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The Six Million Dollar Man & The Bionic Woman

I wish I had the 6MDM doll too, but couldn't find any in good condition at the time. None of these still have the skins on their forearms as these have deteriorated.

I used to have that, with the roll-back skin on the forearm, the 'bionic' eye that you could see through, and the 'iron' girder accessory. Used to make him fight my Action Man - Steve always won :yay:
 
If you notice in the first two-parter Bionic Woman episode in 6MDM, and in roughly the first 5 or 6 episodes of her regular TV series, Lindsay Wagner doesn't have the scar above her lip.

She only got it by about episode 7 in a car accident. I think she was either drink driving or she fell asleep at the wheel and crashed into a tree.
 
I would cast someone like Blake Lively or Rachel McAdams as Jaime Sommers if I were in charge.
 
I would cast someone like Blake Lively or Rachel McAdams as Jaime Sommers if I were in charge.
Rachel only does certain tv. it's like a rarity otherwise I'd almost say she doesn't do it at all . it really has to catch her eye I guess in if this is meaty enough or will push her career to new hights. and she sorta in high placeas it is.


Blake formerly started out a tv star before going into movie it's possible. Unless she doesn't want to go back and just do movies for longer.
 
Not talking about TV but in a big screen version, especially if the character featured in the 6MDM movie, even if she's not bionic yet.
 
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That's the one I had.

I bought a Bionic Woman doll a few years ago. ...

It was the doll with the blue jumpsuit. I just wish she actually wore something like that in the TV series, because she never did.

Although more blue than black seems similar to what she wore in the Bigfoot episodes.
I think maybe that's what they were referencing.
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If you have Bigfoot they go well together.
And if you get this Bionic Adventure outfit for Steve,
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you can pretty well recreate the whole episode! :oldrazz:

I also got a German Shepherd to stand in for Maximillion that was in the same scale as her.
Was it Kenner's Duke The Super Action DOG figure?

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....
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He's a great stand in for Max!
 
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No it was some dog that came with an action man figure. Will have to take a pic at some point.

I remember the Big Foot episode and the jump suit she wore in it which was about the closest they ever got to the doll. But I always wished they had her in a blue version in the series.
 
Btw watching that Big Foot clip, it reminded me of how similar the style is to the incredible hulk tv series, because both were by Kenneth Johnson. That could easily have been a Hulk episode. But I preferred the bionic woman because it was more light hearted and hopeful and less depressing.
 
Melissa Benoist is another actress who would be good for Jaime Sommers. She has the right kind of personality and a close enough look. She might not want to do something like this after Supergirl though.
 
I would cast someone like Blake Lively .... as Jaime Sommers if I were in charge.

I can see that, she'd be great.
Just don't let Ryan Reynolds play Steve Austin. Let him play Maskatron! :woot:
 
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Richard Anderson, Actor on 'The Six Million Dollar Man,' Dies at 91

3:35 PM PDT 8/31/2017 by Mike Barnes

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richard_anderson_six_million_dollar_man_still.jpg
Courtesy of Photofest
Richard Anderson (center) with his bionic friends Lee Majors and Lindsay Wagner

He played Oscar Goldman on 'The Bionic Woman' spinoff as well after working in such films as 'Paths of Glory,' 'Seven Days in May' and 'Seconds.'

Richard Anderson, who portrayed Oscar Goldman, the head of a secret scientific government organization, on the 1970s series The Six Million Dollar Man and its spinoff, The Bionic Woman, died Thursday. He was 91.
Anderson, who was mentored by nice guy Cary Grant and received a huge career boost when he was cast in Stanley Kubrick’s anti-war classic Paths of Glory (1957), died at his home in Beverly Hills, publicist Jonathan Taylor announced.


A frequent authority figure onscreen, Anderson also portrayed a colonel in another notable war film, the Rod Serling-scripted Seven Days in May (1964), and he operated on Rock Hudson, the second time much to Hudson’s dismay, in another John Frankenheimer film, the sci-fi thriller Seconds (1966).


As an MGM contract player who started out in the mailroom, Anderson appeared early in his career in such films for the studio as The Magnificent Yankee (1950), Scaramouche (1952), Escape From Fort Bravo (1953) and Forbidden Planet (1956).


He then moved to Fox and played Joanne Woodward’s mama’s-boy boyfriend in The Long, Hot Summer (1958).


In the highly rated, two-part episode that brought a thrilling end to the 1960s ABC series The Fugitive, Anderson portrayed the brother-in-law of Richard Kimble (David Janssen). He also was Police Lt. Steve Drumm on the final season of CBS’ Perry Mason and Santa Luisa Police Chief George Untermeyer on ABC’s Dan August, starring Burt Reynolds.


After three popular Six Million Dollar Man telefilms in 1973, the Universal TV property was given steady life as an ABC series in January 1974. On the show, Anderson played the chief of the fictional Office of Scientific Intelligence and the boss of Steve Austin (Lee Majors), a NASA astronaut who is injured in a crash and “rebuilt” (at a cost of about $29 million in today’s dollars), becoming a secret agent.


Anderson also is heard in the show’s action-packed introduction: “Gentlemen, we can rebuild him, we have the technology. We have the capability to make the world’s first bionic man.”


The series then spawned The Bionic Woman — starring Lindsay Wagner as Jaime Sommers, a tennis player who’s infused with machinery and brought back to life after a parachuting accident, and Anderson played Goldman on that show (which went from ABC to NBC) as well.


He was the first actor to portray the same character on two TV series running concurrently on two networks.


