Lois and Clark the New Adventures of Superman in What Order to Watch

American tv set series 1993-1997

Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman
Loisnclark.jpg
Also known equally
  • The New Adventures of Superman
Genre
  • Superhero
  • Drama
  • Romance
Based on

Superman
past

  • Jerry Siegel
  • Joe Shuster
Developed by Deborah Joy LeVine
Starring
  • Dean Cain
  • Teri Hatcher
  • Lane Smith
  • Eddie Jones
  • K Callan
  • Michael Landes
  • Justin Whalin
  • Tracy Scoggins
  • John Shea
Theme music composer Jay Gruska
Land of origin United States
Original linguistic communication English
No. of seasons 4
No. of episodes 88 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
  • Deborah Joy LeVine
  • Robert Singer
  • Eugenie Ross Leming
  • Brad Buckner
  • David Jacobs
  • Robert Butler
Running time 45 minutes
Production companies
  • December 3rd Productions
  • Gangbuster Films Inc.
  • Roundelay Productions
  • Warner Bros. Television
Distributor Warner Bros. Television
Release
Original network ABC
Original release September 12, 1993 (1993-09-12) –
June xiv, 1997 (1997-06-14)

Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman is an American superhero television serial based on the DC Comics character Superman created by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster. Information technology stars Dean Cain every bit Clark Kent / Superman and Teri Hatcher as Lois Lane. The series aired on ABC from September 12, 1993, to June 14, 1997.[ane]

Developed for television by Deborah Joy LeVine,[ii] the series loosely followed the modern origin of Superman, established by writer John Byrne, in which Clark Kent is the true personality and Superman a disguise. The series focuses on the human relationship and romance between Lois and Clark as much as the adventures of Clark'southward modify-ego, Superman.[3]

Overview [edit]

On May 17, 1966, Jonathan and Martha Kent (Eddie Jones and One thousand. Callan) witness the crash-landing of a small spaceship in Shuster'south Field outside of Smallville, Kansas. When they investigate, they detect the baby Kal-El and make up one's mind to raise him as their ain, naming him Clark Jerome Kent (Dean Cain). Throughout the series, Clark proudly states his mother fabricated his Superman costume for him. Clark oftentimes consults his parents either by phone or in person, later impromptu Superman flights to Smallville, about personal and moral concerns and dilemmas.

The serial opens 20-seven years afterwards, on the mean solar day Clark moves to Urban center after leaving his position every bit a newspaper editor of Smallville Press and interviews for a job at the Daily Planet under editor Perry White (Lane Smith). Clark becomes acquainted with lensman Jimmy Olsen (Michael Landes in season 1, Justin Whalin thereafter) and gossip columnist Cat Grant (Tracy Scoggins). Before long after being hired, Clark is partnered with star reporter Lois Lane (Teri Hatcher). Clark falls in dearest with Lois at outset sight. When Superman saves Lois from a space shuttle disaster, she instantly becomes infatuated with Clark's change-ego, and names him Superman.

Superman'southward kickoff mission interferes with the illegal dealings of Lex Luthor (John Shea), a Metropolis business behemothic and benefactor. Subsequently Luthor's plot was stopped, Superman lets Luthor know he is watching him and the two get arch-enemies. However, Clark respects Luthor'south life, even surreptitiously using his superpowers to save Lex from bleeding to decease. Luthor sees Superman equally a worthy opponent; he ultimately discovers his weakness to kryptonite and realizes he has a secret identity, vowing to acquire information technology in hopes of making the hero's life difficult.

Production [edit]

DC Comics president Jenette Kahn had been working for several years to sell the concept of a Superman tv serial. The series would exist unlike. In 1991 Leslie Moonves and Deborah Joy LeVine helped sell the series to ABC television network with a new title, Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman.[4]

The series mirrored John Byrne's reboot of Superman, making Clark Kent more assertive and less clumsy. A few episodes directly emphasized that Clark was the unequivocal dominant personality, not Superman. Following this theme, an innovation unique to the serial was the depiction of Clark Kent and Superman'south traditional hairstyles being reversed—in this serial, it is Superman whose hair is slicked dorsum and Clark whose fringe falls more naturally. An additional chemical element that reflected the postal service-Byrne comics was the portrayal of Lex Luthor (at least initially) equally a corrupt corporate tycoon rather than the traditional mad scientist.

