The Stones of Venice is a Big Finish Productionsaudio drama based on the long-running Britishscience fiction television series Doctor Who. Big Finish Productions is a British company that produces audio plays based on British cult science fiction properties. ... This is a list of audio plays based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who produced by Big Finish Productions. ... The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is a country in western Europe, and member of the Commonwealth of Nations, the G8, the European Union, and NATO. Usually known simply as the United Kingdom, the UK, or (inaccurately) as Great Britain or Britain, the UK has four constituent... A broadcast of the long-running and popular British science-fiction series Doctor Who. ... The Doctor Who 2005 television series logo. ...
Plot
Sometime in the future, the Eighth Doctor and Charley visit Venice about to sink below the water. Venice is known for its waterways and gondolas Gondola. ...
The Doctor is the only known name of the central character in the long-running BBC television science-fiction series Doctor Who, and also featured in a vast range of spin-off novels, audio dramas and comic strips connected to the series. ... Paul McGann (born November 14, 1959) is an actor who made his name on the BBC serial The Monocled Mutineer, in which he played the lead role. ... India Fisher, who provides the voice for Charley Pollard Charlotte Elspeth Pollard, or simply Charley, is a fictional character played by India Fisher in a series of audio plays produced by Big Finish Productions based on the long-running British science fiction television series Doctor Who. ... India Fisher, who provides the voice for Charley Pollard India Fisher is a British actress. ... Mark Gatiss (born October 17, 1966 in Sedgefield, County Durham) is a British actor and writer. ...
The Doctor insists that the fall of Venice was always on the cards, a phrase which seems to amuse Ms Lavish immensely; Venice's doom comes not from the natural process of decay, but the curse.
It's the last night of Venice, they're surrounded by danger and dark secrets, and much to Churchwell's horror, the Doctor is in his element; for there's corruption here, and he's the man to sort it all out.
Venice begins to sink, and as the panic-stricken revellers flee for their lives, Ms Lavish sighs and orders the band to strike up.
The hour of Venice perhaps, too, one might be led to think from certain signs, the hour of Ruskin in France, the hour of Venice in any case.
Venice has never enjoyed, among the intellects of the elite, a favour as special and as lofty as it does today.
The dying Venice of Barrès, the carnivalesque and posthumus Venice of Régnier, the Venice insatiable in love of Mme de Noailles, the Venice of Léon Daudet, of Jacques Vontade