MAGS AND BOOKS
Serial and Year: ISBN 1-880417-16-2 / 1995.
Pages: 10 pages out of 242 pages in total.
Pictures: 5 full-page b&w pictures.
Article: 5-page article with a little review and a detailed episode guide on the whole series run.
Author: William E. Anchors Jr.
Publisher: Alpha Control Press.
Country: USA.

About The Show: Wonder Woman could have been titled "The Show That No One Wanted." It's original pilot starred Cathy Lee Crosby, set in modern times, bu response was poor. Over a year later ABC tried again with Lynda Carter, Miss World-USA 1973, and the show was dated during World War II. This version, titled The New, Original Wonder Woman, was more interesting and truer to the comic, and while the ratings were good, it was erratically shown by ABC who used it as filler material for The Bionic Woman, which 
was temporarily off the air while Lindsay Wagner was recuperating from injuries received in a car accident. When it was cancelled, the production company went to CBS, where it was picked up and had a successful two year run under the title The New Adventures of Wonder Woman. In this third version, Wonder Woman (still Lynda Carter) was again set in modern times. The CBS was by far the best of three, and has reminded the most popular.
Wonder Woman (First Pilot)
Wonder Woman (airdate: March 12, 1974, 90 minute pilot movie). In the first pilot film, Wonder Woman leaves her home of Paradise Island among an amazing race of Amazon women, and moves to America, where she assists the U.S. government in combating a villainous spy ring that is plaguing the country. Cast: Cathy Lee Crosby as Wonder Woman, Ricardo Montalban [Star Trek] as Abner Smith, Anitra Ford as Ahnjayla, Andrew Prine [V] as George Calvin, Charlene Holt as Hippolyte, Kaz Garas as Steve Trevor, Richard X. Slattery as Col. Henkins, Sandy Gaviola as Tina, Beverly Gill as Dia, Donna Garrett as Cass, Jordan Rhodes as Bob, Roberta Brahm as Zoe, Robert Porter as Joe, Ronald Long. Writer: John D.F. Black. Director: Vincent McEveety.
The New Original Wonder Woman (ABC series)
Production credits: Producer: Wilfred Baumes. Executive Producer: Douglas S. Cramer. Characters created by Charles Moulton. Developed for TV by Stanley Ralph Ross. Music: Artie Kane, Charles Fox  Norman Gimble. Regular cast: Wonder Woman (Lynda Carter), Major Steve Trevor (Lyle Waggoner), Gen. Phillip Blankenship (Richard Eastham), Yeoman Etta Candy (Beatrice Colen), Drusilla (Debra Winger), The Queen Mother (Cloris Leachman, Carolyn Jones), Magda (Pamela Shoop), Dalma (Erica Hagen). Number of ABC episodes: one 90 minute pilot movie,  12 one hour segments.
Premise: Wonder Woman, under the guise of Diana Prince, leaves her home on Paradise Island - located in the Bermuda Triangle - to fight crime and evil. The first twelve episodes are set in the World War 11 era, where she battles Nazis and other bad guys. She works with Steve Trevor, U.S. Army flying ace who meets Wonder Woman when he is shot down over Paradise Island. Wonder Woman takes him back to the U.S., and remains with him under her secret identity of secretary Diana Prince.
The New Original Wonder Woman (airdate: Nov. 7, 1975, second 90 minute pilot movie). U.S. Army fighter pilot Steve Trevor is shot down in a remote section of the Atlantic by Germans, and he crash lands on an uncharted island. But while the island may be uncharted, it is definitely inhabited - by a race of beautiful and amazingly strong Amazon women who rescue him. He is nursed back to health by Princess Diana, and it is decided to return him to the United States. Olympic games are held to determine who is the greatest warrior, and the contest is won by Diana, so she is sent to stay and help protect the U.S. as Wonder Woman (Steve is given a drug to remove his memory of Paradise Island). Before leaving she is given a golden belt to preserve her strength away from her home, and a golden lariat that will obey her command. Arriving in America, she is not there long before being pitted against Nazi spys who are trying to steal a highly-advanced bomb prototypes Guest cast: Red Buttons [Five Weeks in a Balloon] as Ashley Norman, Kenneth Mars as Col. Von Blasko, Stella Stevens as Marsha, Eric Braeden as Kapitan Drangal, Fanny Flag as the Amazon doctor, Henry Gibson as Nicholas, Severn Darden as the bad guy, Ian Wolfe, Fritzi Burr, Helen Verbit, Tom Rosqui. Writer: Stanley Ralph Ross. Director: Leonard Horn.
