His first one-man show,
Moths Ate My Doctor Who Scarf, was at the
2006 Edinburgh Festival Fringe. In 2008, the show embarked on a much larger tour and continued in the UK in 2009, with international appearances in
Los Angeles, at the
New Zealand Comedy Festival,
Toronto and
Florida. A full cast adaptation of
Moths Ate My Doctor Who Scarf was recorded in May 2007 and broadcast on digital channel
BBC7 in July, prior to a
BBC Audiobooks CD release. It featured Hadoke as himself narrating, with guest appearances from
Doctor Who actors
Colin Baker and
Louise Jameson, plus comedian
Alfie Joey and
Early Doors actor James Quinn as The Voice Of The
BBC. It received a five star review from
SFX magazine and was nominated as Best Drama in the 2008
Sony Awards. A sequel show,
My Stepson Stole My Sonic Screwdriver, was performed at the 2012
Edinburgh Fringe Festival. On 17 November 2013 at the Garrick Theatre in London, Hadoke performed a double bill of both shows, which were recorded for future DVD release.
Other Doctor Who work Hadoke's website lists a collection of ten connections with
Doctor Who, including having a character named after him in
Dale Smith's novel
Heritage. He has moderated the DVD commentaries for many
Doctor Who stories, including
The Rescue and
The Romans (released in 2009 as a box set);
The Curse of Peladon and
The Monster of Peladon (released together in 2010);
The Time Monster (released in 2010 as part of the "Myths and Legends" box set);
The Dominators (released 2010);
The Ark (released 2011); and
The Krotons (released 2012). He also appeared in the special feature "Robophobia" for the Special Edition of
The Robots of Death (released 2012). In 2009, Hadoke collaborated with writer
Rob Shearman to watch and comment on every episode of
Doctor Who from the programme's debut in 1963 to
David Tennant's final story. The resulting discussions are being published as ''Running Through Corridors: Rob and Toby's Marathon Watch of Doctor Who'', a three-volume series from
Mad Norwegian Press. The first volume, covering the 1960s, was published in 2010; the second volume, covering the 1970s, was published in 2016. Hadoke appears as a bartender in a cameo appearance in
An Adventure in Space and Time, a docudrama detailing the early history of
Doctor Who. == Acting career ==