Portrayed by the legendary Mark Bonnar, The Eleven is a Time Lord suffering from a unique and terrifying affliction. He retains the personalities of all his previous incarnations. While a Time Lord usually regenerates and changes personality, The Eleven carries his past selves with him like a crowded room in his head.
Spoiler warning for a decade-old audio drama, but proceed with caution if you are unspoiled. Doctor Who - Big Finish - UNIT- Dominion
In an era where Doctor Who on television often shies away from moral ambiguity, Dominion embraces it. It reminds us that the Doctor is not a superhero but a survivor—one who has seen empires fall and friends turn to dust. And it asks the question that all great Who stories ask: at what cost does victory come? Portrayed by the legendary Mark Bonnar, The Eleven
The Trivarox communicate via a disorienting, multi-layered hiss that sounds like snakes speaking in harmony. Battle sequences are reminiscent of classic Doctor Who but with cinematic surround-sound scale; you can hear the clank of UNIT rifles, the squeal of alien plasma fire, and the crunch of collapsing concrete in vivid detail. Spoiler warning for a decade-old audio drama, but
The friction between Klein’s calculating nature and Will’s innocence provides the story with its emotional core, forcing the Seventh Doctor to play the role of ringmaster to a chaotic circus.
: In a major series twist, the "Other Doctor" is revealed to be the Master in a new "reborn" body.
On one side, there is Elizabeth Klein, portrayed by the brilliant Tracey Childs. Klein is a character with a deeply complex history. Originally a scientist from an alternate timeline where the Nazis won World War II (thanks to her meddling with the Doctor’s TARDIS), she had reformed, but her relationship with the Doctor was always fraught with tension. She is intelligent, ruthless, and cynical—the antithesis of the traditional "assistant."