Doctor Who: Could the 13th Time Lord be a woman?Published16 July 2017Shareclose panelShare pageCopy linkAbout sharingImage source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Peter Capaldi bows out this Christmas after four years in the role, but show bosses have remained tight-lipped about his successor. Could we see a female regeneration? Jodie Whittaker, who found fame in ITV's detective drama Broadchurch, is one of those in contention.Image source, PAImage caption, Phoebe Waller-Bridge is another favourite - and former Broadchurch cast member - to take on the part and become the first female Doctor. Former companion Billie Piper told the BBC it would "feel like a snub" if the role went to another man - but would Phoebe be able to squeeze the Tardis in around time on the Millennium Falcon now she's started filming the new Star Wars Han Solo movie?Image caption, Kris Marshall had been so hotly tipped to be the next Doctor bookmakers suspended betting on him earlier this year. The rumour mill went into overdrive when he quit BBC drama Death in Paradise days after Peter Capaldi announced his departure. But as betting later resumed on the former My Family star, maybe he's not in the running after all.Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Olivia Colman could be a good choice having worked with incoming show boss Chris Chibnall on Broadchurch. David Tennant - otherwise known as the 10th Doctor and Colman's Broadchurch co-star - told the BBC he thought "she'd be great" in the role, but added: "Whether that's in her sights at the moment, I suspect probably not."Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Ben Whishaw - who plays Q in the James Bond films - has the required combination of geekiness and eccentricity to play the Doctor. However, the last time the vacancy arose, he said: "I don’t think you can be Q and Doctor Who. It would be a bit wrong."Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Tilda Swinton created headlines last year when she took on the role of the Ancient One in Marvel's Doctor Strange - a character depicted as a Tibetan male monk. Could she take on another role previously played by a man?Image caption, Homeland and Supergirl actor David Harewood played Joshua Naismith in the 2009 Doctor Who Christmas special The End of Time. Outgoing Doctor Who boss Steven Moffat has spoken of his desire for a non-white actor, and said the role had been offered to an unnamed black actor in the past.Image caption, Maxine Peake, known for TV's The Village and Silk, is a hugely versatile actress who would bring both steel and wit to the role.Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Another popular choice would be The IT Crowd's Richard Ayoade - although he may be tied up presenting The Crystal Maze comeback on Channel 4.Image caption, Rory Kinnear is another of the bookmakers' favourites - the Penny Dreadful and The Casual Vacancy actor was strongly linked with the role before Capaldi replaced Matt Smith in 2013.Image caption, Sacha Dhawan could be another contender. His previous credits include An Adventure in Space and Time, a docudrama created for Doctor Who's 50th anniversary in 2013.Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Conviction and Agent Carter star Hayley Atwell revealed on Twitter in 2015 that she would like to be The Doctor.Image source, Getty ImagesImage caption, Andrew Scott made his name as Moriarty in Sherlock - which was created by Steven Moffat and Doctor Who writer Mark Gatiss - and is now a bankable name around the world.Image caption, Before War and Peace, Happy Valley and Grantchester, James Norton was in a 2013 episode of Doctor Who. "My character met a fairly gruesome end in my Doctor Who episode," he said in 2014. "Maybe they could quietly recast me as someone else." Like the Doctor, perhaps?Image caption, Peter Capaldi, who replaced Matt Smith as The Doctor, said Doctor Who "is a fantastic programme to work on", but the time had come for him to move on.More on this storyNew Doctor Who actor to be revealedPublished16 July 2017It's time for a female Doctor, says BilliePublished31 January 2017Peter Capaldi to leave Doctor WhoPublished31 January 2017