Neil Gaiman: A Black Actor Turned Down 'Doctor Who'

A Black Actor Turned Down 'Doctor Who'
AUSTIN, TX - MARCH 09: Neil Gaiman poses at the Warner Brothers TV 2013 SXSW party on March 9, 2013 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images)
AUSTIN, TX - MARCH 09: Neil Gaiman poses at the Warner Brothers TV 2013 SXSW party on March 9, 2013 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images)

A black actor turned down the lead role in "Doctor Who," one of the show's writers Neil Gaiman said.

Gaiman took to his blog to answer reader questions about the recent announcement that Peter Capaldi will be "Doctor Who's" Twelfth Doctor and said he has no doubt somebody of a different race/gender will take on the main role on "Doctor Who" eventually.

"I know one black actor who was already offered the part of the Doctor, and who turned it down," Gaiman wrote.

When asked to elaborate, Gaiman declined, saying the reveal "was something I was told in confidence by the actor in question ..." The Huffington Post's request for comment from BBC America was not immediately returned.

Following the announcement of Matt Smith's "Doctor Who" departure, there was a mass amount of speculation about who his replacement would be. Would the new Doctor be a female for the first time? A minority actor? A gay character? Oscar-winner Helen Mirren said it's time to shake it up.

"I'm not going to be the first female 'Doctor Who.' No, no, no. Absolutely not, I absolutely wouldn't contemplate that ... but I do think it's well over-time to have a female 'Doctor Who' ... I think a gay, black female 'Doctor Who' would be best of all,” Mirren told "Daybreak."

On his blog, Gaiman said it wasn't time for a woman to take on the role, but he thinks it was a missed opportunity to not cast a non-white actor.

"Does that mean I’m disappointed by Peter? No, just excited to see what kind of Doctor he makes," he wrote.

"Doctor Who" 50th anniversary special airs on Saturday, Nov. 23 on BBC America.

Close

What's Hot