So William Dozer commissioned a pilot script from Stan Hart and Larry Siegel, who were both writers for The Carol Burnett Show, and to say it was terrible would be an insult to terrible things. Though to be fair only a five minute portion of the pilot was filmed so maybe the rest of it was utter brilliance, but having watched the agonizingly unfunny five minutes available I’m going to go out on a limb and say it probably stunk all the way through. As it is such a small screen test we can only get the barest idea of what the intended premise for show was all, but from what we see it’s very much in the style of 60s sketch comedy. Diana Prince (Ellie Wood Walker) lives with her mother (Maudie Prickett) who seems overly concerned that her daughter is married yet, and Diana worrying about her potential love interest Steve Trevor. I’m more concerned with the fact that while trying to read a newspaper she falls off the couch.
This isn’t Clark Kent clumsiness as a disguise, she’s just a klutz.
When Diana realizes that with the storm outside Steve Trevor’s plane will be grounded, and for some reason this means she must rush off to rescue him, from what I have no idea. Maybe Steve just really hates waiting at airport terminals. Her mother is against Diana rushing off as the bad weather is nothing to fly through in her skimpy costume and she should stay home read, watch TV and eat her roughage. Diana responds, “But the fate of the Free World depends on me.” I’m not sure how Steve being stranded at an airport puts the Free World in peril but sure I’ll go along with that. Her mom implores her to, “Eat first save the Free World later.”“You can’t be a decent martyr on an empty stomach.”
Diana claims that, “The nation needs me.” Her mother on the other hand thinks the world doesn’t seem to care what Wonder Woman needs, such as a man, “How do you expect to get a husband flying around all the time?” is her mother’s weary response, followed by, “You don’t know how it feels to be the mother of an unmarried daughter your age? Why the whole neighbourhood is talking.” So this show was certainly not breaking any new ground with progressive humor, but what’s even more bizarre is that it’s revealed that Diana/Wonder Woman is not only "shocklingly" single but she’s also 28 million years old. I’m not sure what kind of mythology this show was basing their version of Wonder Woman on but it clearly wasn’t based on Ancient Greece and their pantheon of gods as the comic book was. It would have been pretty boring to be a god back then when mankind was still millions of years away from existing.“There’s a job to be done, by Wonder Woman.”
After brushing off her mother’s concerns for her social life Diana opens the secret panel where she keeps her Wonder Woman costume, no spinning starburst that we’d get in the later Linda Carter series, and then William Dozier provides us with some very bizarre voice over narration (Note: He also provided the narration for the Adam West Batman series) that fills the audience in on just who this Wonder Woman is.
“Wonder Woman, who knows she has the strength of Hercules.”
“Who knows she has the wisdom of Athena.”
“Who knows she has the speed of Mercury.”
“And who thinks she has the beauty of Aphrodite.”
“Who knows she has the wisdom of Athena.”
“Who knows she has the speed of Mercury.”
“And who thinks she has the beauty of Aphrodite.”
This is the quintessential difference between Dozier’s Batman and Dozier’s Wonder Woman; Adam West played his version of Batman straight, the world around him was the thing that was off kilter, but this Wonder Woman is clearly the butt of the joke. She is henpecked by her mother for being single and even the narrator is taking shots at how she looks. Even stranger is that when she poses in front of the mirror her reflection is a totally different Wonder Woman, being played by Linda Harrison, whose figure is better and is wearing a costume that fits snugger. I’m not sure what kind of agenda Dozier was trying to pull her but I think it starts with Sex and ends with ist.
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