Do I seem bitter? Good, because I am.
Moving on.
I wrote at length about badass female heroines three weeks ago. There were more on my list, but the post was getting kinda long so I stopped. Picking up now where I Ieft off.
A gal pal and I went out for dinner and a movie while our husbands were out of town on business. Fortunately, we had an early dinner because we wouldn’t have been able to eat a thing if we saw the movie first. The movie we chose without remembering that we would each be sleeping alone that night was Alien. It is to our credit that my friend and I didn’t empty our stomachs of the dinner we ate earlier.
While Alien scared the bejeebers out of me and certain scenes made me want to puke, I loved that Ellen Ripley (Sigourney Weaver’s character) was tough, a survivor. She was smart, strong, gutsy, heroic and more resourceful than the men in the crew who were killed one by one. Even in moments when she was one on one with the alien and terrified, she kept her wits about her and kicked its ass, figuratively, by blowing it out the hatch into space.
Not that anyone’s interested, but I did go to bed with every light in the house turned on that night, and I didn’t get any sleep until the sun came up.
Linda Hamilton’s second turn as Sarah Conner in Terminator 2 had her kicking butt and taking names. In the original Terminator film, she was on the run, protected by a man from the future who saved her from being killed by a terminator from the future. In T2, she had toughened up. She became a badass who had learned how to use weaponry and how to fight to protect herself and her son. She didn’t hang around waiting to be rescued. She took an active part in destroying the second terminator sent to kill her.
The least serene character in the movie Serenity was River Tam, played by Summer Glau. River was a brilliant child prodigy tortured and brainwashed by a totalitarian government of the future. She escaped with the help of her brother but healing was slow. She is a slip of a girl. Her appearance is deceptive. Her fighting prowess is unexpected, She doesn’t just kick butt. She becomes a killing machine, the ultimate badass, and she is the Serenity crew’s savior in battle.
My favorite female butt kicker in a TV series was NCIS’s badass Ziva David, as played by Cote de Pablo. Ziva was fearless, a one-woman wrecking squad. She outfought and outshot the guys on her team. She even shot her own half brother when he went rogue and tried to kill Gibbs (Mark Harmon, the Silver Fox). Ziva had an aura of danger about her. She was not to be messed with, but she could be fun too. Part of her charm was her imperfect command of English. She was always messing up colloquial expressions to comic effect. I was bummed when Cote de Pablo left the show. Even more so when the producers killed her character offscreen a few years after she left. The show hasn’t been the same without her.
Last but not least, I’m going to give a nod to Charlie’s Angels. They weren’t badasses, but when they came on the scene on TV in the seventies, female private investigators were still a novelty. The angels were women doing a dangerous job usually reserved for big, strong, tough male PIs. The angels did the job in high heels and gorgeous fashions. What’s not to like about that? 
AS LOVELY AS APHRODITE—AS WISE AS ATHENA—WITH THE SPEED OF MERCURY AND THE STRENGTH OF HERCULES—SHE IS KNOWN ONLY AS WONDER WOMAN, BUT WHO SHE IS OR WHENCE SHE CAME, NOBODY KNOWS!
As did Superman, Batman, and other male superheroes, Wonder Woman had a secret identity: mild mannered Diana Prince. Like Superman, she hid her true identity behind a pair of glasses and no one recognized her. As a kid, I always wondered about that because I had no trouble recognizing her—or Superman.
It was a real kick when Wonder Woman became a television series–Lynda Carter was perfection in the title role. She looked and acted the part so well it was as if Wonder Woman had come to life. I never missed an episode.
I already had a book titled Wonder Woman, which is a collection of the best Wonder Woman comics from the 1940s, the golden age of comics. My friend sent me a copy of The Secret History of Wonder Woman by Jill Lepore. The volume contains little known and fascinating information about Wonder Woman’s creator Charles Moulton, who was both a feminist and an eccentric who believed women should rule the world. What a lovely idea!
