocal about how much I liked 'Doctor Who,' I didn't realize how deep the fan base was.

My mother says my first television experience was hiding behind the sofa watching John Pertwee's 'Doctor Who.' I loved that show.

Everywhere I go, I am The Doctor, and everyone smiles at me - they are pleased to see Doctor Who, who's far more exciting than I am.

'Doctor Who' is, unavoidably, a product of mid-twentieth-century debates about Britain's role in the world as its empire unravelled.

I think expectations of 'Doctor Who' should always be high, because it's a show that must always progress and get better and better.

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