13 GREAT REASONS to Watch the 1970s WONDER WOMAN Show — RANKED

Lynda Carter turns 72!

UPDATED 7/24/23: Lynda Carter — born July 24, 1951 — turns 72! This first ran in April 2021 for the Wonder Woman show’s anniversary but it’s the perfect time to present it again! Dig it. — Dan

Y’know what I’ve been doing lately? Watching the Lynda Carter Wonder Woman show. Notice I didn’t say “rewatch” because, believe it or not, until recently I never bothered to view more than a handful of episodes here and there. (We all have our gaps, man.)

Anyway, it turns out that cartoonist and 13th Dimension contributor Karl Heitmueller Jr. just completed a bona fide rewatch, so I’ve enlisted him to give us 13 GREAT REASONS TO WATCH THE 1970s WONDER WOMAN SHOW — RANKED.

So why today? Well, it happens to be the show’s unofficial anniversary. Follow me here: The original Cathy Lee Crosby TV movie aired in 1974 on ABC as a pilot. The network passed but the idea didn’t die: Instead, another pilot starring Lynda Carter that was more faithful to the comics ran in November 1975 with the unwieldy name The New Original Wonder Woman. That version, set during World War II, hit the mark and led to a series, simply called Wonder Woman, which debuted April 21, 1976 — 45 years ago. (The show later moved to CBS, was updated to the ’70s and renamed again: The New Adventures of Wonder Woman.)

Anyway, given the show’s convoluted history, this day is a good as any to mark its anniversary, so here’s Karl.

Groovy.

Karl Heitmueller Jr.

By KARL HEITMUELLER

I recently finished a re-watch of the 1975-79 Wonder Woman TV series, which I purchased on DVD in 2004 because that was just what we did back then!

But as with so many of my Blu-rays and DVDs, the three season box sets mostly sat on my shelves gathering dust, until COVID quarantine made all this hard media again seem like a great idea. After just over two months of (mostly) nightly viewings, I finished all 60 episodes (counting the TV movie pilot) and have some notes.

Is the show perfect? Of course not — it was a 1970s TV superhero show! But there are many reasons to watch, some snarky, some not. Here are 13 of them:

13. Recycling Reconsidered. In the pre-recycling days, apparently everyone just left dozens of giant, empty cardboard boxes stacked up everywhere. Which is lucky for the villains of the 1940s and the 1970s, who had nice, soft cushioning for those times when Wonder Woman threw them through the air (which was pretty much every episode). Remember this the next time you’re folding up those cartons to stick in recycling… is there a chance you might be tossed like a rag doll across your garage? Might wanna hang onto some of those assembled Amazon boxes (pun intended).

12. Sponsored by L’Eggs. In both pilots (the 1975 ABC TV movie and the 1977 CBS reboot), you might notice something strange about the Amazons of Paradise Island… despite living in a feminine utopia, away from the trappings and edicts of a patriarchal society, they’re all wearing… panty hose?!? Even on the beach! This unlikely fashion choice would follow Diana to her life in “Man’s World,” where she not only wears stockings as Wonder Woman, but in every possible scenario… even with a bathing suit at the swimming pool or a nightgown at bedtime or in a tropical jungle! Heck, she probably even has them on under her diving outfit!

Wonder Woman was hardly the only culprit in this era, where TV pretty much eschewed bare legs on everyone. Chrissy Snow and Daisy Duke (look ’em up if you have to, Gen-Zers) both wore stockings with hot pants and high heels. But to watch it in the 21st century, the abundance of redundant—and no doubt uncomfortable—hosiery is rather distracting (if you’re inclined to pay attention to things like legs).

11. Spot the 1940s Anachronisms. In the first, WWII-set season, the show paid attention to era-appropriate costuming and hair for the principal actors. The guest stars… not so much. As with Happy Days (set in the 1950s and early ’60s), once the era was firmly established, that kind of verisimilitude kinda went out the window. Watch for Nazis sporting ’70s shag haircuts and sideburns or a kidnapped scientist’s suit that looks like it came from the wide-lapelled Johnny Carson Collection. Also, for bonus points, watch the background for 1970s cars, airplanes, and signage! (My favorite anachronism: In the pilot film, an unattended newsstand displays a copy of Superman #261 — cover dated February 1973!)

