"Wonder Woman" Light-fingered Lady (TV Episode 1978) Poster

(TV Series)

(1978)

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8/10
Stealing Her Scenes Like a Pro
darryl-tahirali29 March 2022
Posing as "Lil Thaxton," Diana Prince is the "Light-fingered Lady" spearheading an Inter-Agency Defense Command sting operation against Anton Caribe (Greg Morris), a criminal mastermind orchestrating his own sting against his rival Sutton (Titos Vandis) in this tense tale that plays like a late-period "Mission: Impossible" caper, when the Impossible Missions Force targeted primarily organized crime (usually embodied as "the Syndicate").

And why not? Supervising producer Bruce Lansbury was a "Mission: Impossible" alumnus, as was Morris, who famously played the team's technical wizard Barney Collier; in addition, guest stars on the iconic spy series included Vandis and Christopher Stone, who plays Ryan, one of Caribe's crew who introduces Diana, as ex-con and noted thief Lil--hence the "Light-fingered Lady"--to Caribe. High-tech manipulation also figures into Caribe's heist, although it is Lil who is brought in to neutralize Sutton's elaborate alarm system in Bruce Shelly's tight script; Shelly had also penned the caper for the tepid "The Queen and the Thief" earlier in season two, although he engineers a more involving story this time around.

Also part of Caribe's crew is Leech (Joseph R. Sicari), Caribe's zealous security man with lingering suspicions about Diana. Hoping to expose her as an impostor, he confronts Lil with "Marge" (Judyann Elder), Lil's former cellmate, hoping to expose Lil as a fraud. Although Marge is actually an IADC operative disguised as the real Marge--another "Mission: Impossible" specialty--Lynda Carter plays it as if she didn't expect her to appear, heightening the dramatic moment. However, Lil passes the test and join Caribe's crew, further augmented by fixit-man Grease (Gary Crosby) and muscle Rojak (Bubba Smith), for the assault on Sutton's compound to boost $50 million in what Caribe expects to be his final job. Smith, a former NFL All-Pro defensive lineman, also provides comic relief based on his former profession: When Diana, as Lil, asks him, "Weren't you up for manslaughter for what you did to that quarterback?" Rojak replies, "Naw, he lived."

Naturally, Wonder Woman is invaluable to Lil's success, first in securing the specs on Sutton's sophisticated alarm system, then, secretly, during the heist, where she demonstrates her ability to communicate with a pair of German shepherd guard dogs in the only paranormal aspect (apart from Wonder Woman's very existence, of course) to what is an effective crime drama marred only by the underuse of Morris, who has little to do besides move his chess pieces from his secluded lair as it is his henchman--and one henchwoman--doing all the action.

By now, Carter seems to be honing her acting chops by the episode; here, she is developing nuance as her Wonder Woman, while locking Leech in a closet, flashes some hilarious eye-rolling; then, in the next moment as Lil, steamrolls him while letting him out. As Lyle Waggoner's Steve Trevor recedes ever further from the spotlight, "Wonder Woman" becomes Carter's showcase, and stories such as "Light-fingered Lady," in which she steals her scenes like a pro, only burnish that status.
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5/10
Fair enough
Joxerlives23 January 2012
Warning: Spoilers
Light fingered lady Wonder Woman does heist movie. We see her in her swimsuit again and see her ability to communicate with animals when she charms the guard dog. We also have Bubba Smith who'll later go on to fame with the police academy films. Steve finally gets a kiss from Diana but sadly only on the cheek. Lovely line; Villain; "You see what you get? You see what you get when you trust a woman?" Steve; "Yeah, you get the job done!" Story goes that Bubba Smith was reluctant to have his macho reputation tarnished by pretending to be thrown by a 'little white lady' (one of the few people who could call the statuesque Lynda Carter 'little') but Lynda Carter convinced him by doing it for real. 5/10
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4/10
AND WHERE IS WONDER WOMAN
asalerno1014 May 2022
This episode could fit into any other spy series at the time except Wonder Woman. Here Diana infiltrates with a false identity within a gang that is dedicated to stealing valuable art objects, Caribe is the head of the gang and constantly doubts whether Diana is who she says she is. The unusual thing about this episode is that the thieves are captured by Diana Prince! It is assumed that if the heroine of the series is Wonder Woman, it is she who in the final scene must be the one who uses her powers to catch the bad guys, but here that does not happen, but Diana is the one who appears taking all the credit in the scene final. Incomprehensible.
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