Using technology from Lake's cellar, the Doctor sucks the toppling CyberKing into the Time Vortex. The emotional feedback destroys both the Cybermen and Hartigan. The Doctor uses the infostamps to sever Hartigan's connection to the CyberKing. The Doctor, Lake and Rosita manage to rescue the children, including Lake's son. The Doctor discovers another entrance to the Cybermen's base under Lake’s house. The Cybermen have constructed, using child labour, a "CyberKing" (a giant mechanical Cyberman), using their human ally Miss Hartigan ( Dervla Kirwan) as its controller. The Doctor realises that the man is actually Jackson Lake ( David Morrissey), a missing human who believed he was the Doctor due to absorbing the data of infostamp about the Doctor. They discover Cybermen data-storage infostamps, which the man recalls holding when he lost his memories. The man is investigating a series of disappearances around London and the Cybershades. The Doctor initially believes this man is a future incarnation of himself suffering from amnesia. The Tenth Doctor ( David Tennant) lands in Victorian London and, overhearing cries for help, encounters a man calling himself "the Doctor" and his companion Rosita Farisi ( Velile Tshabalala), attempting to capture a Cybershade, which escapes. "The End of Time" was the first two-part episode with an overall title and episode numbers since Survival in Season 26, the final serial broadcast during the series' original run. See also: List of Doctor Who episodes (2005–present) After the fourth series was the final full series to star David Tennant as the Doctor, and the last with lead writer and showrunner Russell T Davies, the specials marked their official departure from the programme, with Matt Smith and Steven Moffat replacing them as the Doctor and the lead writer and showrunner respectively. The specials included appearances of one-off companions, portrayed by David Morrissey, Velile Tshabalala, Michelle Ryan, Lindsay Duncan and Bernard Cribbins, as well as featuring cast from previous seasons, including Catherine Tate, Billie Piper, Freema Agyeman, Noel Clarke, John Barrowman, Elisabeth Sladen and John Simm. Midway through the sequence of specials (commencing with " Planet of the Dead"), production switched to filming in high-definition. " Music of the Spheres" was filmed for the 2008 Doctor Who Prom in July 2008, and the animated six-episode serial Dreamland was produced for the BBC's Red Button service, which was released over six consecutive days in November 2009. Two supplemental episodes were also filmed alongside the specials. The specials started production in April 2008 for "The Next Doctor", and filming for the final special "The End of Time" began in March 2009. The first special was broadcast on 25 December 2008 with " The Next Doctor", with the last special, the two-part episode " The End of Time", broadcasting over two weeks on 25 December 2009 and 1 January 2010. Davies' decision to step down as showrunner. The specials were produced in lieu of a full series in 2009, to allow the new production team for the programme to have enough time to prepare for the fifth series in 2010, in light of Russell T. The 2008–2010 specials of the British science fiction television programme Doctor Who are five specials that linked the programme's fourth and fifth series.
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