Wonder Woman with a shaggy Dr. Bellows

10. Lyle Waggoner’s Earnestness. Poor Lyle Waggoner. He never got the girl. The romance between Maj. Steve Trevor and Wonder Woman that was building in Season One got chucked out the window once the show shifted to the modern day and Waggoner began playing the son of his 1940s character. Presumably, the producers thought it might be creepy for Diana to hook up with her old flame’s offspring, and they weren’t wrong. But as the show went on, Trevor not only lost out on romantic action, but all other kinds as well, as he eventually became an IADC desk jockey, shuffling papers instead of socking bad guys in the jaw alongside Wonder Woman. Still, Waggoner never stopped portraying Trevor (both of ’em) with anything less than 100 percent square-shouldered earnestness. And just look at those gleaming teeth!

9. Super Powers With Accompanying Sound Effects. Most of Wonder Woman’s powers (which she derives from Aphrodite’s Magic Girdle… er, Belt, and does not have when she’s Diana Prince) are accompanied by super ’70s sound effects, just to remind the viewer that this is not Normal Woman.

Of course, there’s the spinning transformation from Diana to Wonder Woman (with accompanying non-diegetic explosion). She can’t fly, but she can leap tall buildings — as well as gardens, fountains, cars, construction equipment, and any other structure bigger than a bread box — in a single bound (with accompanying ascending/descending exaggerated whizzing sound). She’s super strong (any person or item thrown by Wonder Woman moves so fast it creates a whooshing sound only slightly less subtle than that of George Reeves’ Superman taking off in flight) and able to deflect bullets with her Amazonian bracelets (the sparking ricochet effect set off by triggers concealed in Lynda Carter’s fists, but you knew that, didn’t you?).

She can run really fast (over 10 miles a minute according to a late S2 episode), even sometimes in high heels (see #3)! She can force people to tell the truth and do what she says by ensnaring them in her magic lasso (which somehow emits computerized bleeps and bloops during this procedure). She can use her tiara as a boomerang, and can perfectly impersonate anyone’s voice.

Oh, and, like Dr. Doolittle, she can talk with the animals (whether or not she can walk with the animals, grunt and squeak and squawk with the animals remains to be seen).

8. Guest Stars A-Go-Go! Both the ABC and CBS shows’ guest star roster reads like a 1970s-themed trivia game. Robert (Mike Brady) Reed (with ’70s ’stache and turtleneck in 1942)! Lance (James at 15/16) Kerwin! The great Cloris Leachman camping it up like she’s in a Batman episode! Gary “Radar O’Reilly” Burghoff (Lynda Carter’s cousin)! Kenneth Mars (taking time off from Mel Brooks movies)! The popular mime duo (you read that correctly) Shields and Yarnell! Pop idol Leif Garrett (in two roles! And still with hair!)! Laugh-In’s Henry Gibson (sadly not reciting poetry)! Martin Mull as a flute-playing rock star/magician/thief (who sang the songs in the episode himself!)! And of course, “Introducing Debra Winger” as Diana’s sister, Drusilla, aka Wonder Girl (in a perfectly awful costume)! Whew! All that’s missing is Jimmy “J.J.” Walker and Charo!

7. The Alternate Suits. OK, first, let’s agree that the “real” Wonder Woman costume is spot-on, a near-perfect realization of the comic book outfit. Sure, the bullet-bra and giant shorts of Season One can look a little weird if you stare too much (STOP IT!), but when the show moved into the 1970s, designer Donfeld’s costume looked better than anything we’d ever seen in a comic book adaptation (with the possible exception of Tom Tyler’s Captain Marvel suit in the 1941 serial).

But whenever Diana needed to make use of alternate transportation or do some diving, a second spin brought about alternate costumes that haven’t exactly stood the test of time. The “Scuba Suit” (with flippers that sometimes appear once Diana hits the pool, er, ocean), which also doubles as her biker outfit (with added star-spangled helmet) feels more like something Cathy Lee Crosby would wear in the original, ill-fated 1974 telefilm. The single-use skateboard ensemble features knee and elbow pads (are they even necessary?) that just look silly.