Many of the stories in flavor one involved normal human criminals using advanced and powerful technology or involved in large and dangerous conspiracies—nearly, if non all, of the Lex Luthor stories of flavor one. After season one, serial creator Deborah Joy LeVine left the prove equally a producer, and a new product team took over the series. Episode plots gradually shifted from those in which Lois, Clark, and Superman only became involved with criminal elements or dangerous situations through their own initiative to more than fantastic plots. The show often centered on comic-fashion villains who specifically targeted Lois, Superman, or Clark from the beginning, rather than endangering the protagonists reactively when they became threats to other criminal plans. Later plots oftentimes revolved around villains with special superhuman powers and abilities.

A 5th season of the series was initially announced by ABC. When the network unexpectedly canceled plans for season v, the producers and writers of the testify were unprepared. The series ended on a cliffhanger in which Clark and Lois discover an infant in their home with a note proverb the child belongs to them. This mystery was never solved on the series.

Serial history [edit]

Season ane [edit]

Teri Hatcher and Dean Cain received critical praise for their performances.[5] [6] Lane Smith breathed life and humor into the Daily Planet editor-in-chief Perry White and John Shea received positive reviews for his portrayal of Lex Luthor. Michael Landes portrayed a modern-solar day Jimmy Olsen and Tracy Scoggins a comedic portrayal of Cat Grant. Lex Luthor'due south death in the season finale occurred after disagreements between Shea and the producers over the thespian's strenuous commute betwixt New York and Los Angeles. No longer a regular cast member, he reappeared once in season two, twice in season 3, and once in season 4.[7]

Luthor develops an interest in Lois Lane and through most of the first season tries to woo her. Although Lois is receptive to his romantic advances, she remains infatuated with Superman. Lois also develops feelings for Clark, but represses or denies them. Luthor eventually proposes matrimony to Lois. Clark, seeing he may lose Lois, attempts to convince her of Luthor's true nature, but fails. In a last-ditch attempt, Clark tells Lois that he is in love with her; she replies that she does not render his feelings but cares for him securely as a friend. Later, Lois asks Superman if at that place is any hazard of a romance between the two of them. Superman turns her down and Lois accepts Luthor's proposal. Luthor decides to coincide his nuptials with the expiry of Superman, whom he traps in a kryptonite muzzle in the wine cellar of Luthor Tower, which also contains the chapel where the wedding ceremony will occur. As the hymeneals approaches, Lois realizes she loves Clark and says no to Lex at the altar.

Clark had been working with Perry and Jimmy to betrayal Lex and they take enough prove for the police to interrupt the wedding. Lex eludes the police force and jumps from his penthouse office to his apparent death. Superman has escaped the cage and, as Clark, rejoins Lois. However, his powers have been diminished past kryptonite and he cannot stop the villain from falling to the pavement. Newspapers written report that Lex'due south body has been stolen from the morgue and hint he may not be expressionless. Clark, fearing his unrequited honey for Lois may damage their human relationship, tells her his profession of dear was only out of a desire to protect her from Lex. Lois, who was about to tell Clark that she loves him too, instead keeps it to herself and their human relationship remains a friendship.

Season ii [edit]

In season two, the character of True cat Grant was dropped, and Michael Landes was replaced with Justin Whalin as Jimmy Olsen. The official reason, according to Landes, was that he looked too similar to Dean Cain.[8] On the show, the explanation is that he has changed with age. Series creator Deborah Joy LeVine and the entire first-season writing team were also dismissed. The new producer, Robert Singer, planned a stronger focus on action;[9] the show likewise shifted its focus onto the budding romance between Lois and Clark.

Lex Luthor returned in one episode and other villains from the comics, such every bit The Prankster, Metallo, the Toyman and the criminal grouping known every bit Intergang, began to appear. This season also featured the debut of fan-favorite villain Tempus (Lane Davies) and H. Yard. Wells appeared every bit a fourth dimension-traveler. Wells's younger self was played by Terry Kiser, and the older Wells was played by Hamilton Army camp.