Wonder Woman Meets Baroness Von Gunther (airdate: April 21, 1976). The Amazon princess must defeat the Baroness Von Gunther, an ingenious female Nazi and head of a spy ring endangering the country. Guest cast: Christine Belford [Outlaws] as Baroness Von Gunther, Bradford Dillman as Arthur Deal/Thor, Christian Juttner as Tommy, Ed Griffith as Hanson, Edmund Gilbert as the warden. Writer: Margaret Armen. Director: Barry Crane
Fausta, The Nazi Wonder Woman (airdate: April 28, 1976). To retaliate for Wonder Woman's interference with their operations, the Nazis create a superwoman of their own to oppose her. And it appears Fausta has been successful when she defeats Princess Diana and takes her back to Germany as her prisoner. Guest cast: Lynda Day-George [The Return of Captain Nemo] as Fausta, Christopher George [The Inmortal] as Rojack, Bo Brundin as Kesselmann. Writers: Bruce Shelby and David Ketchum.
Beauty on Parade (airdate: Oct. 13, 1976). German agents acting as saboteurs are using a traveling beauty contest as a cover for their activities. Guest cast Anne Francis [Honey West] as Lola Flyinn, Dick Van Patten [When Things Were Rotten] as Jack Wood, Bobby, Van [Lost Horizon] as Monty Bums, Christa Helm as Rita, Jennifer Shaw as Suzan, William Lanteau as Col. Flint. Writer: Ron Friedman. Director: Richard Kinom.
The Feminum Mystique, part one and two (airdates: part one, Nov. 6, 1976; part two, Nov. 8, 1976). Wonder Woman must come to the rescue when Nazi scientist Professor Radl kidnaps Diana's sister Drusilla, also known as Wonder Girl. Holding her prisoner, he hopes to find the secret of the bulletproof metal used in the bracelets of the Amazon Wonder Woman and her younger sister. Guest cast: John Saxon as Radl, Charles Frank as Peter Knight, Paul Shenar as Wertz, Pamela Shoop as Magda, Erica Hagen as Dalma, Kurt Kreuger as Hemmschler, Curt Lowens as Gen. Ulrich. Writers: Jimmy Sangster, Barb Avedon and Barb Corday. Director: Herb Wallerstein.
Wonder Woman vs. Gargantua (airdate: Dec. 18, 1976). Nazi Hans Eichler has specially bred a powerful gorilla to eliminate the Amazon Princess. Guest cast Robert Loggia [T.H.E. Cat] as Hans Eichler, Gretchen Corbett [0therworld] as Erica Belgard, John Hillerman as Conrad Steigler, Mickey Morton as Gargantua, Tom Reese as Carl Mueller. Writers: David Ketchum and Tony DiMarco. Director: Herb Wallerstein.
The Pluto File (airdate: Dec. 25, 1976). A scientist finishes a document that details the formation of volcanoes, but the secret papers are stolen. However, the thief, Sean Fallon, is unaware that he is a carrier of the bubonic plague. Guest cast: Robert Reed as Sean Fallon, Hayden Roarke as Prof. Warren, Kenneth Tigar as Dr. Barnes, Albert Stratton as Charles Benson, Michael Twain as Frank Willis, Jason Johnson as James Porter. Writer: Herb Wallerstein. Director: Herb Wallerstein.
Last of the $2 Bills (airdate: Jan. 8, 1977). The latest Nazi threat comes from a counterfeit ring that plans to flood the market with fake two-dollar bills. Guest cast: James Olson as Wotan, Barbara Anderson as Maggie, Richard O'Brien as Frank Wilson, John Howard as the doctor, David Cryer as Hank, Dean Harens as Dan Fletcher, Victor Argo as Jason. Writers: Paul Dubob and Gwen Bheni. Director: Stuart Margolin.
Judgement From Outer Space, part one and two (airdates: part one, Jan. 15, 1977; part two, Jan. 17, 1977). An alien from a distant planet arrives on Earth. The man, known as Andros, explains that unless mankind stops their constant state of warfare he must, destroy the planet to eliminate humanity's war-like nature before it develops the ability to wreak havoc on other worlds. But Nazis kidnap the alien and hide him behind their lines, and now only Wonder Woman can save him. Guest cast- Tim O'Connor [Buck Rogers] as Andros, Scott Hylands as Paul Bjornsen, Kurt Kasznar [Land of the Giants] as Von Dreiberg, Janet MacLachlan as Sakri, Vic Perrin as Gorel, Arch Johnson as Gen. Kane, George Cooper as Gen. Clewes, Hank Brandt as Graebner, Christopher Cary as Mallory, Fil Formicola as the sergeant, Patrick Skelton as Gormsby, Christine Schmidtmer as Lisa Engel. Writer: Stephen Kandel. Director: Alan Crosland.
