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"Legend of the Sea Devils" saw the Doctor and Yaz finally confess their feelings to one another, but the Doctor said her life was too dangerous for her to attach herself to anyone.

What Doctor Who's Most Shocking Betrayal Says About 'Dot and Bubble's' True Villain

In "Dot and Bubble," Doctor Who offered a Black Mirror-style examination of social media, but ended on a harsh look at the people behind the screens.

The unfulfilled love story between the Thirteenth Doctor and Yaz came to a head in the Thirteenth Doctor's final adventure, "The Power of the Doctor." As she prepared to regenerate, the Doctor expressed she wanted to face this next phase of her life on her own, as she and Yaz acknowledged that the woman Yaz had fallen in love with was about to change.

This brief kiss was not anything romantic; the Doctor was simply overcome with excitement at the thought that Rory had found a solution to the seemingly impossible circumstances they found themselves in.

Unlike some of the other kisses, the one between the Doctor and Rory did not break any notable Doctor Who barriers. Showing the Doctor in a queer romance finally delivers what has been teased and promised but never delivered in previous eras, such as in the Thirteenth Doctor's final adventures with Yaz.

It has pushed Doctor Who forward and shone a spotlight on a previously under-explored aspect of the Doctor.

New episodes of Doctor Who are available to stream every Friday on Disney+ and Saturday on BBC iPlayer.

Created by
Sydney Newman

First TV Show
Doctor Who

Latest TV Show
Doctor Who: The Complete David Tennant

First Episode Air Date
November 23, 1963

Latest Episode
Wild Blue Yonder (2023)

TV Show(s)
Doctor Who, Doctor Who: Pond Life, Doctor Who: Scream of the Shalka, Doctor Who: The Matt Smith Collection, Doctor Who: The Complete David Tennant, Doctor Who: The Peter Capaldi Collection, Doctor Who: The Jodie Whitaker Collection, Doctor Who: The Christopher Eccleston & David Tennant Collection

The further adventures in time and space of the alien adventurer known as the Doctor and his companions from planet Earth.

However, it did occur naturally as an outpouring of excitement and affection, which reinforced the idea that men can be affectionate and spontaneous.

However, the Doctor had been exclusively with women up until Rogue's appearance.

Ncuti Gatwa is the first openly gay actor to play the Doctor, so it's fitting that the Doctor's first same-sex relationship occurred during his run. Men being comfortable with this type of affection is something that is not often shown on television and contributes to the pro-LGBTQ+ direction that Doctor Who has gone in since 2005.

4 Jenny and Vastra

Deep Breath (2014)

2014's Deep Breath featured Doctor Who's first lesbian kiss, although it was criticized for not being romantic.

While saying his final goodbyes before what was sure to be a deadly mission, Jack kissed Rose and told her she was worth fighting for before turning to the Doctor and briefly kissing him.

Jack and the Doctor's kiss is important because it is the first same-sex kiss in Doctor Who's history; additionally, Jack was played by a gay actor, which made his interactions more authentic.

The wild adventure was set against a period backdrop that included expertly choreographed ballroom dances. 

"I was learning how to follow, and I'd never followed before," Groff said in a behind-the-scenes video. The name "Pride" encourages those feelings as the community comes together to celebrate and bolster LGBTQ+ rights movements. 

Gatwa publicly came out as queer in a 2023 interview with Elle UK.

dr who gay kiss

The 2005 revival didn't initially portray the Doctor as a romantic character, though a trend emerged of Doctors and companions kissing for reasons related to sci-fi contrivances, rather than their feelings for each other. The Doctor is able to rescue Jake at the last minute, materializing the TARDIS around him just in time, and a relieved Adam kisses Jake.

Dan spoke to both the Doctor and Yaz about the barely concealed feelings between them separately. However, the series also included several same-sex relationships, which included kisses.

Russell T. Davies also was criticized for using the Bury Your Gays trope on Torchwood after killing off most of the cast at the end of season 2 and Jack's love interest, Ianto Jones, during season 3.

The recent Doctor Who Rogue romance subplot was the series' first romantic kiss between the Doctor and someone of the same sex as their current incarnation, leading to the mistaken impression that this was the first same-sex kiss in the series' 60-year history.

When Rory suggested that perhaps the ship had defense systems installed, the Doctor kissed him on the lips before getting to work. Additionally, Rory has no real reaction to the kiss and it's never discussed, which is a welcome antidote to the trope of straight men panicking if a gay man expresses interest in them.

Technically, Rory also kisses the Doctor during the Power of Three, although he only does so on the cheek.

However, this first kiss was very different than some of the other kisses depicted on Doctor Who because it was not a romantic kiss and didn't feature a same-sex relationship.

5 The Doctor And Rory

Dinosaurs on a Spaceship & The Power of Three (both 2012)

During season 3's lighthearted "Dinosaurs on a Spaceship," the Doctor and Rory worked together to try to stop a Sirulian spaceship from crashing into the Earth.

The Doctor held the remote and was faced with choosing between losing Ruby or freeing the Chuldur. The month-long celebration honors the self-affirmation, dignity, equality and increased visibility of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people.

“The development of the relationship served the needs of a fast-moving plot and was unlikely to strike viewers of any age as a model for interpersonal relationships outside this particular fictional context.”

The Doctor Who episode, set in the British Regency period of 1813 and first broadcast on June 8, made history after featuring the first ever explicitly romantic same-sex kiss on screen.

Mischievously flirting throughout the episode, shocking the other guests at the Regency ball with same-sex dancing, their united effort finally saw Rogue sacrifice himself to save the world, but not before he had given the Doctor a goodbye kiss.

John Barrowman’s Captain Jack briefly kissed Christopher Eccleston’s Doctor in a 2005 episode, but that encounter lacked the sexual charge of the Time Lord’s encounter with Rogue.

  • The Doctor's kiss with Rogue sets the stage for potential future appearances, hinting at a recurring relationship with the time-traveling hero.