We'd been promised "Easter eggs and kisses to the past" in Doctor Who's centenary special and The Power of the Doctor certainly delivered, serving up cameo appearances from several classic companions.

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Having bid a heartbreaking farewell to the Doctor (Jodie Whittaker), Yaz (Mandip Gill) returned to Earth and was reunited with Dan (John Bishop) and Graham (Bradley Walsh), with the latter revealed to have set up a support group of sorts for ex-TARDIS travellers.

"I have this problem," Graham told the group. "See, I met this person and I got whooshed away, across all of space and time. I had the most amazing adventures.

"But I came back and I actually can’t tell anyone, because they’d have me put away – and that started me thinking though… I can’t be the only one."

He certainly isn't – revealed to have accepted Graham's invitation alongside Dan, Yaz, Ace (Sophie Aldred), Tegan (Janet Fielding) and Kate Stewart (Jemma Redgrave) are three classic Doctor Who companions: Melanie Bush (Bonnie Langford), Jo Jones (Katy Manning) and Ian Chesterton (William Russell).

Bonnie Langford as Mel in Doctor Who.
Bonnie Langford as Mel in Doctor Who in 1987. BBC

Mel travelled with both the Sixth Doctor (Colin Baker) and the Seventh (Sylvester McCoy) between 1986 and 1987, while Jo – then Jo Grant – was assistant to the Third Doctor (Jon Pertwee) between 1971 and 1973 and last appeared in spin-off The Sarah Jane Adventures in 2010.

Ian, meanwhile, was one of Doctor Who's original cast, debuting in the show's very first episode in 1963 and travelling alongside the First Doctor (William Hartnell) until 1965 – returning to the series almost six decades later, the science teacher gets a mighty surprise...

William Russell photographed in 2010 in a light blue shirt
William Russell. Patrick Mulkern/Radio Times

Reflecting on his own experiences alongside the Doctor, Dan remarks: "I’m glad I’m not on the verge of being exterminated anymore – but I do miss her."

"Sorry… did you say… her?!" says a flabbergasted Ian, learning about regeneration for the first time.

Speaking to press at a screening of the centenary special, Doctor Who showrunner Chris Chibnall said it was essential that the episode be "big", "epic" and "emotional" but also that it have "lots of golden threads back to the past".

"To see William Russell as Ian Chesterton, going right back to the first ever episode of Doctor Who... a lot of people worked very hard to make all of those things happen," Chibnall explained.

"I didn't tell anybody I was going to be doing it – I just put it in the script and sent the script off. I just thought this was the moment when we could ask [those actors to return], and they were all really keen – we just got incredible messages back.

"On the day, it was really emotional, but it was emotional in an amazing way."

Doctor Who - The Power of the Doctor
Jodie Whittaker in The Power of the Doctor. James Pardon/BBC Studios

Though she wasn't required for filming, Jodie Whittaker revealed that she paid a special visit to the Doctor Who set on the day that the companion reunion was shot. "It was so emotional, it was amazing," she said.

"Walking onto set with people who... this is their show, and you are a tiny drop in the ocean of Doctor Who. For us, we've got to tread lightly and we've got to earn our place. And so then to be on set with people that paved the way for us to be here, it's a really emotional thing.

"I've made no kind of secret of the fact that I'm a relatively new Whovian compared to a lot of people because my introduction into the universe has been getting the job. So to have these kinds of experiences... I know people would kill to be in this position. And so I knew every second of it, you just got to treasure."

Following transmission of The Power of the Doctor, Doctor Who is entering a bold new era for its 60th anniversary and beyond under returning showrunner Russell T Davies. But have we seen the last of these old faces? Perhaps not – after all, Kate did mention she was keen to get them on UNIT's books...

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