Formula 407 (airdate: Jan. 22, 1977). A scientist, Professor Moreno, has perfected a means to produce rubber as strong as steel. But Nazis are after the formula, so Trevor and Diana follow German agents to Buenos Aires to stop them. Guest cast Nehemiah Persoff as Prof. Moreno, Marisa Pavan as Maria, John Devlin as Major Keller, Charles Macaulay as McCauley, Peter MacLean as Schmidt, Maria Grimm as Lydia Moreno, Armando Silvestre as Antonio Cruz. Writer: Elroy Schwartz. Director: Herb Wallerstein.
The Bushwackers (airdate: Jan. 29, 1977). A new threat to the U.S. war effort comes from German cattle rustlers who are raiding ranches in Texas. Mr. A Hadley contacts the government and request their and Wonder Woman's help in combating the thieves. Guest cast: Roy Rogers as Mr. Hadley, Henry Darrow as Walter Lampkin, Lance Kerwin as Jeff Hadley, Tony George as Emmett Dawson, David Clarke as Sheriff Bodie, David Yañez as Charlie, Christoff St. John as Line, Justin Randi as Freddie, Carey Kevin Wong as Sen, Rita Gomez. Writer: Skip Webster. Director: Stuart Margolin.
Wonder Woman In Hollywood (airdate: Feb. 16, 1977). Heroes of the U.S. armed forces are brought home to Hollywood to film a movie about their exploits, but the men are being kidnapped by ruthless Nazi agents. Guest cast: Harris Yulin as, Mark Bremer, Robert Hays [Starman] as Jim Ames, Christopher Norris as Gloria Beverly, Charles Cyphers as Kurt, Alan Bergmann as the director. Writer: Jimmy Sangster. Director: Stuart Margolin.
The New Adventures of Wonder Woman (CBS series)
Production credits: Executive Producer: Douglas S. Cramer,  Wilfred Baumes. Developed for TV by Stanley Ralph Ross. Characters created by Charles Moulton. Music: Artie Kane. Theme: Charles Fox,  Norman Gimbel. Regular cast: Wonder Woman (Lynda Carter), Steve Trevor, Jr. (Lyle Waggoner), Joe Atkinson (Normann Burton), The Queen Mother (Beatrice Straight). Number of CBS episodes: one 90 minute pilot movie,  45 one hour segments.
Premise: After the war has ended, Princess Diana returns home to Paradise Island. Thirty-two years later, she decides the country needs her again, and the ageless superheroine comes to the aid of the U.S. as Wonder Woman, where she teams up with Steve Trevor's son under her civilian identity of Diana Prince. Steve Trevor, Jr., is the head of the Inter-Agency Defense Command, where Wonder Woman becomes an operative. They are assisted by IRAC, the agency's talking computer.
FIRST CBS SEASON
The Return of Wonder Woman (airdate: Sept. 16, 1977, third 90 minute pilot). Thirty-two years after her return to Paradise Island at the end of World War II, the ageless Diana Prince becomes involved with the outside world again after a U.S. aircraft carrying government agents is disabled by a knock-out gas delivered by an enemy agent. The plane wanders out of control and enters the airspace of Paradise Island, where the Amazon women rescue those on board. Princess Diana is startled to see a young Steve Trevor after so many years, but finds out that he is Steve Trevor, Jr., who is an agent of the Inter-Agency Defense Command. Diana realizes the country is opposing evil forces once again, so she receives permission to return to the U.S. as Diana Prince. Her queen mother gives her powerful weapons to fight evil, including a lariat, a magic belt, a set of bullet reflecting wrist bands, and a tiara containing a special ruby that allows her to contact Paradise Island at any time. Steve is hypnotized to forget Paradise Island and to believe Diana is a replacement assistant he was supposed to meet on his trip to Latin America. The aircraft is sent aloft with Diana at the controls and the rest of the passengers and crew are awakened after Diana leaves via an escape hatch and enters her own invisible plane, which she uses to fly to Steve's destination in Latin America. Once there, the hypnotized Steve accepts Diana upon seeing her at the airport. She quickly becomes involved in helping Steve overcome an international terrorist. Later, when they return to the U.S., Diana updates her personnel files on a computer, and takes her place as Steve's assistant in the Inter-Agency Defense Command, lead by Steve Trevor, Jr. Guest cast: Fritz Weaver as Dr. Solano, Jessica Walter as Gloria, Beatrice Straight as the Queen, Bettye Ackerman as Asclepia, Russ Marin as Kleist, Dave Knapp as Maj. Gaines, Frank Killmond as Logan, Dorrie Thompson as Evadne, Brooke Bundy as Beverly. Writer: Stephen Kandel. Director: Alan Crosland.