Both shows ended in 1978, but Universal, prodded by Anderson, made three more bionic telefilms through 1994. As an executive producer, he was instrumental in the casting of Sandra Bullock as a supercharged woman in 1989’s Bionic Showdown.


Years later, Andy Stitzer (Steve Carell) had an action figure of Oscar Goldman in The 40-Year-Old Virgin.


In a statement, Majors said that he first met Anderson in 1966 when he guest-starred on one of Majors' earlier shows, The Big Valley.


"Richard became a dear and loyal friend, and I have never met a man like him," he recalled. "I called him 'Old Money.' His always stylish attire, his class, calmness and knowledge never faltered in his 91 years. He loved his daughters, tennis and his work as an actor. He was still the sweet, charming man when I spoke to him a few weeks ago."


Added Wagner: "I can't begin to say how much I have always admired and have been grateful for the elegance and loving friendship I was blessed to have with Richard Anderson."


His first wife was Carol Lee Ladd, the step-daughter of actor Alan Ladd; his second was Katharine Thalberg, the daughter of Oscar-winning actress Norma Shearer and famed MGM producer Irving Thalberg. Both marriages ended in divorce.


Born on Aug. 8, 1926, in Long Branch, N.J., Anderson and his family moved to Los Angeles when he was 10. After graduating from University High School and serving a 17-month stint in the Army during World War II, he studied at the Actors Laboratory in L.A.


Anderson was working on an NBC show called Lights, Camera, Action in 1949 when, out of the blue, he received a phone call from Grant. “My wife [Betsy Drake] and I saw you on television. We think you’re pretty good, particularly in comedy. Why don’t you come to the studio for lunch?” he said of the invitation in the 1991 book, Evenings With Cary Grant.


“I met him on the set of Crisis. I’ll never forget it. He said, ‘I’d like to help you. You’re a very good actor.’”


That led to a screen test and a contract at MGM, where Anderson stayed for six years and made nearly 30 films. He then appeared on a loan-out to United Artists for Paths of Glory, playing Major Saint-Auban, the heartless prosecuting attorney who wants three soldiers court-martialed for cowardice, in the acclaimed World War I drama.


“That film changed my whole career,” he said.


Anderson later portrayed a district attorney on the 1961-62 ABC adaptation of Bus Stop, a brigadier general on Twelve O’Clock High, another government guy opposite Jennifer O’Neill on Cover Up, Sen. Buckley Fallmont on Dynasty and the narrator on Kung Fu: The Legend Continues.


The career-long supporting player was once a leading man — portraying a doctor in Curse of the Faceless Man, a forgettable 1958 film that took six whole days to make.


“It was a low-budget remake of The Mummy two decades earlier, featuring a stone monster rather than one wrapped in bandages,” Anderson recalled in a 2015 interview. “We spent a week filming in a big old house on the way up to Malibu — the house is still there. I really just learned my lines and tried not to bump into the furniture. The only movie poster I have hanging in my home is from that film.”


A collector of vintage cars — he had a 1936 Ford Phaeton and a 1957 Bentley Continental Flying Spur — Anderson also was dedicated to philanthropic causes like the Veterans Park Conservancy, an organization that honors military veterans by preserving, protecting and enhancing the West Los Angeles VA property, and the California Indian Manpower Consortium, which provides employment, training and other services to Native Americans across California, Illinois and Iowa.


Survivors include his daughters Ashley, Brooke and Deva, a music supervisor for film and TV at Playtone in Los Angeles.


"Our dad was always there for us and showed us by loving example how to live a full and rich life with gratitude, grace, humor and fun," Ashley said.
 
http://www.superherohype.com/news/4...ase-dates-for-six-billion-dollar-man-and-more

Warner Bros. sets release dates for The Six Billion Dollar Man, The Sun is Also a Star and More

Warner Bros. has set release dates for The Six Billion Dollar Man, The Sun is Also a Star and more. The Six Billion Dollar Man will hit theaters on May 31, 2019. That puts the film a week after John Wick: Chapter 3 so far, but the film currently has no competition on that date.

The Six Billion Dollar Man starring Mark Wahlberg is based on the classic television series The Six Million Dollar Man and the novel Cyborg by Martin Caidin. The story follows military officer, Steve Austin, who becomes part of a top secret government program after a horrific accident leaves him near death. With the help of cutting edge technology, Steve is brought back to life with extraordinary abilities, making him the world’s first truly bionic man.

That's next year. I hope we get some progress on this. It feels like this has been in development hell for years.

Is it going to be a comedy or straight action drama? I hope they don't go too comedic, and certainly not a spoof like Baywatch or CHiPs.

Isn't Wahlberg getting a bit old? I'd rather they got someone a bit younger now.

Something tells me we'll be here this time next year and the film won't even have progressed at all. I hope I'm wrong.
 
If the film keeps the idea of Austin as a pilot and astronaut then Wahlberg is fine.
 
Did anyone have the Six Million Dollar Man or Bionic Woman dolls... I mean action figures when they were young? They were pretty cool although the skins weren't that durable.

Yes, I had (and still have) him as well as the Maskatron, Oscar, Operating Table, Radio Backpack, and a couple of the various outfits you could buy.
Mine still has the original skin on it and it's not doing to badly after all these years. I also have the slightly rubbish costume you could wear, which consisted of a flimsy plastic mask (like the cheap Halloween half-masks with elastic band you can buy) and a rather flimsy red tracksuit. The mask looked like an increased in size version of the doll's face.
 
---Better a delayed drama than that low-comedy Jim Carrey treatment that almost happened.

Well we don't know if it's still going to be a comedy with Mark Wahlberg.
 

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