The BBC television series
Murder Rooms: The Dark Beginnings of Sherlock Holmes was a fictionalized account of Doyle's time as Bell's clerk. The series may have exaggerated Bell's criminal investigations as well as the degree to which Holmes was based on Bell (played by
Ian Richardson), and it positioned Doyle in the role of a
Dr. Watson to Bell's Holmes. The original one-off production, which led to the later series, was released on DVD and VHS in the US in 2003, titled
Dr. Bell and Mr. Doyle – The Dark Beginnings of Sherlock Holmes. In 2006, Stone Publishing House published a book, written by historian Dr. Robert Hume, aimed at schoolchildren titled
Dr. Joseph Bell – the Original Sherlock Holmes. In the
Doctor Who episode "
Tooth and Claw" in 2006, the time travelling adventurer known as the
Doctor identifies himself as an ex-student of Bell to
Queen Victoria. The
comic book Les dossiers du Professeur Bell by
Joann Sfar is about the (fictional) supernatural adventures of Dr Bell. In episode 11, Season 5, of the Fox TV show
House M.D., Wilson presents House with Joseph Bell's
Manual Of the Operations of Surgery as a Christmas gift. The character of House is based on Holmes, who, as noted, was based in turn on Bell. In episode 14 of the show's eighth and final season, House briefly comes to believe that his biological father is a man named Thomas Bell, played by prominent Scottish actor
Billy Connolly. The novel
Mr. Doyle & Dr. Bell (1997) by
Howard Engel is a fictionalized account of Joseph Bell and his influence on Conan Doyle. In
Elementary, an American procedural drama television series that was introduced as a contemporary update of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's stories of Sherlock Holmes, Holmes and Watson often work with a Detective called Marcus Bell, which is likely a nod to the real-life Joseph Bell. ==Memorial==