Anschluss 177 (airdate: Sept. 23, 1977). In a South American country where Nazi's took refuge after World War 111, the Germans are planning a comeback with the establishment of a Fourth Reich. Their plan: to clone der fuhrer, Adolf Hitler. Guest cast: Mel Ferrer [Robocop] as Fritz Gerlich, Julio Medina as Gaitan, Leon Charles as Von Klemper, Kurt Kreuger as Koenig, Barry Dennen as the cloned Hitler, Peter Nyberg as Strasser. Writers: Dallas L. Barnes and Frank K. Telford. Director: Alan Crosland.
The Man Who Could Move the World (airdate: Sept. 30, 1977). Wonder Woman's return to activity against criminals in 1977 revives an old grudge from a previous operation in World War II. It seems that an ex-Japanese soldier has sworn to obtain revenge for Wonder Woman's interference thirty-five years earlier. Guest cast: Yuki Shimoda as Ishida, J. Kenneth Campbell as Taft, Lew Ayres as Dr. Wilson, James Long as Oshima, Peter Kwong as Massake. Writer: Judy Bums. Director: Bob Kellijan.
The Bermuda Triangle Crisis (airdate: Oct. 7, 1977). Wonder Woman returns to the area of her home, Paradise Island in the Bermuda Triangle, after an aircraft disappears there. To locate the surveillance plane, Steve and Diana go undercover as a wealthy vacationing couple. Guest cast Charles Cioffi as Manta, Larry Golden as Lt. Mansfield, Herman Poppe as the sergeant. Writer: Calvin Clements, Jr. Director: Seymour Robbie.
Knockout (airdate: Oct. 14, 1977). Has Steve been kidnapped? The head of the Inter-Agency Defense Command has disappeared while in Los Angeles, so Diana Prince goes in search of her boss. Guest cast: Ted Shackelford as Pete, Jayne Kennedy as Carolyn, Frank Marth as the tall man, Arch Johnson as John Kelly, Burr DeBenning as Tom Baker, K.C. Martel as Ted, Abraham Alvarez as Officer Fernandez, Frank Parker as Lane Curran. Writer: Mark Rodgers. Director: Seymour Robbie.
The Pied Piper (airdate: Oct. 21, 1977). A rock musician is using special music to place young women under his power, then he sends them out to pull off thefts. When Wonder Woman discovers who is behind the crimes, she tries to arrest Hamlin Rule, but the special frequency of music he uses to hypnotize females may be too strong even for Wonder Woman. Guest cast: Martin Mull as Hamlin Rule, Eve Plumb as Elena Atkinson, Bob Hastings as the gatekeeper, Denny Miller as Carl Schwartz, Sandy Charles as Louise. Writers: David Ketchum and Tony DiMarco. Director: Alan Crosland.
The Queen and the Thief (airdate: Oct. 28, 1977). Steve wants to capture an internationally-wanted thief. He believes Robley may appear at a foreign embassy, so he and Diana go undercover: Steve pretends to be the leader of a foreign country, while Diana takes the job of a maid. Guest cast Juliet Mills as Queen Kathryn, David Hedison [Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea] as Evan Robley, John Colicos [Battlestar Galactica] as Ambassador Orrick. Writer: Bruce Shelly. Director: Jack Arnold.
I Do, I Do (airdate: Nov. 11, 1977). Foreign agents are operating out of an exclusive spa that caters to the wives of important government officials, and while there they are forced to reveal secrets that could prove damaging to the U.S. Guest cast: Celeste Holm as Dolly Tucker, John Getz as Christian Harrison, Simon Scott as Sam Tucker, Kent Smith [The Invaders) as Justice Brown, Henry Darrow [The Invisible Man] as David Allen, Steve Eastin as Johnny. Writers: Brian McKay and Richard Carr. Director: Herb Wallerstein.
The Man Who Made Volcanoes (airdates: Nov. 18, 1977). An eccentric scientist, Dr. John Chapman, has discovered a way to activate volcanic disturbances - and begins a scheme that will cover the planet with artificially induced volcanic eruptions. Guest cast: Roddy McDowall [Planet of the Apes] as Dr. John Chapman, Roger Davis [Dark Shadows] as Jack Corbin, Irene Tsu as Mei Ling, Richard Narita as Lin Wan, Milt Kogan as Kalanin, Ray Young as Tobirov. Writers: Dan Ullman and Wilton Denmar Director: Alan Crosland.
