ELECTRA WOMAN AND DYNA GIRL
(ABC, September 11-December 25, 1976)
Sid & Marty Krofft Television Productions
MAIN CAST:
Deidre Hall – Electra Woman/Lori
Judy Strangis – Dyna
Girl/Judy
Norman Alden –
Professor Frank Heflin
Marvin Miller -
Narrator
Electra Woman
and Dyna Girl was one of the original segments of the 90-minute umbrella
program, The
Krofft Supershow. Although Krofft was in the name, Sid & Marty Krofft weren’t the
originators of the series. Rather, it was Hanna-Barbera veterans Joe Ruby and Ken Spears, then under
contract with ABC to create and supervise
Saturday morning projects, who created the show as the first in a partnership
with the Kroffts. It was further developed by story editors Dick Robbins and Duane Poole.
Electra Woman, Dyna Girl and Frank in the ElectraBase. |
The show was heavily influenced by the live-action Batman television
series, as well as the popularity of Filmation’s The
Secrets of Isis, which led to a greater demand for
strong female characters on Saturday mornings. Electra Woman and Dyna Girl were
actually Lori (Deidre Hall, who was cast in her well-known role on Days
of Our Lives while filming
the show) and Judy (Judy Strangis, whose brother worked on Batman), ace reporters for Newsmaker
Magazine. When crime reared its ugly
head, Lori and Judy would “electra-change” into their costumes through a flash
of light, operate out of a high-tech underground headquarters called the
ElectraBase, and pursue their foes in the ElectraCar. The only other person
privy to their secret identities was scientist Frank Helfin (Norman Alden), who
remained in the ElectraBase to operate the CrimeScope computer and relay
information to the duo in the field. Their primary weapons in the war on crime
were the ElectraComs: bulky wrist devices that could perform a variety of
functions depending on a given situation. A narrator (Marvin Miller) would
set-up the episode for the audience and interject at key moments to heighten
the drama, furthering the Batman comparison
along with Dyna Girl’s tendencies to make exclamations beginning with “Electra”
(as opposed to Robin’s
“Holy”).
Ali Baba and his Genie with an evil Dyna Girl. |
Electra Woman
and Dyna Girl debuted with the rest of The
Krofft Supershow on ABC on September 11, 1976. Each episode was only around
12-minutes in length, and like Batman ended
on a cliffhanger that would be resolved the following week. The heroes would
find themselves up against a colorful assortment of villains and their
henchmen: The Sorcerer (Michael
Constantine) and his assistant, Miss Dazzel (Susan Lanier); the hypnotic
musician Glitter Rock (John Mark
Robinson); the Empress of Evil (Claudette
Nevins) and her follower, Lucrezia (Jacqueline Hyde); Ali Baba (Malachi Throne, who had played
Falseface on Batman) and his Genie (Sig Haig); the Pharaoh (Peter Mark Richman) and his
Cleopatra (Jane Elliot); and Spider
Lady (Tiffany Bolling),
mistress of disguise. Along with Robbins and Poole, the series was written by Gerry Day, Bethel Leslie and Greg Strangis with music
composed by Jimmy Haskell. Walter C. Miller and Jack Regas directed the series
utilizing a variety of wild camera angles and shots that were used to hide many
of the production flaws and limited special effects that plagued the series.
The 2001 and 2016 reboot attempts for the series. |
While The
Krofft Supershow was renewed for a second season, Electra Woman was not. It wouldn’t be until 2001 that the concept
was revisited when The WB
commissioned a pilot for
a sequel series. The show would have been a cynical parody of the original,
showing a disillusioned, bitter, alcoholic and promiscuous Electra Woman (Markie Post) who had retired and
lost her husband to her former partner, Dyna Girl (Anne Stedman). The pilot was
never aired, but has been posted online and included on bootleg DVDs of the
original series. A second
attempt came in 2016 when YouTube
celebrities Grace Helbig and Hanna Hart were cast in a reboot. The film was
initially released in 11-minute webisodes through Fullscreen’s streaming platform that
April while the complete film was released in June through major platforms by Legendary Digital Studios and Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. Sony
released it on DVD
the following month.
