It should go without saying that actress Dana Delany has a knack for playing strong female characters. Right now Delany can be seen starring as Edith Roosevelt, wife of 26th president U.S. Teddy Roosevelt, in the new HBO Max mini-series
The American Guest. A quarter of a century earlier though, Delany portrayed another influential American female icon when she voiced intrepid reporter Lois Lane in
Superman: The Animated Series.
In celebration of the 25th anniversary of the show, Warner Bros. Home Entertainment has released
Superman: The Complete Animated Series on a remastered Blu-ray, which is now available.
The Beat had the chance to speak with Dana Delany about her experience working on such a groundbreaking animated series. During our conversation, Delany not only recalled how much Lois Lane meant to her as a child but also discussed the recent DC Comics publishing news that Jon Kent, the son of Clark Kent and Lois Lane, would be
coming out as bisexual which made national headlines.
Taimur Dar: I was watching a retrospective on the new Superman: TAS Blu-ray and voice director Andrea Romano revealed something I didn't know before. Apparently you actually cried when you auditioned for the role because Lois Lane was a character you dreamed about playing.
I really want to know when and how your love of Lois Lane began and why the character means so much to you. Dana Delany: God, it's so funny I had forgotten that! Just hearing you say that made me cry again! [Laughs]. I love Andrea. I kind of grew up with Lois. When I was a kid, if you could imagine in the 1950s, I used to watch when I was four years old the TV series with
Phyllis Coates and then
Noel Neill playing Lois. Every Sunday we'd go to church and my reward would be that I'd get to go to the drugstore and buy a comic book which was 10 cents! Lois had her own comic book. Yeah, I read the Superman comics too but I always got my Lois Lane comics because she was really my idol. She was a career girl who was really sassy and no-nonsense [and] was in charge of her own life. When I auditioned for the part of Lois Lane I was so thrilled to get to say, "My name is Dana Delany and I'm reading for Lois Lane." Just to say that was exciting to me.
Dar: A lot of the cartoons I watched growing up featured the "damsel in distress" trope like Daphne in Scooby-Doo or April O'Neil in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. I think we've definitely seen a shift in entertainment away from that cliché. In Superman: The Animated Series, Lois was definitely captured a fair amount of times but I felt she still retained her inherent inner strength. How did you want to defy the image of Lois simply being a mere damsel in distress through your performance? Delany: I have to say that really was in the writing. I think that
Paul Dini,
Alan Burnett, and
Bruce Timm created that right from the first episode. Lois was very tough-talking and in charge. I watched a few episodes last night and it really brought it home to me that Superman only saved her when all other options failed. It was almost only when she was falling out of a window and he had to catch her. She was clever, witty, and would punch somebody out when she needed to. She was very much her own person. She definitely was not a damsel in distress.
Dar: Completely agree! In the last few years, comic writers seem to have honed in on Lois Lane in regards to how truth and journalism have been under attack in the last few years. Do you think the importance of Lois Lane has grown in this modern era? Delany: To me, she's always been important so I don't think that's changed in my mind. [Laughs]. Superman has always been political. The comic was originally drawn and created in response to the political world of the time with anti-Semitism and Nazism. I feel like Lois Lane's character was always political. When we did the series the Gulf War had just happened and we very much dealt with that. We were dealing with Lex Luthor and his weapons of mass destruction. So I feel like it's always been timely. It's right in whatever time we're in that Lois and the investigative reporter should always reflect that. I remember when Watergate happened in '72/'74 that character also reflected that. It's always been of our time.