The Mind Stealers From Outer Space, parts one and two (airdates: part one, Dec. 2, 1977; part two, Dec. 9, 1977). Diana reteams with Andros, an outer space alien she met thirty years earlier [see Judgement From Outer Space], in an effort to overcome a group of villains known as the Skrills. The outlaws are staging kidnappings all over the country, collecting, for some sinister purpose, the most brilliant scientists and intellectuals the nation has to offer. Guest cast Dack Rambo as Andros, Vincent Van Patten as Johnny, Kristin Larkin as Debbie, Barry Cahill as General Miller, Allan Migicovsky as Dr. Rand, Sol Weiner as Capt. Parelli, Earl Boen as Chaka, Pamela Mason as Carla Burgess, Curt Lowens as Nordling. Writer: Stephen Kandel. Director: part one, Michael Caffey; part two, Alan Crosland.
The Deadly Toys (airdate: Dec. 30, 1977). Dr. Hoffman, a sinister toymaker, designs full size toys in the form of androids, mechanical creatures so real they can pass as human. Steve and Diana go into action when the toymaker uses them to rip off the top-secret plans for a new weapon being designed for the government. Guest cast: Frank Gorshin [Batman] as Dr. Hoffman, John Rubinstein as Major Dexter, Ross Elliott as Dr. Lazar, James A. Watson, Jr. as Dr. Prescott, Donald Bishop as Dr. Tobias, Randy Phillips as the doctor. Writer: Anne Collins. Director: Dick Moder.
Light-Fingered Lady (airdate: Jan. 16, 1978). When the Agency learns of plans for a fifty million dollar theft, Diana is sent undercover to become a member of the ring planning to steal the money. Guest cast: Greg Morris [Mission: Impossible] as Anton Caribe, Joseph R. Sicari as Leech, Christopher Stone as Tony Ryan, Titos Vandis as Michael Sutton, Gary Crosby as Grease, Larry Ward as Adler, Bubba Smith [Blue Thunder] as Rojak, Rick DiAngelo as Ross, Stack Pierce as the desk sergeant, Saundra Sharp as Eve, Judyann Elder as Marge Douglass. Writer: Bruce Shelley. Director: Bruce Shelley.
Screaming Javelin (airdate: Jan. 20, 1978). A nutty "dictator" of an imaginary country decides he can receive recognition by winning that year's Olympics, so he begins kidnapping top-notch athletes to win the games for Mariposalia. Guest cast: Henry Gibson as Marion Mariposa, E. J. Peaker as Lois Taggart, Melanie Chartoff as Nadia Samara, Robert Sampson as Bo Taggart, Rick Springfield as Tom Hamilton, Vaughn Armstrong as Eric. Writer: Brian McKay. Director: Mike Caffey.
Diana's Disappearing Act (airdate: Feb. 3, 1978). The Agency learns of a scheme to radically raise oil prices in the Mid-East. A Black Arts master, Count Cagliostro, is planning a scheme involving selling fake gold to the greedy president of a foreign country. Guest cast: Dick Gautier as Count Cagliostro, Ed Begley, Jr. as Harold Farnum Brenda Benet as Morgana, Aharon Ipale as Emir, Saundra Sharp as Eve, LA. Preston as Jazreel, Andy Williams as Hutchins. Writer: S.S. Schweitzer. Director: Michael Caffey.
Death in Disguise (airdate: Feb. 10, 1978). Armed killers are after Diana Prince when she accepts a job guarding a wealthy industrialist from a group of assassins. Guest cast: George Charkiris as Carlo Indrezzati, Charles Pierce as Starker, Joel Fabiani as Woodward Nightingale, Jennifer Darling as Violet, Lee Bergere as Marius, Arthur Batanides as Krug, Christopher Cary as Beamer Writer: Tom Sawyer. Director: Alan Crosland.
IRAC is Missing (airdate: Feb. 17, 1978). Computer genius Bernard Havitol plans to rule the world by taking over the memory banks of the world's most powerful computers, and seems to be succeeding - unless Wonder Woman can stop him. Guest cast: Ross Martin [The Wild Wild West] as Bernard Havitol, Tina Lenert as Cori, Lee Paul as Dirk, W.T. Zacha as Dick, Jim Veres as Sgt. Dobson, Lloyd McLinn as the guard, Cletus Young as the official. Writer: Anne Collins. Director: Alex Singer.
Flight to Oblivion (airdate: Mar. 3, 1978). A traitorous officer who used to serve within NATO forces is sabotaging U.S. Air Force operations by using his incredibly strong hypnotic powers. Guest cast: Alan Fudge [The Man From Atlantis] as Major Cornell, Corinne Michaels as Capt. Ann Cornell, John Van Dreelan as Edmund Dante, Michael Shannon as Lt. Stonehouse, Mitch Vogel as Drummer, David Sak Cadiente as the first heavy. Writer: Patrick Mathews. Director: Alan Crosland.