But no alternative outfit is more eye-rolling than the conservative, flesh-covering riding outfit that Roy Rogers insisted Lynda Carter wear in the Western-themed Season 1 episode, “The Bushwhackers.” Practicality has no place in superhero shows, Roy!

I do like the cape that Wonder Woman wears to formal functions, though.

6. Weird Geography. Thanks mostly to production budget restraints, Wonder Woman couldn’t hide mountains (or palm trees) in the background in location shots that were supposed to be Washington, DC, or other East Coast settings. Lots of California-shot TV shows up through this era just kind of ignored this unavoidable snafu, mostly because nobody thought anyone would be repeatedly re-watching these shows in their homes on hi-def TVs! WE DIDN’T KNOW THE FUTURE!

Toward the end of S3, there was a one-off episode that indicated Diana was being moved out to the West Coast branch of the IADC (and being given a new supporting cast, including a smart-alecky kid, an ersatz-Bionic Man, and a chimpanzee!), but by the next episode, she was back in DC with Steve Trevor. Would a fourth season have eliminated both Steve Trevor and the geographical flubs (as well as taken away Diana’s frequent flyer membership)? We’ll never know.


5. “Futuristic” Tech. The invention of the “Inter-Agency Defense Command” was actually a good way to allow Steve and Diana to get involved in all manner of national and international crime and espionage. But the agency’s tech has aged about as well as any computers of the era. The enormous, info-gathering, room-filling IRAC computer (nicknamed “Ira”) utilized a robotic voice straight out of a 1950s sci-fi B-movie. Even more laughable is the small, roving computer (named “Rover”) that delivers mail and other small items like glue and passports, actually speaks the Road Runner’s “Beep Beep” as he rolls down the hallways of the IADC (via being pulled with a very visible wire). Damn thing makes Twiki look like the Terminator.

But the IADC computers come off better than the supercomputer in the S2 episode, “IRAC is Missing,” as the machine displays its wiped memory by literally saying, “Uh, um… er, uh…” Evil robots fared even worse, often looking like they were constructed out of some of those leftover cardboard boxes, dryer hoses and silver spray paint.

And while we’re at it, even Lynda Carter admits embarrassment over Wonder Woman’s invisible jet, a plastic model in which we can see a translucent seat (in which an obvious WW doll sits) and center stick, but no engine! It does, however, come with piped-in elevator Muzak, making WW’s urgent missions feel like a jaunt to a Beaches resort.

4. ’70s Up the Wazoo. The New Adventures of Wonder Woman might not be the MOST’ 70s show ever (I’m going with The Captain and Tennille or All in the Family), but there’s enough iconography to keep any fan of that era spellbound: the (mostly) giant, lumbering CARS: Buick Skylark, Lincoln Continental, AMC Matador, Cadillac Coupe DeVille, Chevy Chevelle Malibu, Bel Air, Nova, Monte Carlo, and Camaro, Ford LTD and Gran Torino, Pontiac Firebird, heck, there was even a dune buggy!!;

FASHION: Enormous, oversized glasses, bell-bottoms wide enough to camp in, platform shoes, floppy hats, satin jackets, peasant blouses, fat neckties, and wiiiiiiide collars!;

FADS: skateboarding, disco, glam rock, UFOs, computer dating, and, uh, gymnastics (on more than once occasion, Wonder Woman leapt onto mysteriously placed, high-hung parallel bars to do a quick routine while spellbound evildoers stood and gaped until the heroine dismounted right into them!). Oh, if only there were a punk episode of Wonder Woman.

3. Costume Continuity Errors. Let’s just say it’s a good thing this isn’t a drinking game. First, there’s the inconsistency of Diana’s golden lasso, whether it suddenly turns into a fat, brown rope, or grows to hundreds of feet long (I mean, it is magic, so you could argue this is not a continuity error, but let’s just go with it).

But the most common costume continuity flub concerns Wonder Woman’s red-and-white boots, which switch from heels to flats numerous times in every single episode. Obviously, this depends on whatever stunt is being performed (sometimes she runs in heels, sometimes not, but she never, ever does a super-leap in them). Which raises the question, why bother with the heels in the first place (aside from the obvious trope)? The character didn’t always wear heels in the comics, the 5’10” Carter didn’t need them to appear statuesque, and wouldn’t it be a nice feminist touch to have Wonder Woman in flats?

