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The Bionic Woman was a television series which spun off from The Six Million Dollar Man. It starred Lindsay Wagner as Jaime Sommers, a tennis professional who was nearly killed in a sky diving accident, and was rebuilt by Oscar Goldman (Richard Anderson) and Dr. Rudy Wells (Martin E. Brooks), who had also rebuilt The Six Million Dollar Man. As the result of her operation, Jaime Sommers had amplified hearing, a greatly strengthened right arm, and enhanced legs, enabling her to run faster than a speeding car. The series ran on the American Broadcasting Company from 1976 to 1977 and on NBC from 1977 to 1978. Jaime Sommers and Steve Austin (The Six Million Dollar Man) had been engaged prior to his career as an astronaut, but had drifted apart. Jaime first appeared in a two-part episode of The Six Million Dollar Man in 1975, but died when her body rejected her bionic implants. But the character was so popular that the next season it was revealed that Jaime hadn't died after all, although Steve Austin was not informed of this fact. Eventually she was revived from a coma and the rejection issue was resolved. An unfortunate side-effect, however, was she developed a form of amnesia that caused her to forget her relationship to Austin. Nonetheless, Austin and Sommers worked together frequently and became close friends again over time. Her most noted enemies were the Fembots, a line of powerful androids that Jaimie fought twice in her series. Their main weakness was their default operational setting produced a unique high pitched sound only Jaimie could hear with her ear implant, allowing her to detect their presence. Jaime, now retired as a tennis player, took a job as a schoolteacher in Ojai, California, where she lived in a converted farmhouse rented from Austin's mother and stepfather, who were aware of her (and Steve's) bionic nature and their double lives as secret agents. In later episodes, Jaime all but adopted Maximillion, a german shepherd that had been given bionic legs and other augmentations in an experiment to see if trained animals could benefit from bionics. In later years, the love between Jaime and Steve rekindled, and this was further explored in three made-for-TV reunion movies in the late 1980s and early 1990s (see the article for The Six Million Dollar Man for more information). In early 2004, there were news reports that Jennifer Aniston would star in a new Bionic Woman TV series. Meanwhile, according to Universal Home Video, the original series is expected to be released to DVD sometime in 2005, along with its parent program The Six Million Dollar Man. Two novels based upon series episodes were published in the 1970s: Welcome Home, Jaime and Extracurricular Activities, both by Eileen Lottman. The UK editions of these two books were credited to "Maud Willis" and were retitled Double Identity and A Question of Life, respectively. Although the closing credits of every episode says the series was based upon Martin Caidin's 1972 novel, Cyborg, this only refers to the bionics concept, the characters of Rudy Wells and Oscar Goldman, and the occasional appearance by Steve Austin; Jaime Sommers does not appear in any of Caidin's novels. A short-lived comic book series by Charlton Comics was published in 1976-77.
EpisodesSeason 1 (1976)
Season 2 (1976-1977)
Season 3 (1977-1978)
TV movies
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