Seance of Terror (airdate: May. 10, 1978). After years of work, an international peace conference is arranged. But the talks are being sabotaged by a child who is able to influence the behavior of the delegates with his "psychic photographs". Guest cast: Todd Lookinland as Matthew, Rick Jason as Koslo, Kres Mersky as Theodora, Hanna Hertelendy as Ms. Kell, John Fujioka as Yamura Adam Ageli as Bakru. Writer: Bruce Shelly. Director: Dick Moder.
The Man Who Wouldn't Tell (airdate: Mar. 31, 1978). Company scientists haven't been able to find the correct ingredient needed for a powerful new explosive, but a bungling janitor, Alan Akroy, manages to discover it. Unfortunately, a rival company is now after Alan and the formula. Guest cast: Gary Burghoff as Alan Akroy, Jane Actman as Meg, Philip Michael Thomas as Furst, Michael Cole as Ted, Millie Slavin as B.J. Writer: Anne Collins. Director: Alan Crosland.
The Girl from Ilandia (airdate: April 7, 1978). Tina, a beautiful young lady found floating on a raft at sea, proves to have unusual telekinetic powers - just the thing that makes her wanted by underworld thugs. Guest cast: Julie Ann Haddock as Tina, Harry Guardino as Simon Penrose, Allen Arbus as Bleaker, Fred Lerner as Davis, Buck Young as the doctor. Writer: Anne Collins. Director: Dick Moder.
The Murderous Missile (airdate: April 21, 1978). While on her as way to a missile site to perform an assignment, Diana is taken prisoner in a deserted old desert ghost town. Guest cast: Warren Stevens as Sheriff Beal, James Luisi as George, Steve Inwood as Mac, Mark Withers as Luther, Lucille Benson as Flo, Hal England as Hal Shaver. Writer: Dick Nelson. Director: Dick Moder.
SECOND CBS SEASON
One of Our Teen Idols is Missing (airdate: Sept. 22, 1978). Wonder Woman must save Lane Kincaid, a teenage idol that has been kidnapped, and replaced with a convincing double. Guest cast: Leif Garrett as Lane Kincaid/Mike Kincaid, Dawn Lyn as Whitney Springfield, Michael Lerner as Ashton Ripley, Albert Paulsen as Raleigh Crichton, Michael Baseleon as Morley. Writer: Anne Collins. Director: Seymour Robbie.
Hot Wheels (airdate: Sept. 29, 1978). Diana Prince is searching for a Rolls Royce that has been stolen, as its hood ornament contains some top-secret microfilm. Guest cast: Peter Brown as Tim Bolt, Lance LeGault [Werewolf] as Otis Fiskie, John Durren as Alfie, Marc Rose as Slim. Writer: Dennis Landa. Director: Dick Moder.
The Deadly Sting (airdate: Oct. 6, 1978). For some reason, highlyskilled college football players are bungling and losing important games. When Diana investigates, she discovers that someone is subconsciously manipulating the players to cause their teams to lose. Guest cast: Harvey Jason as Prof. Brubaker, Ron Ely [Tarzan] as Bill Michaels, Scott Marlowe as Angie Cappucci, Danny Dayton as Louis the Lithuanian, Marvin Miller as Beamer, Roman Gabriel, Deacon Jones, Lawrence McCutcheon, Eddie Allen Bell, Gill Stratton. Writer: Dick Nelson. Director: Alan Crosland.
The Fine Art of Crime (airdate: Oct. 13, 1978). A group of art thieves are mysteriously able to rob without being caught by the authorities. When Wonder Woman tries to catch them, she finds herself in the position of being transmuted into a work of art. Guest cast: Roddy McDowall [Planet of the Apes) as Henry Roberts, Michael McGuire as Moreaux, Ed Begley, Jr. as Harold Farnum Gavin MacLeod as Ellsworth, Patti MacLeod as Mrs. Ellsworth. Writer: Anne Collins. Director: Dick Moder.
Disco Devil (airdate: Oct. 20, 1978). Someone is stealing vital government secrets, and when Wonder Woman investigates she finds a psychic who is using his disco to lure in government workers and rob their minds of secret information. Guest cast: Paul Sands as Del Franklin, Wolfman lack as Infrared, Michael DeLano as Nick Moreno, Russell Johnson as the Colonel, Ellen Weston as Angelique. Writer: Alan Brenner. Director: Les Martinson.