2. The Theme Song. I’m just gonna go ahead and say it: There is no better superhero theme ever written. Oh, sure, some can sidle up alongside it… the 1960s Spider-Man cartoon theme, Batman ’66, John Williams’ majestic Superman theme. But are any of those as unshakeable an earworm as Charles Fox and Norman Gimbel’s supremely catchy theme? And there are four different versions (I’m partial to the funked up, final version from S3, even though I do miss the lyrics). C’mon… “In your satin tights/fighting for your rights/ and the old red, white, and blue?” That’s WAY better than “Batman/ Batman/ Batman/BatmanBatmanBatman!” C’mon admit it… the WW theme is stuck in your head now, isn’t it? You’re welcome!

1. Lynda Carter. OK, time to get serious. Because the main reason to watch the three seasons of Wonder Woman is – obviously — Lynda Carter. Not to put too fine a point on it, but she was absolute perfection as both Diana Prince and Wonder Woman. She’s every bit as good as Christopher Reeve playing Superman (and she beat him to the punch by a few years). And it’s not just that Carter looked the part. Like Reeve after her, she underplayed Wonder Woman, allowing the costume to convey the Wonder while she focused on the Woman. Also like Reeve, Carter had a gravitas and maturity that belied her young age (both actors were in their 20s when they first put on the costumes).

Rising above even the cheesiest special effect or lamest plot, Carter made every episode worth watching. Regardless of whether you first saw her as Wonder Woman on Friday nights on CBS in the ’70s, or in reruns on cable in the 2000s, or in a YouTube clip just last week, it’s hard to argue that (all due respect to Gal Gadot, who is admittedly great in the role), Lynda Carter will always be the definitive live action Wonder Woman.

But speaking of the heir to the tiara, here’s one more reason to watch Lynda Carter’s Wonder Woman: To maybe appreciate Gal Gadot’s much-maligned Wonder Woman 1984 just a little bit better. I remain convinced that director Patty Jenkins’ intention with the ill-received 2020 sequel was to pay homage to the glorious cheesiness of not just this series, but all action/adventure/superhero shows of the 1970s and ’80s. If you look at WW84 in that context, treat it as a big budget episode of the TV show, it actually works a lot better than if you simply compare it to the admittedly superior 2017 Wonder Woman.

Because let’s face it, as much as we love them, superheroes… are goofy. Godlike beings in skintight costumes fighting bad guys, most of whom don’t stand a chance against them? Regardless of how many coats of angst or black we paint on them, it’s ultimately a kid’s fantasy that we, as adults, enjoy nonetheless.

As Wonder Woman (the show) reminded us week after week, it’s inspirational, it’s cathartic and, mostly, it’s an awful lot of fun.

Remastered Wonder Woman is available on Blu-ray; it’s also streaming on HBO Max.

MORE

— Lynda Carter’s WONDER WOMAN Finally Coming to Blu-ray. Click here.

— The Weird Wonder of WONDER WOMAN’s First Movie. Click here.

Author: Dan Greenfield

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16 Comments

  1. A great summation. Thank you for respecting the show, the actors, and the crew who put in a lot of effort to make something enjoyable for us kids each week.

    Also for not (as many do today) ripping it to shreds by comparing to today’s standards. You looked at it as it was in time created. Valid points about shortcuts (70s extras in 1942, fads, etc) – but those don’t need to spoil the fun.

    Great closing comments. And do agree about the music. Including those mentioned with it. They are long lasting and for many of us – are always associated with the character – regardless of how good the contemporary offerings.

    Thank you.

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  2. I remember watching the Cathy Crosby movie and being so upset how off it was. I was ecstatic when Lynda Carter came along. Though I was a much bigger fan of the WWII season. Speaking of….

    “ favorite anachronism: In the pilot film, an unattended newsstand displays a copy of Superman #261 — cover dated February 1973!)”….. I’ll need to look for that one. Along those lines, in the tv show MASH, the character Radar is shown reading comics all the time. In one episode a cover is shown and it’s a MARVEL Avengers cover.

