Brigadier reveals Jo’s abduction
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Brigadier inquires about Chin Lee's fate, and the Doctor suggests she be released, believing the threat has passed now that he has her device. As the phone rings, the Brigadier speaks with an Inspector, indicating trouble at Stangmoor prison.
The Doctor anxiously asks about Jo's well-being during the call, only to learn from the Brigadier that Miss Grant has been captured and is being held hostage at the prison, raising the stakes and shifting the scene's focus to Jo's peril.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Controlled and professional, masking any personal concern beneath a veneer of military discipline. His emotional state is one of focused duty, though there may be an undercurrent of frustration at the escalating crisis.
The Brigadier receives the phone call with his characteristic military composure, delivering the news in a clipped, official tone that betrays no emotion. His posture remains rigid, and his responses to the caller are concise and procedural. He does not elaborate on the details of Jo’s capture, instead treating it as another operational update. His demeanor contrasts sharply with the Doctor’s visceral reaction, emphasizing the institutional detachment that defines his role.
- • Maintain operational composure and authority in the face of bad news
- • Ensure the Doctor remains informed but does not act recklessly
- • Coordinate UNIT’s response to the hostage situation without revealing institutional vulnerabilities
- • The situation at Stangmoor requires a structured, military response
- • Emotional reactions can compromise mission effectiveness
- • The Doctor’s personal connection to Jo may cloud his judgment
Fearful and potentially traumatized (implied). Her state is unknown, but the Doctor’s reaction suggests she is in immediate danger and distress.
Jo Grant is the subject of the phone call, revealed to have been captured and held hostage at Stangmoor Prison. She is not physically present in the scene, but her abduction is the catalyst for the event. The Doctor’s immediate concern for her safety highlights her centrality to the unfolding crisis, as she becomes a pawn in the Master’s scheme and a personal stake for the Doctor.
- • Survive the hostage situation
- • Resist the Master’s influence or manipulation
- • She is being used as bait to draw the Doctor into a trap
- • Her safety is now tied to the Doctor’s next moves
Anxious and protective, with a simmering anger at the Master’s manipulation. His usual playful demeanor is stripped away, replaced by a focused intensity that borders on desperation.
The Doctor interrupts the Brigadier’s conversation mid-sentence, his voice sharp with concern as he asks about Jo’s safety. His body language tenses upon hearing the news, and his single-word response (‘Well?’) is laden with unspoken dread. He is visibly shaken, his usual eccentric charm replaced by a raw, protective urgency that reveals his deep emotional investment in Jo’s well-being. His focus shifts instantly from procedural matters to the immediate threat, signaling his readiness to act.
- • Confirm Jo’s safety and condition
- • Assess the immediate threat posed by the Master’s actions at Stangmoor
- • Prepare to intervene directly, bypassing bureaucratic delays
- • Jo is in grave danger and requires immediate assistance
- • The Master’s influence at Stangmoor is escalating beyond control
- • UNIT’s protocols may slow down an effective response
Chin Lee is mentioned in passing as having left the Brigadier’s office prior to the phone call. Her departure is …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The telephone serves as the critical conduit for the news of Jo’s abduction, its ringing interrupting the Doctor and Brigadier’s conversation. The call is brief and functional, delivering the stark update in a matter-of-fact tone that contrasts with the emotional weight of the information. The telephone’s role is purely instrumental, but its sudden intrusion underscores the unpredictability and urgency of the crisis. The device is a symbol of UNIT’s communication infrastructure, both its efficiency and its limitations in conveying the human cost of the Master’s actions.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Brigadier’s office serves as the neutral ground where the news of Jo’s abduction is received, its institutional setting amplifying the contrast between the Doctor’s emotional reaction and the Brigadier’s professional detachment. The heavy curtains and desk, typically associated with authority and control, now feel claustrophobic as the crisis unfolds. The office’s atmosphere shifts from one of procedural discussion to one of urgent tension, with the phone call acting as a jarring intrusion into the relative calm. The space becomes a microcosm of the broader conflict between personal stakes and institutional duty.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
UNIT is represented through the Brigadier’s official capacity and the phone call’s institutional tone, which frames Jo’s abduction as an operational update rather than a personal tragedy. The organization’s protocols are on full display, with the Brigadier acting as its voice and the Doctor’s emotional reaction serving as a counterpoint to its detached efficiency. UNIT’s involvement in this moment highlights its role as both a protector and a potential obstacle, as its bureaucratic structure may hinder the swift action required to address the crisis.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Doctor's identification of the Keller machine at Stangmoor Prison as the source of the telepathic disturbances leads to the Brigadier receiving a call about trouble at Stangmoor Prison (ed984133a5b91689) and learning Jo is in danger."
Dragon hallucination reveals mind-control device"The Doctor's identification of the Keller machine at Stangmoor Prison as the source of the telepathic disturbances leads to the Brigadier receiving a call about trouble at Stangmoor Prison (ed984133a5b91689) and learning Jo is in danger."
Doctor traces mind-control to Stangmoor"The Doctor deduces the manipulation is the work of the Master (beat_fed0390f70165644), his immediate thought is of Chin Lee's fate, showing his concern for those affected by the Master. Then receiving word of trouble at Stangmoor prison (beat_de4b211706567efb)."
Brigadier Uncovers Master’s Hypnotic Manipulation"The Doctor deduces the manipulation is the work of the Master (beat_fed0390f70165644), his immediate thought is of Chin Lee's fate, showing his concern for those affected by the Master. Then receiving word of trouble at Stangmoor prison (beat_de4b211706567efb)."
Doctor Identifies Master’s Hypnotic Scheme"The Brigadier learns that Jo Grant is being held hostage at Stangmoor prison (beat_ed984133a5b91689), motivating the Doctor to go there. This is a direct cause for him arriving at the prison gate in Bessie, where he's intercepted by Mailer (beat_459af478fd4073eb)."
Mailer ambushes Doctor at prison gateThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"BRIGADIER: Yes, I see. There's been trouble at Stangmoor."
"DOCTOR: Is Jo all right?"
"BRIGADIER: Miss Grant's been captured. She's being held hostage."