Formicida (airdate: Nov. 3, 1978). Dr. Irene Janus becomes "Formicida", a being with incredible power and the ability to control thousands of insects, Now she is using her powers to stop the manufacture of a deadly pesticide. Guest cast: Lorene Yarnell as Dr. Irene Janus/Formicida, Robert Shields [Wild Wild West Revisited] as Doug, Robert Alda as Harcourt, Stan Haze as Cawley. Writer: Katharyn Michaelian Powers. Director: Alan Crosland.
Time Bomb (airdate: Nov. 10, 1978). A scientist from the year 2155 uses a time travel device to return to 1978. But she has no intention of furthering science; instead, she plans to use her knowledge of the future to become a billionaire. Guest cast: Joan Van Ark as Cassandra Loren, Ted Shackelford as Adam Clement, Allan Miller as Dan Reynolds, Fredd Wayne as LL MacConnell. Writers: Kathleen Barnes and David Wise. Director: Seymour Robbie.
Skateboard Whiz (airdate: Nov. 24, 1978). Skateboard wiz Cynthia Eilbacher is being used for blackmail and extortion by her godfather, a Mafia kingpin. Guest cast: Jaime O'Neill as Cynthia Eilbacher, Eric Braeden as Donelson, Ron Masak as Duane Morrisey Art Metrano as Friedman, John Reilly as Skye Markham, James Ray as John Key. Writer: Alan Brennert. Director: Les Martinson.
The Deadly Dolphin (airdate: Dec. 1, 1978). Criminals have kidnapped a trained dolphin and sent him out on a suicide mission: the animal is carrying explosives that will detonate when they strike an oil tanker carrying 50,000 barrels of crude oil, the release of which will cause an ecological disaster. Guest cast Penelope Windust as Dr. Sylvia Stubbs, Nicolas Coster as Silas Lockhart, Britt Leach as Billy, Albert Popwell as Gaffer, Brian Tochi as Darrel, Michael Stroka as Henry. Writer: Jackson Gillis. Director: Sigmund Neufield.
Stolen Faces (airdate: Dec. 15, 1978). To learn what she is up to, Diana is following a fake Wonder Woman who is performing good deeds; but finds that more duplicates are being made of other people, including one of Steve. Guest cast: Joseph Maher as Edgar Percy, Kenneth Tigar as John Austin, Bob Seagren as Roman, John O'Connell as Todd Daniels, Diana Lander as Nancy. Writer: Richard Carr. Director: Les Martineson.
Pot Of Gold (airdate: Dec. 22, 1978). Wonder Woman goes to the aid of a leprechaun to help him recover his stolen gold. Guest cast: Dick O'Neill as Pat O'Hanlon, Brian Davies as Thackery, Steve Allie Collura as Bonelli, Arthur Batanides as Maxwell, Ric De Angelo as Raucher, Sherrie Wills as Lisa. Writer: Michael McGreevy. Director: Gordon Hessler.
Gault's Brain (airdate: Dec. 29, 1978). Billionaire Harlow Gault is alive and well, or at least his brain is. The disembodied brain is looking for a new body as a home to continue Gault's existence. Guest cast: John Carradine [The Howling] as the voice of Gault, Lloyd Levine as Stryker, Kathy Sheriff as Tara London, David Mason Daniels as Morton Danzing, Mark Richman as Dr. Crippin, Erik Stem as Turk. Writers: Arthur Weingarten and John Gaynor. Director: Gordon Hessler.
Going, Going, Gone (airdate: Jan. 12, 1979). A group of criminals who specialize in stolen nuclear hardware is being infiltrated by Diana Prince to put a stop to their thefts. Guest cast: Hari Rhodes as Como, Bo Frundin as Zukov, Kaz Garas as Lucas, Mako as Brown, Charlie Brill as Smith, Marc Lawrence as Jones, Milton Selzer as Captain Louie. Writer: Patrick Mathews. Director: Alan Crosland.
Spaced Out (airdate: Jan. 26, 1979). Two rival groups will do anything to obtain a stolen laser crystal, but it has been hidden somewhere at a science-fiction convention. Guest cast: Rene Auberjonois as Kimball, Paul Lawrence Smith as Simon Rohan, George Shung as Mr. Munn, Bob Short as Robby the Robot. Writer- Bill Taylor. Director: Ivan Dickson.
The Starships are Coming (airdate: Feb. 2, 1979). Is Earth being invaded by aliens? Someone has pulled off a fantastic hoax to make Wonder Woman and the rest of the world believe that hostile starships are heading towards our planet. Guest cast: Andrew Duggan as Mason Steele, Jeffrey Byron as Henry Wilson, Tim O'Connor [Buck Rogers] as Col. Robert Elliott, David White as the general, James Coleman as the aide, Sheryl Lee Ralph as Bobbie, Frank Whiteman as the newsman. Writers: Glen Olson and Rod Baker. Director: Alan Crosland.
