The adventures of two female superheroes.The adventures of two female superheroes.The adventures of two female superheroes.
- Awards
- 2 nominations
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- TriviaOriginally aired as 16 serialized installments on The Krofft Supershow (1976). They were later re-edited as 8 stand-alone episodes which went on to air sporadically on TV and blip on home video. The original "Supershow" edits are generally longer, but there are a few extended shots in the standalone versions. Only part two of "Empress of Evil" is unchanged.
- Quotes
The Sorcerer: Your attention, my kilowatt cuties!
- Crazy creditsAbout 35 seconds into the show's titles the episode's villain is briefly seen, meaning there are six different opening credit sequences.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Land of the Lost: Dream Maker (1992)
Featured review
Super-women!
Only a handful of episodes were ever made for this addition to "The Krofft Supershow", but it marks a milestone in entertainment history: the introduction of Diedre Hall in her pre-"Days of our Lives" days.
Here, she portrays Lori, a career woman who, with her assistant Judy (Judy Strangis), also fight crime in the guise of Electra Woman and Dyna Girl, with the help of their faithful butler Alfred...I mean, their friend Frank Heflin (Norman Alden).
Much like "Batman", EW and DG have an array of devices they use to fight crime and a vast selection of villains to fight against every episode. If memory serves, there was even a cave(!) they operated out of.
Though it reeked of '70s kiddie-show cheapness, the show had a bland kind of style as it tried to evoke the Caped Crusader and Boy Wonder while splicing in Women's Lib at the same time.
Too bad. Maybe if they had Aaron Spelling as a producer?
Four stars for "Electra Woman and Dyna Girl" - Diedre Hall's finest hour (in 1976, that is).
Here, she portrays Lori, a career woman who, with her assistant Judy (Judy Strangis), also fight crime in the guise of Electra Woman and Dyna Girl, with the help of their faithful butler Alfred...I mean, their friend Frank Heflin (Norman Alden).
Much like "Batman", EW and DG have an array of devices they use to fight crime and a vast selection of villains to fight against every episode. If memory serves, there was even a cave(!) they operated out of.
Though it reeked of '70s kiddie-show cheapness, the show had a bland kind of style as it tried to evoke the Caped Crusader and Boy Wonder while splicing in Women's Lib at the same time.
Too bad. Maybe if they had Aaron Spelling as a producer?
Four stars for "Electra Woman and Dyna Girl" - Diedre Hall's finest hour (in 1976, that is).
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- Mister-6
- Jul 7, 2000
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- Electra Bella y Dyna Chica
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Top Gap
By what name was Electra Woman and Dyna Girl (1976) officially released in India in English?
Answer