Wonder Woman was the first of several feisty female heroines who captured my imagination as a girl and later on as a grown woman. As a kid, I remember watching a black and white 1955 TV series titled Sheena, Queen of the Jungle. A tall, long-haired blonde in animal skins named Irish McCalla played Sheena. She had a chimp for a sidekick, and she held her own against the bad guys and even rescued the good guys.
1965 brought The Avengers and Diana Rigg as Emma Peel over from the UK to ABC-TV. In a role reversal, Emma Peel was the muscle and partner John Steed was the perfect gentleman. It was a hoot to see Emma in her black leather cat suit using martial arts to wipe up the floor with the bad guys while the impeccably dressed Steed used his ever-present umbrella as a sword. The dialogue between the two was witty and the plots leaned toward spy-fi. It was fun to watch and refreshing to see a strong woman kicking butt.
When it came to kicking butt, Lucy Lawless as Xena, Warrior Princess was as tough as they come. She didn’t need a man to fight her battles for her. She handled a sword as if she were born with one in her hand. She outfought and outrode the men around her and showed the evil ones no mercy. She even gave Hercules and Ares a run for their money.
At a science fiction convention I was involved with in October of 1981, one of our guests was Kay Aldridge, Queen of the Serials. Aldridge is best known for her role as Nyoka the Jungle Girl in the fifteen-episode 1942 Republic Serial The Perils of Nyoka aka Nyoka and the Tigermen. Aldrich’s character Nyoka endures and survives many perils. She aids an expedition in search of the Tablets of Hippocrates. Lots of action takes place along their way. Nyoka is also in search of her father, a scientist who went missing on a prior expedition.
Nyoka is the main character and the focus of the serial is on her. It was a pioneering role in that respect. In that era, it was unusual for the main character to be a strong, self-reliant woman instead of a damsel in distress for the hero to rescue. What is also interesting about this serial is that females are the protagonist and the antagonist. Instead of a hero and a villain, we have a heroine and a villainess. An evil princess, Vultura, vies with Nyoka for the tablets and a hidden treasure. Vultura and her minions attempt to prevent Nyoka and the expedition from discovering the location of the tablets and treasure.
While Aldridge didn’t do all her own stunts, she did a few action sequences that resulted in several bruises and a burn on her leg from dry ice used to create an effect in episode three. She remembers being extremely frightened when the chapter six cliffhanger had her hanging over a fiery pit.
We discussed with Aldridge how she wanted to be introduced for her scheduled guest talk at the convention. She was such fun and such a good sport that she suggested she would wear her Nyoka costume [It still fit her!] and we could have one of our group wear a gorilla suit and chase her from the rear of the auditorium up to the stage. Brilliant! The audience loved it. After her talk about her modeling career and the films and serials she starred in, she posed with audience members for dozens of photos. She was a huge hit with the crowd.
I began writing this post prior to the sad, untimely death of Carrie Fisher, portrayer of the take charge, smart, strong, feisty, kick butt, iconic movie heroine of Star Wars IV, V, VI, and VI, Princess Leia Organa. Being a princess, she could have remained safe behind palace walls. Instead she became a fearless leader of the rebellion. I loved the way Leia took charge on the Death Star when Luke and Han had no plan for how all of them would escape once they released Leia from her cell. She barked, “This is some rescue,” at her hapless would-be heroes. She ended up leading the rescue mission herself, grabbing a blaster, firing at the Empire’s storm troopers, and saying, “Somebody has to save our skins.” And she did.
Carrie Fisher’s death on Tuesday, December 27, 2016, was tragic. It marked the loss of a bright, witty, multi-talented, strong, courageous woman, and selfless mental health advocate. At age 60, Carrie Fisher left us much too soon, but her legacy of inspiring young girls and women to be the heroes of their own stories will live on beyond the life of the Star Wars franchise. May she be with the force and may the force be with us all.
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