During the flavour, Clark and Lois begin to consider dating just are interrupted by Mayson Drake (Farrah Forke), a district attorney who takes a romantic interest in Clark simply has a total lack of regard for Superman. Mayson dies as Lois and Clark have their start date. In the side by side episode, a federal agent named Dan Scardino (Jim Pirri) becomes a rival to Clark for Lois' affections. After initially spurning Dan, Lois decides to date Dan when Clark frequently has to suddenly get out their talks or get-togethers to salvage other people (as Superman) just offers ridiculous reasons for why he had to suddenly depart. Lois eventually decides she has more feelings for Clark than for Dan, and they begin dating more than seriously. In the season finale, Clark comes shut to telling Lois his secret simply does non, first considering of his uncertainty well-nigh her reaction, and then interruptions by people plotting to expose his identity to the world. At the end of the final episode, Clark proposes to Lois but Lois' response is left as a bewilderment for the next season. Season ii became a success and garnered higher ratings in its initial airings, catastrophe the flavor in 58th place.

Season three [edit]

Season 3 averaged more than 18 1000000 viewers per episode and ranked 44th for the season. In the premiere episode, in responding to Clark's marriage proposal, Lois reveals that she knows Clark's surreptitious identity and expresses business organisation about how she can trust him when he has kept that secret from her for then long. They spend more time together and later on having a few disagreements which and then get resolved with them being even closer, she accepts Clark's proposal in the seventh episode, "Ultra Woman". ABC announced that the hymeneals would occur on Valentine's Day weekend; with ABC sending heart-shaped "wedding invitations" to ABC News staff. A controversy erupted, when ABC presents the viewers with a bogus nuptials, with Clark unwittingly married to a clone of Lois.[ten] This was the outset of a 5-function story, in which Lois is kidnapped past Lex Luthor, replaced by a clone, the real Lois suffering from amnesia, and Clark trying to find the real Lois Lane.

In the third-flavour premiere, Lois has discovered Superman's undercover identity. Initially, she resents Clark not telling her. Afterward they carve up for a fourth dimension, Lois dates Patrick Sullivan, an antique dealer who is plotting to kill her in a sacrificial druid ritual, and she and Clark carry out assignments where they either pose as a married couple or are alone together for an unabridged weekend. Lois finally accepts Clark's engagement ring after acquiring his powers and temporarily becoming a superhero named Ultra Woman. Lois suffers a bout of amnesia and hallucinates their wedding. In one case she recovers, Lois and Clark are still engaged when two other Kryptonians come to Earth, i of whom is Clark's wife. They insist Clark go with them to save their world, New Krypton, from domination past an evil tyrant named Lord Nor; Clark leaves Lois, taking her wedding ceremony ring to think her and every bit a promise to return as chop-chop equally possible. While committed to each other, they both incertitude he will ever return.

Season four [edit]

The final season had several 2-function episodes. It began with the resolution of a cliffhanger involving a previously unknown colony of Kryptonians. Lois and Clark finally midweek in the third episode of the flavour entitled "Swear To God, This Time We're Not Kidding". The same calendar week, DC Comics released Superman: The Wedding Anthology, featuring the long-awaited marriage of Lois and Clark. The series ended on a cliffhanger in which Lois and Clark detect an baby in Clark's erstwhile bassinet, along with a note that claimed the child belonged to them.

During the 4th flavor, ABC had announced a fifth flavour of the evidence; its producers and writers were unprepared when ABC afterwards decided that no new episodes would exist produced. The series had weakened in its Sunday 8:00 pm timeslot and had been shifted to seven:00 pm in January, and was moved to Saturdays in the spring.[eleven] The ratings dropped even further, and the evidence finished its last season in 104th place, averaging less than ten million viewers per episode. It was removed from the schedule in May 1997.[11] ABC made up for its commitment to Warner Bros. by ordering thirteen episodes of a Debra Messing drama, Prey.

The fourth season starts with Clark heading toward New Krypton, while the evil tyrant Nor has instead invaded Earth, so Clark returns just equally Nor takes over Smallville. He and Lois defeat the tyrant and persuade the New Kryptonians to allow Clark to stay on Earth. After some other failed wedding ceremony anniversary, Lois and Clark get married. Evil forces go along to assault them, delaying their honeymoon, but eventually, the couple moves into a new dwelling house. Throughout the season they strengthen their bail, despite some disagreements and villains trying to destroy them. The newlywed reporters discover that Clark cannot begetter a child with Lois, merely at the terminate of the concluding episode, a child mysteriously appears. This mystery was never resolved in the television series, but Brad Buckner, executive producer, and writer for the 3rd and fourth seasons, later revealed the planned story was that the child "was Kryptonian royalty, stashed past his mother to proceed him safe from assassins".[12]

Cast [edit]

Principal cast members of flavor one.