Heroes--busted! |
In 1976, the heroes were prominently displayed on a lunchbox
from Aladdin featuring the first
season entries of Supershow. In 1977,
View-Master released a set
adapting “The Spider Lady” episodes.
“The Spider Lady” was also adapted into
puzzle form by HG Toys, going along with the board game by
Ideal, a puzzler
toy by Harmony, and a costume
by Ben Cooper. In
2010, Electric Tiki released a pair
of mini-busts featuring Electra Woman and Dyna Girl in a semi-cartoon
style. An Electra
Woman action figure was made by Living Toyz as part of The Krofft
Superstars series, however the line was cancelled before Dyna Girl was ever
made.
VHS cover. |
In 2000, Rhino
Entertainment released four episodes to VHS
edited together to form two complete stories. Episodes of the series were
featured on the compilations The World of Sid & Marty Krofft by Rhino in 2002 and Sid & Marty Krofft’s Saturday Morning
Hits by SMK Pictures in 2010. The complete series was made available
as part of the The World of Sid and Marty Krofft—Complete
Series released by Beyond Home Entertainment Australia, however they used the episodes edited together
for later syndication rather than the original cuts. The series’ theme was
included on the compilation CD H.R. Pufnstuf and Other Sid & Marty
Krofft Favorites.
EPISODE GUIDE:
“The Sorcerer’s Golden Trick: Part 1” (9/11/76) – The Sorcerer escapes
from prison looking for revenge on the heroes and all the gold in Fort Knox.
“The Sorcerer’s Golden Trick: Part 2” (9/18/76) – The Sorcerer traps
the heroes with a man-eating tiger while he continues his raid on Fort Knox.
“Glitter Rock: Part 1” (9/25/76) – Lori’s former classmate and King of
Touremburg stays with the ladies for their high school reunion and ends up
kidnapped by Glitter Rock and Side Man.
“Glitter Rock: Part 2” (10/2/76) – The heroes rescue King Alex and try
to prevent Glitter Rock from sending up a satellite that will beam hypnotic
music all over the world.
“Empress of Evil: Part 1” (10/9/76) – The Empress of Evil makes her
way into the ElectraBase to challenge Electra Woman and kidnaps Dyna Girl in
the process.
“Empress of Evil: Part 2” (10/16/76) – While the heroes are being
stretched apart, the Empress returns to the ElectraBase and confronts Frank.
“Ali Baba: Part 1” (10/23/76) – Ali Baba and his Genie kidnap a
Russian scientist for his formula that will make good people bad.
“Ali Baba: Part 2” (10/30/76) – Ali Baba uses the formula to turn Dyna
Girl evil and she helps them kidnap Frank from the ElectraBase.
“Return of the Sorcerer: Part 1” (11/6/76) – The Sorcerer and Miss
Dazzle use Merlin’s mirror to steal priceless works of art.
“Return of the Sorcerer: Part 2” (11/13/76) – The Sorcerer
contemplates continuing his crime spree or destroying the mirror that now holds
the heroes captive.
“The Pharaoh: Part 1” (11/20/76) – The Pharaoh and Cleopatra steal a
wooden pyramid from a museum, and in trying to retrieve it the heroes are hit
with a mummifying spray.
“The Pharaoh: Part 2” (11/27/76) – The Pharaoh releases the energy being
Solaris from the pyramid and uses him to hold the city ransom by stealing all
of its power.
“The Spider Lady: Part 1” (12/4/76) – The Spider Lady captures Electra
Woman in order to disguise herself as her and steal the Golden Spider from the
Baklava embassy.
“The Spider Lady: Part 2” (12/11/76) – The Spider Lady uses her
disguise to enter the ElectraBase and set a bomb to destroy the Crimescope.
“Return of the Pharaoh: Part 1” (12/18/76) – The Pharaoh sets his
sights on the Coptic Eye that is part of the recently-transplanted King Tut’s
pyramid.
“Return of the Pharaoh: Part 2” (12/25/76) – The heroes confront the
Pharaoh in the pyramid and end up trapped inside with them.
Originally posted in 2016. Updated in 2020.
2 comments:
who was the singer who song the Electra Woman and Dyna Girl song?
Unknown at this time.
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