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Electra Woman and Dyna Girl

  • TV Series
  • 1976
  • 24m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
617
YOUR RATING
Deidre Hall and Judy Strangis in The Krofft Supershow (1976)
Sci-Fi

The adventures of two female superheroes.The adventures of two female superheroes.The adventures of two female superheroes.

  • Creators
    • Joe Ruby
    • Ken Spears
  • Stars
    • Deidre Hall
    • Judy Strangis
    • Norman Alden
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    617
    YOUR RATING
    • Creators
      • Joe Ruby
      • Ken Spears
    • Stars
      • Deidre Hall
      • Judy Strangis
      • Norman Alden
    • 17User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Episodes16

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season1976

    Photos129

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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Deidre Hall
    Deidre Hall
    • Electra Woman…
    • 1976
    Judy Strangis
    Judy Strangis
    • Dyna Girl…
    • 1976
    Norman Alden
    Norman Alden
    • Frank Heflin
    • 1976
    Marvin Miller
    Marvin Miller
    • Narrator
    • 1976
    Michael Constantine
    Michael Constantine
    • The Sorcerer
    • 1976
    Peter Mark Richman
    Peter Mark Richman
    • The Pharaoh
    • 1976
    Jane Elliot
    Jane Elliot
    • Princess Cleopatra
    • 1976
    Susan Lanier
    Susan Lanier
    • Miss Dazzle
    • 1976
    Claudette Nevins
    Claudette Nevins
    • Empress of Evil
    • 1976
    Malachi Throne
    Malachi Throne
    • Ali Baba
    • 1976
    Tiffany Bolling
    Tiffany Bolling
    • Spider Lady
    • 1976
    John Mark Robinson
    John Mark Robinson
    • Glitter Rock
    • 1976
    Sid Haig
    Sid Haig
    • The Genie
    • 1976
    Bruce M. Fischer
    Bruce M. Fischer
    • Spinner
    • 1976
    Jacquelyn Hyde
    Jacquelyn Hyde
    • Lucrecia
    • 1976
    Jeff David
    Jeff David
    • Side Man
    • 1976
    Michael Blodgett
    Michael Blodgett
    • King Alex X of Tourembourg
    • 1976
    Robert Sutton
    Robert Sutton
    • Leggs
    • 1976
    • Creators
      • Joe Ruby
      • Ken Spears
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    6.6617
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    Featured reviews

    Mister-6

    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).
    Sargebri

    The Distaff Batman and Robin

    This show will always be to me a female version of "Batman". The only difference was that the two leads were not a rich millionaire and his teenage ward, they were a pair of reporters and their version of Alfred was the scientist who invented the special bracelets they wore. I'm just surprised that Howie Horwitz, the producer of "Batman" didn't sue over this show because of its similarities to it, especially Dyna Girl's use of phrases like "ELECTRA WOW" which could have easily been a version of Robin's "HOLY'S". Also, it is very ironic that Judy Strangis was cast in this show. Her father, Sam Strangis, was one of several directors used for the Batman series. In fact, Judy once had a cameo appearance in one episode. This was definitely one of the Krofft brothers wildest creations.
    7jeremycrimsonfox

    Electa-Wow

    I am a fan of this series, mainly because I am a sucker for superhero shows. Electra Woman and Dyna Girl is one of the many shows made by Sid and Marty Krofft, created for the Krofft Supershow. Only eight episodes were made, which were split into 16 for the Supershow, where each episode had two parts.

    In this show, Lori and Judy are two reporters for Newsmaker Magazine, but when crime strikes, and they get a call from Frank, a scientist who serves as inventor and the Alfred of the series, Lori and Judy use their ElectraComs to Electra-Change into Electra Woman and Dyna Girl, spandex-clad heroines, who then use their ElectraComms and smarts to thwart the villain of the day.

    So, basically, this is what we call a late attempt at making money off the success of the Batman show from the 1960's. Due to it being made for Saturday Morning (instead of primetime like the Batman), there are no fisticuffs to be seen or more serious plots. Like the other works of Sid and Marty, this is a cartoony take on the superhero genre, and that is where it can be bad to some, as it sometimes makes the show even more campier than Batman. The first episode does not show the origin story of the two heroines, which is also a downside, as we do not know how Lori and Judy got to become Electra Woman and Dyna Girl and what The Sorcerer. The first episode's villain, did to cross paths with them to want revenge. Other than that, it is a good show. Not perfect, but good.
    zmaturin

    Electra-wow!

