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"When
Wonder Woman was unceremoniously dropped from the ABC fall line-up,
Lynda Carter - everyone's favorite superheroine-come-to-life - had to
face the dim prospect of never returning to Paradise Island. But CBS has
come to the rescue, promising a new, prime-time show and assuring Ms.
Carter and the multitude of her admiring fans that happily the troubles
in paradise are not over..."
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During the past six months, the adventures of the Amazon heroine
Wonder Woman have been as interesting in real life as they have been
on the TV screen. Wonder Woman will be back this season on a regular
basis, no thanks to ABC. At the end of it's 1976-77 run, the network
abruptly let the Wonder Woman cast and crew know that they were not at
all interested in picking up the show for the upcoming season. Before
the initial shock had time to set-in, CBS galloped to the rescue,
offering a weekly time slot to the top rated show. This fall, Wonder
Woman had a new home, a new time and, most importantly, a new
look! |
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Fans of the fantastic female need not dismay. CBS has taken great
pains to give Wonder Woman a facelift that neatly fits into character.
In his office on the Warners studio complex, newfound W.W. producer
Charles Fitzsimons, when queried about the revamped storyline beams:
"Now that we're on a new network, we're taking Wonder Woman out
of the World War II period and updating it to today, giving greater
flexibility to the stories. We want the show to come into the era of
science fiction, to encounter all of the things that are popular with
people today. We don't want to merely deal with the Nazi threat show
after show anymore. We want a faster pace." |
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According to Fitzsimons, the changes have been accepted wholeheartedly
by everyone involved: "Lynda and the cast think the idea is
great." In the new show, Wonder Woman will continue her fight
against evil, as Diana Prince, she will be special assistant to Steve
Trevor Jr., son of the Air Force intelligence ace for whom Wonder
Woman worked incognito during World War II. The role is again played
by Lyle Waggoner. Trevor Jr. is part of the interconnected
Intelligence Community which falls under the direction of the
President's Office. In fact, the weekly assignments will be received
in top secrecy from a soft-spoken man with a southern accent. Fitzsimons,
who served as a producer for the first William Dozier Batman pilot,
stresses that the modifications of the new, improved Wonder Woman will
be minimal and all for the better. Appearances will be slightly
altered, of course, but he adds "The costumes will be basically
the same with a little modernization. The wide lapels, however, will
be strictly taboo". |
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While CBS was busy changing the life of Wonder Woman on the tube, star
Lynda Carter was diligently changing her everyday existence in a big
way. Early in June she married her personal manager, Ron Samuels, and
flew off to Hawaii on their honeymoon. Before embarking on her new
life, on and off screen, the talented Ms. Carter took time to chat
with STARLOG while hard at work on the set of one of the final ABC
specials of last season. Huddled inside her air conditioned
dressing-room trailer, Lynda seemed fairly oblivious to the action
going on outside. A few yards away from her door, a group of extras,
dressed in broad-lapeled suits and well-worn fedoras, trudged
laboriously through an artificial swamp on the back lot of Warner's
studios. The day was unusually hot and humid, and the Los Angeles sun
made the tropical set authentic in terms of temperature. The cast and
crew wilted accordingly. Lynda's trailer, however, remained untouched
by it all and the willowy star, in simple black sweater and slacks,
talked about her career and involvement with the show in low, hushed
tones. |
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"People want to get back to old-fashioned feelings," she
said in an attempt to explain Wonder Woman's immense popularity.
"There's a strong romantic element in the show along with the
fantasy-type characters; a war hero and Amazon Princess. Doesn't every
girl still want to be a princess and every boy a hero?". |
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That basic idealistic desire to be something special was part of
Lynda's own childhood in Phoenix, Arizona. The 24 year old brunette
related that she avidly followed Wonder Woman's comic book exploits as
a youngster, often pretending she could imitate the character's
fantastic feats. In real life, though, she found herself frustrated
and somewhat inhibited by the single characteristic that brought her
to the attention of Wonder Woman's producers in the first place ...her
height. |
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"In
High School," the statuesque, six foot beauty recalled, "I
was too tall to be in the pep squad, too tall for a boy to feel
comfortable with on a date and too tall to feel at ease anywhere.
Everybody used to tell me - sympathetically, I guess- 'Don't worry,
you've got what it takes...talent! You'll make it.' Nobody showed me
how, though, until someone, I forget who, said 'study.' So I took up
music and singing." |
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As a result, she was voted Most Talented Student at Arcadia-Titans
High School in Phoenix. Lynda subsequently decided to leave Arizona
State University to pursue a singing career. While she didn't exactly
set the pop world afire, she was good enough to tour with several rock
groups before returning home in 1972. It was at this time that Lynda
decided to capitalize on her most obvious natural asset: Her beauty.