Principal cast members of the rest of the serial run.

Main cast [edit]

Player Character Seasons
1 2 iii 4
Dean Cain Clark Kent / Kal-El / Superman Main
Teri Hatcher Lois Lane Main
Lane Smith Perry White Primary
Michael Landes[13] [14] Jimmy Olsen Main
Justin Whalin[fifteen] Main
Tracy Scoggins Catherine "Cat" Grant Chief
K Callan Martha Kent Main
Eddie Jones Jonathan Kent Main
John Shea Lex Luthor Main Guest Guest Vocalisation

Recurring [edit]

  • Phyllis Coates and Beverly Garland every bit Ellen Lane
  • Harve Presnell as Sam Lane
  • Lane Davies as Tempus
  • Terry Kiser and Hamilton Camp as H.Grand. Wells
  • Kenneth Kimmins every bit Dr Bernard Klein
  • Elizabeth Barondes and Roxana Zal equally Lucy Lane
  • Simon Templeman equally Lord Nor

Special guest [edit]

  • Richard Belzer every bit Inspector Henderson
  • Sonny Bono as Mayor Frank Berkowitz
  • Peter Boyle as Pecker Church building Sr
  • Delta Burke equally Myrtle Beech
  • Bruce Campbell as Bill Church Jr
  • Drew Carey as Herbie Saxe
  • Robert Carradine equally Joey Bermuda
  • Denise Crosby every bit Dr. Gretchen Kelly
  • Robert Culp as Mr. Darryl
  • Tony Curtis as Dr. Isaac Mamba
  • Roger Daltrey as Alien Assassin
  • David Doyle equally Mike
  • Morgan Fairchild as Miranda
  • Genie Francis as Amber Lake
  • Jonathan Frakes as Tim Lake
  • Frank Gorshin as Sharpie Lawyer
  • Harold Gould every bit Edwin Griffin
  • Jasmine Guy every bit Angela Winters
  • Sherman Hemsley as Toyman/Winslow Schott
  • Penn Jillette as Darrin Romick
  • James Earl Jones every bit Franklin Stern
  • Shelley Long as Lucille Newtrich
  • Howie Mandel as Mister Mxyzptlk
  • Phil Mickelson as golf instructor
  • Rick Overton as Victor
  • Bronson Pinchot as Prankster/Kyle Griffin
  • Dick Van Patten as Santa
  • Isabel Sanford as Ms. Duffy
  • Dwight Schultz equally Garret Grady
  • Dean Stockwell as Preston Carpenter
  • David Warner as Jor-El
  • Fred Willard as President Garner
  • Raquel Welch every bit Diana Stride
  • Adam W as Tabloid TV reporter

Novels, collected editions and related merchandise [edit]

Lois & Clark: A Superman Novel by author C. J. Cherryh, based on the television series, was released in 1996. The novel was published in a Science Fiction Book Club hardcover edition and a paperback edition past Prima Publishing.[sixteen]

Other novels based on the series include:

  • Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman: Oestrus Wave [17]
  • Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman: Exile [18]
  • Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman: Deadly Games [19]

DC Comics published a comic book trade paperback nerveless edition Lois & Clark, The New Adventures of Superman, in 1994, which featured a selection of modern era stories by John Byrne and other writers and artists. The drove includes an introduction by Byrne, with the evidence's star Dean Cain and Teri Hatcher as Lois and Clark on the cover.

  • Lois & Clark, The New Adventures of Superman – collects The Human being of Steel #ii, Superman Annual vol. 2 #1, Superman vol. 2 #9 and eleven, Activity Comics #600 and 655, Adventures of Superman #445, 462, and 466. (1-56389-128-X, 192 pages)

Skybox released in 1995 a series of trading cards based on the first season of the testify. 90 trading cards were issued alongside 9 special cards, a series of temporary tattoos and two illustrated cards by well known artists Boris Vallejo and Julie Bell.[ citation needed ]

Broadcasts [edit]

The states [edit]

From September 1997 to August 2003 all four seasons of the evidence were aired on TNT tv set network. The entire series became available on HBO Max in August 2021.

