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Arts & Culture

INDEPENDENT LENS: Wonder Women! The Untold Story Of American Superheroines

Valerie Perez as Wonder Woman.
Courtesy of Vaquera Productions
Valerie Perez as Wonder Woman.

Airs Monday, April 15, 2013 at 11 p.m. on KPBS TV

"Wonder Women! The Untold Story Of American Superheroines" traces the fascinating evolution and legacy of Wonder Woman. From the birth of the comic book superheroine in the 1940s to the blockbusters of today, "Wonder Women!" looks at how popular representations of powerful women often reflect society’s anxieties about women’s liberation.

Lynda Carter, actress, cast as Wonder Woman in 1976.
Courtesy of Vaquera Productions
Lynda Carter, actress, cast as Wonder Woman in 1976.
Actress Lindsay Wagner was cast as Jaime Sommers in the 1970s television series "The Bionic Woman."
Courtesy of Vaquera Productions
Actress Lindsay Wagner was cast as Jaime Sommers in the 1970s television series "The Bionic Woman."
Filmmakers Kristy Guevara-Flanagan (Director) and Kelcey Edwards (Producer).
Courtesy of Vaquera Productions
Filmmakers Kristy Guevara-Flanagan (Director) and Kelcey Edwards (Producer).
Gloria Steinem, writer, lecturer, editor, and feminist activist.
Courtesy of Vaquera Productions
Gloria Steinem, writer, lecturer, editor, and feminist activist.
Wonder Woman fan and mother, Carmela Lane. She identifies so strongly with her favorite superheroine...so much so that she has not one, but two Wonder Woman tattoos!
Courtesy of Vaquera Productions
Wonder Woman fan and mother, Carmela Lane. She identifies so strongly with her favorite superheroine...so much so that she has not one, but two Wonder Woman tattoos!
Wonder Woman Day in Portland, Oregon.
Courtesy of Vaquera Productions
Wonder Woman Day in Portland, Oregon.

The film goes behind the scenes with TV stars Lynda Carter (Wonder Woman) and Lindsay Wagner (The Bionic Woman), comic writers and artists, and real-life superheroines such as Gloria Steinem, Kathleen Hanna, and others, who offer an enlightening and entertaining counterpoint to the male-dominated superhero genre.

A film by Kristy Guevara-Flanagan and Kelcey Edwards, "Wonder Women! The Untold Story Of American Superheroines" premieres on the award-winning series INDEPENDENT LENS, hosted by Stanley Tucci.

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"Wonder Women!" explores our nation’s long-term love affair with comic book superheroes and raises questions about the possibilities and contradictions of heroines within the genre.

Reflecting our culture’s deep-seated ambivalence toward powerful women — even in this so- called post-feminist era — women may be portrayed as good, or brave, or even featured as “action babes,” but rarely are they seen as heroes at the center of their own journey.

Tying the film together is the groundbreaking figure of Wonder Woman, the unlikely brainchild of a Harvard-trained pop psychologist named William Moulton Marston.

From Wonder Woman’s original, radical World War II presence, to her uninspiring 1960s incarnation as a fashion boutique owner, to her dramatic resurrection by feminist Gloria Steinem and the women of Ms. Magazine, Wonder Woman’s legacy continues today—despite the fact that she has yet to make it to the big screen.

In our era of increased plastic surgeries and emphasis on “looking good” rather than acting powerfully, many psychologists, media and social critics have long decried the fact that women are bombarded with images of physical perfection and portrayals of their gender purely in terms of sexual attractiveness.

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"Wonder Women!" counters this by reflecting on why our culture struggles with images of women triumphant beyond the domestic arena of relationships and family. Exploring how our highly visual culture places more emphasis on girls’ and women’s looks rather than on their deeds, Wonder Women urges women to claim the action genre — and media in general— as their own, if they want to change how they are represented.

Says director Guevera-Flanagan, “I loved the idea of looking at something as populist as comics to reveal our cultural obsessions, and in particular, how women’s roles have changed over time. The narratives of our most iconic superheroes, told and re-told over decades, boldly outline our shifting values. For some it’s Lara Croft, for others it’s Buffy the Vampire Slayer, but we all need those iconic heroes that tell us we have the power to slay our dragons and don’t have to wait around to be rescued.”

INDEPENDENT LENS is on Facebook, and you can follow @IndependentLens on Twitter. "Wonder Women! The Untold Story Of American Superheroines" is on Facebook, and you can follow @WonderWomenDoc on Twitter.

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Watch Coming Soon to Independent Lens: Wonder Women! on PBS. See more from Independent Lens.

"Wonder Women! The Untold Story Of American Superheroines" traces the fascinating evolution and legacy of Wonder Woman. From the birth of the comic book superheroine in the 1940s to the blockbusters of today, popular representations of powerful women often reflect society’s anxieties about women’s liberation.
Your browser does not support this object. Content can be viewed at actual source page: http://video.kpbs.org/video/2331466577

Watch Meet Carmela: A Real Life Wonder Woman on PBS. See more from Independent Lens.

In this excerpt from the INDEPENDENT LENS documentary, "Wonder Women! The Untold Story Of American Superheroines," we meet working mom, Carmela Lane, and hear why she identifies so strongly with her favorite superheroine...so much so that she has not one, but two Wonder Woman tattoos!
Your browser does not support this object. Content can be viewed at actual source page: http://video.kpbs.org/video/2364992725

Watch Gloria Steinem on Wonder Woman on PBS. See more from Independent Lens.

Iconic activist, Gloria Steinem, is featured in the upcoming INDEPENDENT LENS film, "Wonder Women! The Untold Story Of American Superheroines," which traces the evolution and legacy of Wonder Woman. In this short interview Gloria Steinem reminisces on her own childhood and remembers her favorite Superheroine, Wonder Women.