She entered a local beauty contest. A "Miss World-USA" crown
followed and crash courses at several New York acting schools ensued.
Eventually, Lynda made her way to such shows as Starsky &
Hutch, Cos and Nakia in guest roles. |
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About this time, ABC was reeling from an unsuccessful attempt at
launching comic-strip heroine Wonder Woman on the airwaves. Their
attempt with Cathy Lee Crosby was a bona fide disaster and a new
actress was needed pronto. Lynda's regal figure was spotted and,
Voila!, instant superhero! Seated calmly on the set, Lynda stated that
she thoroughly enjoyed her role as Wonder Woman explaining her
feelings about the unique coloring of the drama. "It crosses the
bridge between fun and reality," she theorized, thus making it a
show that would appeal to both children and adults. As the final ABC
season drew to a close, Lynda stated that she never really worried
about being stereotyped as the Amazon type or being identified too
closely with the Wonder Woman role. "Wonder Woman is part of my
life right now and I see it as a step in my career," she smiled.
"I'm not really afraid of being typed because I'm involved with
different things, like writing music and singing." |
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"Wonder Woman has never really been flesh and bones before, so,
right now, I AM Wonder Woman. If a person totally immersed herself in
a role, she would be totally insane. But if she didn't become involved
at all, she wouldn't be doing the super job." Lynda doubted that
she would ever completely lose herself in the superhero image because
of the demands of studying the complex character. "There's such a
fine line between fantasy and reality in the show that it's probably
the most difficult role I'll ever play." |
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For Lynda, one of the most fascinating results of the Wonder Woman
role has been the waves of fan mail triggered during the past season.
While a healthy dose of the mail originated from fantasy and comic strip
enthusiasts, a large hunk of it emanated from an appreciative male
audience who rated Lynda's performance on a hubba-hubba scale of one
to ten - a perfect tenner. Lynda is slightly embarrased by this type
of adulation but laughs and enjoys it nonetheless. Especially
fascinating, in her mind, are her chance meetings with her fans. |
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"The other day I stopped by the market to pick up a few
things," she began, "and there were to little girls waiting
outside on bicycles. One of them nudged the other and whispered,
'Look! It's HER!' They both stood there like statues," Lynda
grinned. "So I just put my fingers to my lips like I was in
disguise, Like Diana Prince, and asked them to keep my real identity a
secret." |
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Lynda reacts to the adulation in general with a good-natured shrug.
"I'm just a person like anybody else. Hopefully, the role that I
play will have some kind of positive effect on both myself and the
public." One of the best demonstrations of Lynda Carter's
"positive effect" came to the actress' attention via a
letter from a teacher of retarded children
who wrote to say that her usually impassive children watched and enjoyed a
recent episode. One child in the class, who normally spoke very little,
broke his long-standing silence by actually reading Lynda's name aloud
from the credits. As Lynda recalled the incident her voice caught with
emotion. "Things like that really make you stop and think about
someone other than yourself. Whew. That really blows my mind to think of
it. Of course, the children were just relating to what I'd projected on
screen...but I do get sentimental when I read something like that." |
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Lynda revealed that as a result of the monumental fan response, she had
immersed herself in perfecting the Wonder Woman character offstage as
well as on. Her routine is not confined simply to memorizing lines and
smiling for close-ups.
She has thrown herself into grueling physical
demands of the role. Last season she handled most of her own stunts,
which made it necessary for her to keep in top physical shape...a fact
pleasantly obvious to the hordes of male viewers. |
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"I'm running, swimming, climbing rope...things that a little while
ago would have taken a little more 'oomph' to do. Now I look forward to
it." |
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Lynda explained that she also looks forward to playing Wonder Woman for
as long as the all-powerful ratings allow, although she is aware of the
limitations inherent in the role. Nothing, she giggled, could last
forever. "Can you imagine a 60-year old Wonder Woman? How about a
Wonder-Grandma. You know, hobbling around with a cane instead of a magic
lasso!" |
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The actress was interrupted by a crew member sticking his head inside
her door. Wonder Woman would be needed on the set soon. Lynda arose from
her chair and said her good-byes. Soon, she would be dressed in the red,
white, and blue patriotic costume of her fictional counterpart. The
members of the cast relaxed outside her trailer in canvas backed chairs,
waiting for the heroine to make one of her last excursions into the
fabulous forties before plunging headfirst into a new season of
seventies adventures. |
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Within minutes, Lynda Carter, actress, had reappeared on the set, completely transformed into the towering Amazon Princess. "Beautiful as Aphrodite... Wise as Athena... Stronger than Hercules." For over 35 years, these words of creator Charles Moulton have introduced nearly all of Wonder Woman's comic book capers. Now, in 1977, it seems as if he had Lynda Carter in mind all along. |