United Kingdom [edit]

The series premiered on BBC One on Sabbatum, January eight, 1994, with echo showings until 2002. During its run on BBC I, the series was retitled "The New Adventures of Superman". The BBC held the rights to premiere the offset 3 seasons. It too aired on CBBC's Sabbatum Aardvark strand (later known as Planet Sat) at 8:30 am. BBC Two has besides repeated the series at tea times alongside The Simpsons, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air and many others. Sky One held the premiere rights to the quaternary season in 1997 and broadcast the show nether the original full title. The BBC broadcast the episodes a few weeks subsequently. Heaven One broadcast seasons 1, ii and iii just before the premiere of flavour iv in early 1997. UK Aureate, Sky Living, Bravo, Channel One and ITV2 have also repeated the series. BBC2 last repeated season one in belatedly 2005. Satellite channel Syfy repeated the outset two seasons and the first half of season three in 2012, before replacing it with Smallville.

Republic of Ireland [edit]

The serial aired on RTÉ One from 1995 to 1998 and regularly rerun on TG4 from 2000 to 2002.

Habitation media [edit]

Warner Home Video has released all iv seasons of Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman on DVD in Regions 1, 2, and 4.

Complete Flavor Episodes Release dates
Region i Region 2 Region 4
one 21 June vii, 2005[25] July five, 2006[26] June 14, 2006[27]
2 22 Jan 17, 2006[28] July five, 2006[29] June fourteen, 2006[thirty]
3 22 June 20, 2006[31] September 6, 2006[32] November 1, 2006[33]
iv 22 November 14, 2006[34] December half dozen, 2006[35] Nov 1, 2006[36]

Soundtrack [edit]

Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman (Original Tv set Soundtrack)
Soundtrack album by

Jay Gruska

Released November 4, 1997
Length 57:58
Label Sonic Images

All music is composed past Jay Gruska.

Rail list
No. Championship Length
1. "Main Championship Theme" 1:06
2. "Mothership" two:02
3. "Lois & Clark Courting" 3:xiii
4. "Final Proposal" 2:02
5. "Clark in the State" 1:45
half-dozen. "Final Battle" 4:36
7. "Lois' Large Band" 1:14
8. "Clark's Salsa" ane:47
9. "Superman Says Farewell" 4:25
x. "Lois & Clark's New Home" 2:53
11. "Baby Dreams" three:12
12. "Villains" 7:27
13. "Superman Flies Home" 1:26
xiv. "Lois & Clark's Commencement Love Theme" 1:36
15. "Virtual Reality" 2:37
16. "Tez Arrives" 1:06
17. "Zarah & Ching" 3:51
18. "Tempus" ii:46
19. "Clark Fun" 1:25
twenty. "Playing the Game" 1:nineteen
21. "Main Title Theme (Extended Mix)" 5:38
Total length: 57:26
  • Mastered at Capitol Records, Hollywood
  • Digital editing, pre-mastering: Bruno Coon
  • Engineers:
    • Greg Townley (all orchestral recording)
    • Michael Eric Hutchinson
    • Bobby Fernandez ("Main Title Theme" — recording & mixing)
    • Ray Pyle ("Primary Title Theme extended mix" — recording & mixing)
  • Fine art Direction: Doerte Lau
  • Pattern: Andreas Adamec

Awards and nominations [edit]

See besides [edit]

  • List of villains in Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman

References [edit]