Amazon Hot Wax (airdate: Feb. 16, 1979). Diana goes undercover as a singer to put an end to an extortion scheme being used by someone in the record industry. Guest cast: Kate Woodville as Adelle Kobler, Bob Hoy as Marty, Sarah Purcell as Barbie, Curtis Credel as Eric Landau, Martin Speer as Billy Dero, Rick Springfield as Anton, Danil Torpe as Jerry, Michael Botts as Kim, Judge Reinhold as Jeff Gordon. Writer: Alan Brennert. Director: Ray Austin.
The Richest Man In the World (airdate: Feb. 19, 1979). Wonder Woman and the rest of the country are trying to find a wealthy recluse. The man has disappeared after obtaining a top-secret missile-guidance system scrambling device, but no one can find him. Guest cast: Jeremy Slate as Marshall Henshaw, Roger Perry as Lawrence Dunfield, Barry Miller as Barney, Marilyn Mason as Lucy DeWitt. Writer: Jackson Gillis. Director: Don MacDougall.
A Date with Doomsday (airdate: Mar. 10, 1979). What does a computer dating service have to do with the theft of a governmentproduced biological warfare germ? Wonder Woman must find out after the deadly virus is stolen from the lab it was produced at, and has been traced to the dating service. Guest cast: Hermione Baddeley as Mrs. Thrip, Donnelly Rhodes as Ward Selkirk, Carol Vogel as Dede, Taaffe O'Conell as Val, Arthur Malet as Prof. Zander, Michael Holt as John Blake. Writers: Dennis Landa. and Roland Starke. Director: Curtis Harrington.
The Girl With The Gift For Disaster (airdate: Mar. 17, 1979). A pretty young girl, Bonnie Murphy, always seems to be at the center of one calamity after another. But the latest situation is not her doing: a thief is using her as an unwilling accomplice to steal some priceless historical documents. Guest cast: Jane Actman as Bonnie Murphy, James Sloyan as Mark Reuben, Raymond St. Jacques as William Mayfield, Ina Balin as Elizabeth Koren, S. Newton Anderson as Pete Phillips, Charles Haid as Bob Baker, Dick Batkus [Blue Thunder] as Neil, Dulcie Jordan as the receptionist, Nina Weintraub as Abby. Writer: Alan Brennert. Director: Alan Crosland.
The Boy Who Knew Her Secret, parts one and two (airdates: part one, May 28, 1979; part two, May 29, 1979). Metallic pyramids are falling onto Earth from outer space, and anyone who touches them has their mind trapped by the beings that exist inside the pyramids. While Wonder Woman investigates the situation, humans whose minds have been taken over begin to search for an alien criminal. To avoid capture, the being can transform into anything, including Wonder Woman. Guest cast Clark Brandon as Skip Keller, Michael Shannon as Cameron Michaels, John Milford as Mr. Keller, Lenora May as Melanie Rose, Tegan West as Pete Pearson, Burt Remsen as Dr. Eli Jaffe, Joyce Greenwood as Mrs. Keller. Writer: Anne Collins. Director: Les Martinson.
The Man Who Could Not Die (airdate: Aug. 28, 1979). Wonder Woman is faced with two threats: a criminal genius with incredible powers, and a super-man who is her match in power. Guest cast: Bob Seagren as Bryce Kandel, Brian Dawles as Joseph Reichman, James Bond III as T. Burton Phipps III, John Durran as Dale Hawthome, Robert Sampson as Dr. Martin Akers, John Aprea as Durpis. Writer: Anne Collins. Director: John Newland.
Phantom of the Roller Coaster, parts one and two (airdates: part one, Sept. 24, 1979; part two, Sept. 11, 1979). Diana investigates an amusement park that seems to be the hideout for the leader of a group of foreign spys. Wonder Woman follows him back to the theme park in Washington, but both she and the foreign agent are confronted by a phantom that haunts the park - a disfigured veteran who lives there under the roller coaster. Guest cast: Joseph Sirola as Harrison Fynch, Jared Martin [Fantastic Journey] as Leon Hurney/David Gurney, Ike Eisemann [Fantastic Journey] as Randy, Marc Alaimo as Pierce, S. Newton Anderson as Roberts, Jocelyn Summers as Ms. Patrick. Jessica Rains as the secretary, Mike Kopsha as the sergeant, Judith Christopher as the receptionist. Writer: Anne Collins. Director: John Newland.
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