Peri has the distinction of being the first humanoid television companion to appear in the
comic strip within
Doctor Who Magazine; previously the strip, which began in 1979, depicted the Doctor either travelling alone or with companions created for the strip, while the robotic television companion
K9 was featured in several
DWM comic strips featuring the
Fourth Doctor). Her first appearance was in "Funhouse Part 1" (DWM #102), in which she appeared in two panels as a scantily clad
apparition manifested by a villain. Two issues later, in "Kane's Story Part 1" (DWM #104), she became a regular character in the strip, initially travelling with both the Sixth Doctor and his shape-shifting companion,
Frobisher, and continuing until the final part of "Up Above the Gods" in DWM #129. "Kane's Story" established that, at one point during her travels with the Sixth Doctor, Peri left the TARDIS for reasons left unrevealed and went to live in
New York City, where she took a job in an office, a job she angrily quit for reasons also unrevealed just prior to encountering the Doctor again and voluntarily rejoining him. The epilogue to the
Target Books novelisation of
Mindwarp, written by Philip Martin, stated that Peri returned to the 20th century with King Yrcanos, where the latter became a
professional wrestler. This tongue-in-cheek conclusion was not reflected in any televised story and is generally ignored by the fandom. In the
Marvel Comics graphic novel The Age of Chaos, written by
Colin Baker, Peri lived out her life on Krontep as Queen Consort of Yrcanos and has at least three grandchildren, who are principal characters in the story. The
Virgin New Adventures novel
Bad Therapy by
Matthew Jones reveals that, although becoming the wife of King Yrcanos, Peri blamed the Doctor for abandoning her. In the novel, the
Seventh Doctor made peace with Peri after she found her way back to
Earth through a temporal rift on Krontep and returned her to her time. The
Telos novella Shell Shock by
Simon A. Forward reveals that Peri had been sexually abused by her stepfather. This is hinted at in the
Past Doctor Adventures novel
Synthespians™ by
Craig Hinton, which also reveals that her parents were Janine and Paul Brown and that her father died in a boating accident when she was thirteen. She has two step-siblings from her mother's marriage to Foster. Bryant has voiced Peri in several audio plays produced by
Big Finish Productions, alongside both
Peter Davison as the Fifth Doctor and Colin Baker as the Sixth Doctor. In several of these stories, the Fifth Doctor and Peri are joined by another companion, the Egyptian princess
Erimem. The Sixth Doctor audio play
The Reaping introduces Peri's mother, Janine Foster, played by American actress
Claudia Christian (although in reality, Christian is five years younger than Nicola Bryant). The play, set in 1984 as the Doctor takes Peri back to her time to attend the funeral of the father of a friend of hers, confirms Peri's late father's name as Paul and mentions that Howard and Janine Foster have gone their separate ways but does not mention Peri's step-siblings. After the Doctor and Peri thwart a Cyberman attempt to set up a conversion factory in Baltimore, Peri plans to stay with her family, but Janine is subsequently killed due to an accident involving remaining Cyber-technology, cutting Peri's last familial tie to Earth and prompting her to return to her travels with the Doctor when he comes to visit her at her mother's grave. In the audio play
Her Final Flight, the
Sixth Doctor finds Peri on a remote planet, where she apparently dies of a virus, although it is revealed that the entire story was part of a fantasy designed to make the Doctor kill himself. Another audio play,
Peri and the Piscon Paradox, states that the Time Lords made several adjustments to her timeline, resulting in at least five alternate versions of Peri with different fates, including one that thought she never travelled in the TARDIS but instead moved to California and eventually hosted a chat show called
The Queen of Worries after divorcing her abusive childhood sweetheart. In the later audio ''
The Widow's Assassin'', the Doctor travels to Krontep to attend Peri's wedding, only to be locked up for abandoning her. However, despite apparently spending five years in prison, the Doctor actually spends that time carrying out a complex long-term investigation into the death of King Yrcanos shortly after the wedding, eventually learning that 'Peri' is actually possessed by the Doctor's childhood imaginary enemy, Mandrake the Lizard King, who was 'extracted' from the Doctor's mind when he was exposed to Crozier's equipment. After transferring himself into Peri's body to expel Mandrake, the Doctor and Peri return to their true bodies and resume their travels together. In
Masters of Earth, they arrive on Earth during the Dalek occupation, a year before the events of
The Dalek Invasion of Earth from Earth's perspective, forcing the Doctor to help a future famous rebel figure escape without compromising history. In
The Rani Elite, the Doctor and Peri visit a famous university and are nearly caught in a trap set by a version of
The Rani who has already experienced the events of
Time and the Rani; the crisis ends with Peri receiving an honorary degree in botany to accompany the Doctor's honorary degree in moral philosophy. Future showrunner
Steven Moffat mentions an unnamed 'Warrior Queen on Thoros Beta' in his 1996 short story, "
Continuity Errors". Bryant played the role of 'Miss Brown' in the first three instalments of the
BBV video series
The Stranger, opposite Colin Baker in the title role; although her character was never explicitly identified as being Peri (much as The Stranger was never directly linked to the Doctor), there are nonetheless similarities in the two characters, with one major difference: Bryant used her natural English accent for Miss Brown, rather than affecting an American accent as she did with Peri. == References ==