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  3. Lynda Carter shall always be MY Princess Diana. I watched the show as a kid and a couple of times from start to finish in the last decade. Lynda was spot on perfect as the character I knew from comic books and the Super Friends TV show. She brought a genuine sense of nobility to the role that nicely complimented Christopher Reeve’s Superman. There will never be anyone who can repeat such a feat. Lynda Carter IS Wonder Woman, now and forever.

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  4. If there are any TV historians here they might be able to amplify or correct the next statement.

    I had always heard that the wearing of hose was a Standards and Practices issue. You mentioned several areas where it was unusual to see a woman in hose. I remember Hot Lips from MASH coming out of the shower wearing hose. And the list can easily be extended.

    Apparently there were exceptions. For example on Sally Field’s first series Gidget she always wore hose when she had on shorts or a skirt but not when she was at the beach..

    Anyone want to amplify?

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  5. I never blame actors for bad writing, unless they’re also the writers and/or producers. The amazing Ms Carter was neither of those, she merely hit her marks, held her character, and delivered her lines in a professional manner, but neither her modest talents nor her astounding beauty could overcome such weak writing. Nevertheless, she made an indelible mark on culture and impressionable twenty-something-or-more me.

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  6. I remember watching the Cathy Lee Crosby version and liking it, but the minute that theme song played for the Lynda Carter version, you knew it was going to be good. Another great Wonder Woman moment came on Olivia Newton-John’s 1976 tv special that had an appearance by Ms. Carter as Wonder Woman. You couldn’t get more 1970’s than that!!

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  7. Great article! However, no amount of rationalizing can make WW84 better. It is a putrid, terrible, laughable movie, with no redeeming qualities, at least until it’s featured 30 years from now on the 18th revival of Mystery Science Theater 3000.

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  8. Maybe it’s the lasso of truth, but I cannot lie. I have loved this show since I first saw it in the eighties! I remember watching this with the family every Sunday at 4:00 on ABC. I vaguely remember coiling my bathrobe tie to make my own magic lasso as I played Wonder Boy. Seriously though, even with its ample 70’s T.V. Show flaws, I feel like this has stood pretty well in the test of time. Funny story…. I’ve been watching again on HBO Max (even though I own the DVD’s) and just recently clued in on the whole heel/no heel boot thing. When I read this article I couldn’t help but laugh. Gale Gadot is AMAZING, but Lynda Carter will always be MY Wonder Woman.

    PS – Stop ragging on WW84. It was entertaining and frankly better than either Hulk movie or first 2 Thor movies by Marvel.

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  9. I actually think Debra Winger’s “Wonder Girl” outfit looked great on her. It was also astonishingly water-friendly; remember when Nazi troops (led by the one, the only, John Saxon) invaded Paradise Island to exploit its resources (mineral and…otherwise)? I’ll never forget how, over a couple of shots, “Princess Drusilla” stands in a waist-deep lake with several fellow Amazons; a minute later, she rejoins her elder sister and their mother on the shore…and *Wonder Girl’s costume is BONE-FREAKING-DRY!* With access to such fabric, why did Wonder Woman ever need a wetsuit (an ankle-length one, at that)!?

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  10. Add Roy Rogers to your list of guest stars!

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  11. The only wonder I have is why nobody ever talls about the people she killed. She’s supposed to be a ‘peacemaker’ and violent only when violence is taken against her or others? The numerous men in the submarine that she crashed a plane into died horribly I would imagine…?

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  12. Love it! And you’re right—that theme song is going through my head! (So is that spinning, thunderclap sound effect!)

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  13. My wife and I just finished watching the Blu-ray set (which looks gorgeous, BTW). We both watched the show when it first aired, though neither of us had seen them all. We’d also seen episodes here and there over the years, but this time, it was a trip through all three seasons, and we loved every minute of it. Well, almost. IMO, there’s really only one *bad* episode, and it’s the California one mentioned in the article, which, according to what I read, was a planned pilot for a spin-off show featuring the “Invulnerable Man.” That episode was putrid from the get-go, from the wise-cracking kid on up. That was easily the worst episode, though, and most of them weren’t just “good for ’70s TV,” but were just good television.

    Lynda Carter, of course, was simply wonderful all around. (I got to meet Lynda backstage at an Alice Cooper concert in 2017. It was quite a thrill, as you might imagine!)

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  14. I’ve always thought that Lorene Yarnell was crazy hot. That is all.

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