Doctor Whoâs Surprise âBoomâ Guest Star Calls Back to an Eleventh Doctor Era Twist
Varada Sethu will return to Doctor Who in series 15. But it sounds like it won't be as Mundy...

This Doctor Who article contains spoilers.
Back in 2012, Doctor Who fans freaked out. Weâd been told in advance that Clara (Jenna Coleman) would eventually replace Amy (Karen Gillan) and Rory (Arthur Darvill) as the next companion of the Eleventh Doctor (Matt Smith) in series 7 of the show. But fans werenât prepared for just how soon Coleman would make her Doctor Who debut. Although she wouldnât officially Matt Smith in the TARDIS until a few episodes later, Coleman first appeared in the series 7 premiere âAsylum of the Daleksâ as a seemingly different character named Oswin, who, although she met a tragic end, encouraged the Doctor to her.
And now, 12 years later, it looks like Who history is repeating itself. In the absolutely wonderful Steven Moffat-penned episode, Star Wars: Andor, the actress playing Mundy will be instantly recognizable. Thatâs Varada Sethu! Yes, she was Cinta in Andor, but, as Who showrunner Russell T Davies and various news reports recently confirmed, Sethu is also ing Team TARDIS as a new companion in series 15 of Doctor Who, alongside Ncuti Gatwaâs Doctor and Millie Gibsonâs Ruby. So, like Coleman back in 2012, Sethu is crashing the Doctor Who party earlier than we expected. What does it mean?
Mundy and the Anglican Marines
First, a little bit about Sethuâs character Mundy. Without spoiling too much of the plot of âBoom,â Mundy is a member of the âAnglican Marines,â religiously ordained soldiers who previously appeared in the Eleventh Doctor episodes âTime of the Angels,â âFlesh and Stone,â and âA Good Man Goes to War.â In other words, theyâve popped up a few times in Moffatâs past Who episodes, but why did he choose to introduce Mundy as a gun-toting cleric in âBoomâ?
Moffat explained to Screen Rant: â[The Doctor] has slightly borderline irrational anger at soldiers and religious people, even though heâs full of faith and is pretty much a warrior himself, all self-loathing. I think it just gets him a bit wound up, and I wanted to wind him up. A soldier with a clerical collar, who he ends up really liking, of course, is the perfect person to face him with when he is trying to control his mood state on a smart landmine.â
But the last time we saw the Anglican Marines in âA Good Man Goes to War,â they were going up against the Doctor in his fight to save Amy. So, is Mundy technically aligned with the bad guys?
âI never saw them as straightforward bad guys, to be honest, at all,â Moffat revealed to Screen Rant. âIn âTime of Angelsâ and âFlesh and Stone,â Father Octavian is the most heroic character there. The way he dies to save the Doctor, and the Doctor realizes throughout that story that heâs misjudged him brutally, as heâs inclined to, just because he gets wound up. Heâs a scientist adventurer who has a slight suspicion that he might be God himself, so he just gets really annoyed at that.â
Varada Sethu Wonât Be the First Actor to Play Multiple Roles on Doctor Who
When it comes to Sethuâs Mundy, the relevant detail is that she survives her debut episode. This is in stark contrast with Colemanâs first appearance in Doctor Who, as well as the time Freema Agyeman popped up in Doctor Whoâs âDoomsdayâ a full season before she appeared as Martha Jones in âSmith and Jones.â Agyemanâs first Who character was Adeola, though we were later told that was Marthaâs cousin and that they just happened to look identical.
In fact, thereâs a very long history of Doctor Who accidentally casting actors in small roles, and, later, bringing them back in bigger roles. Lalla Ward appeared as a character named Princess Astra in the January-February 1979 Doctor Who serial âThe Armageddon Factor.â By September 1979, Ward became the second known regeneration of the Time Lord Romana, starting with âDestiny of the Daleks.â Hilariously, in her first appearance as Princess Astra, Ward starred alongside Mary Tamm, who played the first Romana. âDestiny of the Daleksâ finds Romana II telling the Fourth Doctor (Tom Baker) that she chose to look like Princess Astra on purpose, lamp shading the return of Lalla Ward in a different part.
Doctor Who later did this exact same thing when Peter Capaldi played the Twelfth Doctor, after having previously played Lobus Caecilius in the Tenth Doctor (David Tennant) episode âThe Fires of Pompeii.â In the 2015 episode âThe Girl Who Diedâ the Twelfth Doctor ed when he was David Tennant, and rescuing a guy who looks like Peter Capaldi!
How Will Varada Sethu Return in Doctor Who Series 15?
Now, itâs unclear which kind of early cameo weâre dealing with relative to Sethuâs surprise debut. Did Davies love Sethu so much in âBoomâ that he decided to offer her a bigger role in series 15? Or was this introduction always part of the plan for Sethu? Either way, whatâs unclear now is how she will fit into the larger canon once she returns next year. What we know for sure is that when Sethu returns, it wonât be as Mundy, as revealed by Davies after the UK broadcast of the episode.
âItâs a delight to welcome Varada to Doctor Who, earlier than expected, though things are about to get timey-wimey,â Davies said in a statement on Twitter. âThatâs the end of Mundy Flynnâs story, so quite how Varada returns will be revealed next year.â
The timey-wimey history of Doctor Who makes it quite easy to imagine Sethu coming back as a completely different character in series 15âor as a different version of Munday, just as Colemanâs Clara did across series 7. As various versions of Clara (and Oswin), Coleman became known as âThe Impossible Girl.â After her apparent death as Oswin in âThe Asylum of the Daleks,â Coleman appeared again in âThe Snowmenâ as a barmaid/governess living in Victorian England, only to die again. This created a strange kind of magical mystery, which, eventually resulted in present-day Clara becoming the one person who saved various versions of the Doctor throughout the characterâs history.
When asked about by THR about the similarities between Sethuâs debut and Colemanâs, Moffat simply offered, âYeah. Well, no, weâre just doing it again. I mean, I was talking to Russell about what weâre going to do, but sheâs there! Weâre just going to do Clara again. So itâs fun, isnât it? It wakes you up. You think, âAh, there she is!â But when the outlet inquired whether Sethu was cast for series 14 knowing that sheâd be back as a companion in series 15, Moffat gave up nothing, saying only that âthere is a plan. Thatâs all Iâm telling.â
Whether weâre looking at another Clara situation or not, Sethuâs Mundy doesnât seem impossible or magical in âBoom.â Sheâs a down-to-earth character who is clearly changed by encountering the Doctor. What happens when Sethu res the TARDIS next year though, is, for now, anyoneâs guess. As is always the case on this long-running show, time will tellâand it wouldnât be true Doctor Who if everything happened in the right order. What would be the fun in that?
Doctor Who airs on the BBC in the UK and streams on Disney+ in the US.