Super-heroes
were long the staple of Saturday morning cartoons, most notably Hanna-Barbera’s
Super Friends, which ran from
1973-1985. After it left the airwaves, the Man of Steel was legally free to star in
a solo series, produced by Ruby-Spears.

One of Gil Kane's production designs for Ruby-Spears
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According to
Wikipedia, as Superman’s 50th anniversary approached, CBS and Ruby-Spears
began working on a new animated show. Long-time comic book writer Marv Wolfman had
contributed a Superman parody to Garbage Pail
Kids, and was tapped as story editor. Joining him to provide character
designs was comic artist Gil Kane. The pair had collaborated on a stellar run
in Action Comics from 1982-1984.
The show
premiered on September 17, 1988. As the opening credits began with John
Williams’ iconic theme, William Woodson’s voiceover echoed the classic
narration from the 1950s Adventures of
Superman, as clips of an animated Man of Steel in action roll over the
screen.
This series is
the first media adaptation of the Man of Steel that to adopt the major character
revisions by John Byrne’s 1986 reboot. Most notably, Lex Luthor is the head of LexCorp,
using his business assets to bedevil Superman in various ways. Aided by his
air-headed gal Friday Jessica Morganberry, his persona owes much to Gene
Hackman’s portrayal from the live action films.

Lex Luthor and his ditzy girlfriend, Jessica Morganberry
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Regular cast
members include Beau Weaver (Superman), Ginny McSwain (Lois Lane), Mark L.
Taylor (Jimmy Olsen), Stanley Ralph Ross (Perry White) and Michael Bell (Lex
Luthor). Other notable performers who lent their voices to the show include René
Auberjonois as General Zod; Nancy Cartwright (pre-Bart Simpson) as young Clark’s
baby sitter; and Howard Morris, channeling his inner Ernest T. Bass as the
Prankster.
Alan
Oppenheimer and Tress MacNeille played Jonathan and Martha Ken, respectively. They
were featured in a four-minute closing segment that shared stories from Clark’s
childhood, beginning with “The Adoption” in episode 1. Subsequent installments
told stories of entering school, dating and playing high school sports. Episode
13 concludes with “It’s Superman,” featuring his first public appearance in
costume.
Sadly, the
series only ran for a single season. Wolfman claims Judy Price, who was in
charge of CBS' children's programming, had a distaste for super-hero shows, and
scheduled the show early in the morning where it struggled to meet its targeted
audience of 9-13 year olds.
In 2009, all
13 episodes were released as a two-disc DVD set. A recent re-watch shows the
narratives hold up nicely, though a few visual elements date the show. Luthor’s
girlfriend Miss Morganberry resembles a reject from Jem and the Holograms.
Otherwise, it makes a fine addition to anyone’s Superman collection.