From shark-tossing to space sexism: Wonder Woman’s triumphant stint at Power Records, and why DC should revitalize the superhero audio drama.
While Lynda Carter was kicking ass as Wonder Woman on the small screen, the 1970s saw another, oft-forgot dramatization of the exploits of the indomitable Diana Prince: the weird and wonderful audio dramas produced by Power Records.
Power Records was an action-adventure-drama sub-label of Peter Pan Records, which during the 70s was the largest children’s specialty label in America. To quote the son of Power Records’ founder as well as just about every single film exec these days: “superheroes were hot and we got into some of them, and we just kept going.” And go they did, particularly since the Power Records was hilariously laissez-faire on the whole intellectual property isolationism we’re enjoying these days (human sacrifice, Marvel and DC living together! Mass hysteria!). Power Records was the perfect platform for the book-and-record set: a comic printed on sturdy paper, accompanied by a 45 rpm record that dramatized the adventure. According to preeminent Power Records historian Rob Kelly, unlike their Marvel stories, most of Power Records’ DC content was original, featuring the artistic talents of DC veteran Neal Adams and his team at Continuity Associates.
Not unlike her on-screen career, Wonder Woman didn’t receive as many solo records as Superman and Batman. But she was a big success, most likely in part due to the popularity of the then-contemporary Lynda Carter show. In all, there were three standalone Wonder Woman stories: “The Secret of the Magic Tiara,” “Amazons From Space,” and “Wonder Woman versus the War-God.” They were released together on an LP with a cover sleeve of Wonder Woman gleefully deflecting a storm of bullets with a shit-eating grin, encircled by a crowd of angry men. Yes. Please. Sign me the fuck up.
By the early 80s Power Records fell out of favor and is currently survived by a cozy little niche of comic nerds and record collectors. Before listening to Power Records’ Wonder Woman LP it hadn’t occurred to me that neither Marvel or DC have properly taken advantage of audio-based storytelling. It’s a blind spot that’s particularly heinous because there’s a precedent for it and because these days podcasts are ubiquitous, popular and accessible. We love our audio-based media: from the Dungeons and Dragons improv experiment of “The Adventure Zone,” to the old-time-radio-throwback of “The Thrilling Adventure Hour,” to big hits like “Serial,” “My Favourite Murder,” and “WTF.” And yes, the ludicrous copyright nightmare that is Power Records is a significant hurdle. But DC’s apparent total lack of interest in the historic value and artistic project of audio-dramas as a valuable storytelling medium is shocking to me.
More to the point, given that a legitimate digital re-release of their Power Records-affiliated content is unlikely, I think there’s a larger opportunity for DC here. Indulge me in my pipe dream: I think it’d be super cool if DC were to create a podcast that staged its old content as audio dramas (which I’ll remind the jury are distinct from audio books). It’d be an accessible and novel way to introduce unfamiliar audiences to older content and provide a nice tonal contrast and historical supplement. Also because of their history with Power Records, I don’t think it’d feel disingenuous or pandering. All to say: I thoroughly enjoyed Power Records’ Wonder Woman LP and I want more. Please and thank you.
So without further ado here’s a brief overview of the LP…
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