  1. ^ Du Brow, Rick (May xi, 1993). "At ABC, Life Goes On With 11 New Series". The Los Angeles Times . Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  2. ^ Rosenberg, Howard (September 11, 1993). "Lois & Clark Soars, and And then Does Townsend". The Los Angeles Times . Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  3. ^ O'Connor, John J. (April 9, 1995). "TELEVISION VIEW; That Man In a Cape Is Still Flying". The New York Times . Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  4. ^ Cronin, Brian (May eleven, 2006). "Comic Volume Urban Legends Revealed #50!". cbr.com. Retrieved July ten, 2021.
  5. ^ Tucker, Ken (Dec 8, 1995). "Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman". Entertainment Weekly . Retrieved July ten, 2021.
  6. ^ Tucker, Ken (Jan 17, 2015). "Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman". Amusement Weekly . Retrieved April 26, 2015.
  7. ^ Cerone, Daniel (September 17, 1994). "Boob tube's 'Superman' Undergoing a Planetary Shift". Los Angeles Times . Retrieved July x, 2021.
  8. ^ On the DVD commentary for the pilot of Lois & Clark, Dean Cain said that he and Landes looked as though they could exist related.
  9. ^ "History of Lois and Clark – Role 3". Redboots.net. Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  10. ^ Chris Ruppenthal(writers) & Jim Pohl (director) (February eleven, 1996). "I Now Pronounce You...". Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman. Flavour 2. Episode 15. ABC.
  11. ^ a b Allstetter, Rob (August 1997). "'Lois & Clark' Meets Kryptonite". Wizard. No. 72. p. 119.
  12. ^ Byrne, Craig (August 2003). "Lois & Clark Interviews: Executive Producer Brad Buckner - 2003". Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  13. ^ Meisler, Andy (October sixteen, 1994). "A Familiar Name, but I Can't Identify the Face". The New York Times . Retrieved July ten, 2021.
  14. ^ "A Younger Jimmy Joins 'Lois & Clark'". Sun Lookout man . Retrieved October 22, 2010.
  15. ^ Mendoza, N.F. (March 26, 1995). "As ABC'south second assigned Jimmy Olsen, Justin Whalin hits the newsroom running". The Los Angeles Times . Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  16. ^ Cherryh, C. J (August 1996). Lois & Clark: A Superman Novel. Prima Lifestyles. ISBN0761504826.
  17. ^ Friedman, Michael Jan (April 1996). Heat Wave. HarperCollins. ISBN0061010618.
  18. ^ Friedman, Michael Jan (May 1996). Exile. HarperCollins. ISBN0061010626.
  19. ^ Friedman, Michael Jan (June 1996). Deadly Games. HarperCollins. ISBN0061010634.
  20. ^ "The Boob tube Ratings Guide: 1993-94 Ratings History". The TV Ratings Guide . Retrieved July xx, 2020.
  21. ^ "The Television set Ratings Guide: 1994-95 Ratings History". The Idiot box Ratings Guide . Retrieved July xx, 2020.
  22. ^ "The TV Ratings Guide: 1995-96 Ratings History". The Tv set Ratings Guide . Retrieved July xx, 2020.
  23. ^ a b "Done In by Low Ratings". Los Angeles Times. June 14, 1997.
  24. ^ "The Goggle box Ratings Guide: 1996-97 Ratings History". The TV Ratings Guide . Retrieved July xx, 2020.
  25. ^ Gord Lacey (March 14, 2005). "Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman – It'due south a bird, it's a plane, it'south an announcement". Telly Shows on DVD. Archived from the original on March 30, 2007. Retrieved August xix, 2007.
  26. ^ "Flavor 1 (Region 2)". Amazon.fr. Retrieved Baronial 19, 2007.
  27. ^ "Season i (Region 4)". JB Hi-Fi Online. Retrieved August 19, 2007.
  28. ^ Gord Lacey (Oct 11, 2005). "Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman Flavour 2 news and artwork". Telly Shows on DVD. Archived from the original on March xxx, 2007. Retrieved Baronial 19, 2007.
  29. ^ "Season two (Region 2)". Amazon.fr. Retrieved Baronial xix, 2007.
  30. ^ "Flavor 2 (Region 4)". JB How-do-you-do-Fi Online. Retrieved August 19, 2007.
  31. ^ Gord Lacey (March 1, 2006). "Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman – "Superday" concludes with Lois & Clark, Season 3". Television set Shows on DVD. Archived from the original on July 12, 2007. Retrieved August 19, 2007.
  32. ^ "Season iii (Region ii)". Amazon.fr. Retrieved August xix, 2007.
  33. ^ "Season iii (Region iv)". JB How-do-you-do-Fi Online. Retrieved August 19, 2007.
  34. ^ Gord Lacey (August sixteen, 2006). "Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman – A Super Wedding ceremony Happens This November – Season 4 Appear". TV Shows on DVD. Archived from the original on Feb eight, 2007. Retrieved August xix, 2007.
  35. ^ "Season 4 (Region 2)". Amazon.fr. Retrieved August 19, 2007.
  36. ^ "Flavor four (Region iv)". JB Hi-Fi Online. Retrieved Baronial 19, 2007.

External links [edit]

  • Official Warner Bros. Site
  • Official DC Comics Site
  • Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman DVD Site
  • Showtime Person Account from Flavor One Supervising Producer
  • Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman at IMDb
  • Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman on SupermanHomepage.com

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lois_&_Clark:_The_New_Adventures_of_Superman

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