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Adrianne Palicki Lassoes "Wonder Woman"
Sneak Peek actress Adrianne Palicki ("Friday Night Lights") as "Wonder Woman", star of the new NBC TV pilot reboot of the DC Comics character, produced by David E. Kelley ("Boston Legal") .
Kelley's TV pilot incorporates the iconic comic book character's signature 'magic lasso' and 'invisible plane', in what is being described as a "...serious, non-campy take on the DC Comics character...".
The best known adaptation of the Wonder Woman character was the three-season live-action series in the 1970's, starring actress Lynda Carter as the 'Amazon Princess' and her alter ego, 'Diana Prince'.

DC Comics co-publisher, illustrator Jim Lee re-designed WW's costume for 'the modern era' in collaboration with writer J. Michael Straczynski and artists Don Kramer/Michael Babinski.
"Wonder Woman" # 600 "...begins a run that is both forward-looking and true to the legendary character, planting her firmly in the modern era..."
'Wonder Woman' was created by pyschologist William Moulton Marston, ('Charles Moulton') who saw the “great educational potential of comic books”, and was subsequently hired as an ‘educational consultant’ for National Periodicals/All-Winner Comics (forerunners of DC Comics) in 1941, before creating a female comic book superhero, in a field dominated by male characters.
Marston was inspired by his lover Olive Byrne, who lived with him and his wife in a ‘polygamous, polyamorous’ relationship.
Having 2 children with both women, Marston said that both women served as exemplars for his character, subsequently illustrated by artist 'Harry Peter'.
"Wonder Woman is psychological propaganda for the new type of woman who should, I believe, rule the world," Marston wrote at the time, defending his character’s look and sado-masochism, with usually every story highlighting women tied up by a ‘magic lasso’ (of truth), chains, ropes, etc, in order to 'force obedience'.
"Not even girls want to be girls so long as our feminine archetype lacks force, strength, and power", said Marston. "Wonder Woman satisfies the subconscious, elaborately disguised desire of males to be mastered by a woman who loves them"