News

Lynda Carter has been gone from our superhero TV screens for much of the past four decades. But now, the “Wonder Woman” icon has been cast to play the president on “Supergirl.&#82… ...
Leading lady. After her introduction, Wonder Woman was featured on every cover as the lead story in her "Sensation Comics" run. Picking up where the readers left off, in "Sensation Comics" No. 1 ...
She’s the OG Wonder Woman, and for the past 40 years, Lynda Carter’s continued to slay. Though she parked her invisible plane in 1979, she’ll always be Diana Prince. See pics of L… ...
After Wonder Woman ended in 1979, Carter continued working in TV and film, though took a step back to raise her children, Jessica and James, near Washington, D.C., after leaving Los Angeles.
1975-1979: Wonder Woman finally gets her own TV show. ... it looked for a while like our best hope of seeing the character onscreen again would be television. Superhero shows were (and still are) ...
This has to be the highest-profile effort to bring Wonder Woman to television: One of TV's best-known creators, The Practice's David E. Kelley, has come on board to write and produce a new series ...
The Wonder Woman star was cast to play the first Wonder Woman in 1975. The television series only lasted for three seasons, from 1975 to 1979. Carter’s name, however, ...
Lynda Carter, who became a television icon as the star of the live-action “Wonder Woman” series from 1975 to 1979, delighted comic book fans when she popped up at the end of Patty Jenkins ...
In “Wonder Woman,” Ms. Epper was the main stuntwoman to make the leaps, wage the fights and ride the horses for star Lynda Carter in the 1975-1979 series. Deep in a Mexican rainforest, that ...
Jenkins mentioned Lynda Carter, who portrayed the superhero on the 1970s television series and appeared in "Wonder Woman 1984." Patty Jenkins said that Gal Gadot was the "greatest gift" along the ...