    Of all the various Sid & Marty Krofft endeavors, "Electra-Woman and Dyna Girl" is the one that sticks out in my mind as the grooviest. By total coincidence, it's also the only one to feature foxy babes in tight costumes, unless you count that one Bugaloo. The titular heroes are two gals who fight all evil deeds. They work for a magazine, hiding the life they lead. They don't have any super powers, save for the various Electra-gadgets designed by their lumpy live-in scientist Frank. Electra-Woman and Dyna Girl live together with Frank, who never leaves their basement. Their adventures don't make any sense. They're like fever dreams, with no logic to guide them. Each episode will have Frank introducing some new invention, and then a silly-beyond-words villain (like Glitter Rock, an incredibly annoying wannabe rock-star with a green afro and hypnotic music) shows up and the only thing that can stop them is? Frank's new invention. The bad guys always hide in abandoned theaters. Dyna Girl constantly uses "Electra" as a prefix, like "Electra-wow!" or "Electra-sneaky!", which makes me wonder why she isn't called Electragirl, or at least say "Dyna-wow!" Everybody acts like they're on drugs.

    But for all it's pitfalls, it's great TV. I figured out why Sid & Marty Krofft are far superior to other live-action kids programming giants like Saban: They loved what they were doing, they weren't in if for the money. They might have had crappy effects, but they loved their crappy effects! They were proud of those shots of the Electra-Car taking off- so proud that they used it in every episode! They probably thought that optic flash when the gals changed into their costumes was the coolest effect ever. It didn't matter that their stories made no sense and they used the same sets over and over. They loved this sub-Batman camp. They loved Electra-Woman, Dyna Girl, and Frank. They even loved Glitter Rock.

    In fact, now that I think about it, my respect for the Krofft Empire spans their whole body of work, except for maybe "Pryor's Place". I love the nutty drug-filled antics of H.R. Puffnstuff. I love Hoo-Doo, and Sigmund, and Dr. Shrinker, and I like Magic Mongo and the Far Out Space Nuts as friends. So the next time one of your high-minded contemporaries scoffs at the oeuvre of S&MK, you can tell them that they're scoffing at love, baby, and they can scoff all they want but they'll scoff alone! Those philistines! They'll never know the touch of a felt hand puppet, the passion of an over-the-hill child star, or the fragrant odor of sweaty, under-paid dwarf in a dumb looking sea monster costume. They'll never know about back when TV was good and every show summed up it's premise in the theme song lyrics. I weep for them.

    Or not. Whatever. Never mind.
    DearJohnny

    Deranged 70's Cheese Fun

    One of three segments presented on the 70's Saturday morning kidvid THE KROFT SUPERSHOW; The others were 'Wonderbug,' a Herbie The Love Bug knockoff, and 'Doctor Shrinker,' about a mad scientist who shrinks three teens. All three, if I remember right, were dumped in favor of new short features when the SUPERSHOW came back for a second season, though 'Wonderbug' might have stayed around. Only eight episodes of 'Electra-Woman And Dyna-Girl' were produced, but they're vividly, and sometimes even fondly, remembered by Generation Xers. A weird, low-budget pastiche of the campy 1960's BATMAN with a bit of Lynda Carter WONDER WOMAN thrown in, the show starred Deidre Hall and Judy Strangis as 'Lori' and 'Judy,' two magazine writers who, when trouble strikes, usually in the form of a flamboyantly costumed, wildly overplayed super-villain, become super-heroines Electra-Woman and Dyna-Girl. They battled evil using their 'Electra-comps,' clunky-looking devices worn on their wrists that allowed them to fire various types of low-budget rays and kept them in communication with Frank, the crusty scientific genius who invented the Comps and manned the 'Electra-base' in Lori and Judy's basement.

    What makes the show interesting and fun, if not exactly good, is the bizarre sense of conviction most of the actors bring to their roles. They all overact wildly, especially Judy Strangis, but seem perfectly attuned to the claustrophobic confines of the bizarre little world they inhabit. Despite looking like it was made in someone's basement, the show did its best to ape the fantastic comic books it copied, sending its heroines through time, into alternate dimensions, etc. Admittedly, it did it all with apparently two sets, a maximum of six actors, and a budget of twenty dollars, but it could be seen as trying to bring back the spirit of the old CAPTAIN VIDEO-type shows. Or not.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The series was originally aired as 16 serialized installments on The Krofft Supershow (1976). They were later re-edited as eight standalone 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 Empress of Evil: Part 2 (1976) is unchanged.
    • Quotes

      The Sorcerer: Your attention, my kilowatt cuties!

    • Crazy credits
      About 35 seconds into the show's titles the episode's villain is briefly seen, meaning there are six different opening credit sequences.
    • Connections
      Featured in Land of the Lost: Dream Maker (1992)

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    FAQ18

    • How many seasons does Electra Woman and Dyna Girl have?Powered by Alexa
    • Who are Electra Woman and Dyna Girl?
    • What is the name of Electra Woman and Dyna Girl's base?
    • Are Lori and Judy related?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 11, 1976 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official Site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Electra Bella y Dyna Chica
    • Filming locations
      • The Lot - 1041 N. Formosa Avenue, West Hollywood, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Sid & Marty Krofft Television Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      24 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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