She-Ra

She-Ra is a fictional superheroine in the 1985 Filmation series She-Ra: Princess of Power and its 2018 reboot She-Ra and the Princesses of Power.[3] A series of toys under her name was produced by Mattel.[4]

Princess Adora
She-Ra
First appearanceThe Secret of the Sword
Created byLarry DiTillio
J. Michael Straczynski[1][2]
Voiced byMelendy Britt
(1985–1987)
Aimee Carrero
(2018–2020)
LaLa Nestor
(2018–2020; Young)
In-universe information
AliasAdora
NicknamePrincess of Power
The most powerful woman In the universe
RaceEternian
GenderFemale
TitlePrincess
OccupationRebel Leader, formerly military captain
FamilyHe-Ro (ancestor)
King Grayskull (ancestor)
King Miro (grandfather)
King Randor (father)
Queen Marlena (mother)
He-Man/Prince Adam (twin brother)
Hordak (step father)
Shadow Weaver (step mother)
Catra (girlfriend) Glimmer (friend) Bow (friend)
Significant otherCatra

In the 1980s series, She-Ra was intended to extend the appeal of the Masters of the Universe setting by being of interest to young girls in the same way that He-Man appealed to young boys.[5][6] Filmation writers Larry DiTillio and J. Michael Straczynski created the backstory for the property.[1][2][7] She-Ra was introduced in the movie The Secret of the Sword as Force Captain Adora of the Horde ruling Etheria,[8] but turned out to be Princess Adora, the long-lost twin sister of He-Man, Prince Adam.[9]

In the She-Ra: Princess of Power (1985)

Fictional character biography

King Randor and Queen Marlena from planet Eternia had twins, a boy and a girl named Adam and Adora. Hordak, leader of the Evil Horde, kidnapped Adora and escaped to Etheria, where Adora was raised as a mind-controlled Force Captain of The Horde. Adora's uniform – which she continued to wear throughout the series, even after defecting to the Rebels – consisted of a red leotard with long white sleeves, red boots with matching gauntlets, and a black belt.[10]

The Sorceress sent Adam and Cringer to the planet Etheria to find the Sword of Protection's rightful owner. The Sorceress, through the jewel in the Sword of Protection reveals to Adora that she was kidnapped by The Horde when she was a baby and that she had a twin brother in Adam/He-Man, which she instantly believed. Through her newfound love for her brother and seeing him in trouble, Adora breaks the spell that was making her serve the Horde then said "For the honor of Grayskull" as she is transformed into the heroine; She-Ra. She then releases a captured He-Man and jumps from a window, crashing into the Horde stables. She-Ra lands atop Spirit who is transformed into Swift Wind, a talking unicorn.[11] They fly ahead to warn The Rebellion. He-Man and She-Ra return to Eternia, but she decides she must return to Etheria so that she can help free the planet from the Horde oppression.[12]

Adora, having been trained by the Horde her entire life, assumes leadership of the Great Rebellion. The epic battle to free Etheria from the grip of the Evil Horde rages on, spreading across the corners of the planet. Through this war, She-Ra calls upon her allies across the globe, using their special talents to battle against Horde creations. It is implied in several episodes that she has romantic feelings towards the rebel pirate Sea Hawk, who is attracted to her in the guise of Adora as opposed to She-Ra. Whether or not She-Ra and her forces were ever successful in defeating the Horde was never revealed as the series was cancelled before any resolution could be reached. However, it was shown little-by-little that the citizens and kingdoms all over Etheria were rising up against the Horde and pushing back against their tyranny. Unlike Adam, who often feigned laziness and a carefree attitude to deflect any suspicion that he may be He-Man, Adora never acted against her nature and was always seen as brave and selfless, willing to help others in need at a moment's notice.

When Adora transforms to She-Ra, two castles are shown in the background. The first is Castle Grayskull. The second is the Crystal Castle. The Crystal Castle is located atop Skydancer Mountain and is overseen by an entity called Light Hope, who advises She-Ra in times of crisis. In the Princess of Power toyline, the castle is also protected by two winged crystal horses, Moonbeam and Sun Dancer. The Crystal Castle's location is known only to Ahgo (King of the Trolls), She-Ra, and He-Man (she brought him there one time); She-Ra has sworn to secrecy its location, thus earning the title of "Defender of the Crystal Castle."

Powers and abilities

She-Ra is known for her incredible strength. Many times she has been shown to be able to lift not only full-grown men and robots, but also mountain-like rocks and buildings. She is depicted as being extremely fast and acrobatic. Her speed allows her to easily deflect multiple incoming energy blasts with her sword. She-Ra demonstrated a series of other abilities which appear to be more nurturing in nature such as empathic understanding, mental communication with animals, and healing. Whether there is a limit to the length of time she can remain in her heroic form before she reverts to her original form of Adora is unknown. There have been occasions where she is forcibly transformed back into Adora, implying that her powers do have limits to them.

She-Ra's primary weapon is her Sword of Protection. It appears almost indestructible and able to deflect bolts of energy, both magical and technological, as well as project beams of energy from the stone in its center. The stone is also used to turn Spirit into Swift Wind, as the power beam needed to perform the transformation comes from it (as opposed to the Sword of Power, where the energy beam that is used to transform Cringer into Battle Cat is shot from the tip of the sword and requires He-Man to point it directly at Cringer in order for it to work).

In one episode, the stone in She-Ra's sword becomes damaged, causing her to be unable to transform into She-Ra. The sword also had transmutation abilities – upon command it would change shape into whatever She-Ra required at the time, for example a shield, parachute, helmet, rope with grappling hook, and a boomerang.

She-Ra is largely non-violent and engages in combat only as a last resort. She relies on her intelligence and wits, preferring to outsmart her adversaries; her most violent actions typically consist of body throws. Due to broadcast standards of the period, in the Filmation series neither He-Man nor She-Ra ever used their swords offensively; nor did they ever directly punch or kick anyone. He-Man and She-Ra were only allowed to destroy robotic enemies, their primary foes.

Reception

She-Ra is mostly considered a positive role model for women.[13][14][15][16] Some critics have criticized her for being a poor female counterpart to He-Man.[17][18]

In She-Ra and the Princesses of Power (2018–2020)

On December 12, 2017, DreamWorks Animation and Netflix announced a reboot series based on She-Ra. The series was executively produced by author Noelle Stevenson (creator of Nimona and Lumberjanes). The cast was revealed on May 18, 2018 alongside a poster and the official series title: She-Ra and the Princesses of Power. It premiered on November 13, 2018 on Netflix. Unlike the original series, He-Man has no presence in the reboot storyline, last appearing in a 2002 series.

Fictional character biography

In this series, Adora is an 18-year-old girl in season 1, portrayed as a willing member of the Horde as she was brought up in the rigorous military environment since she was found as an orphan years prior. And as a result believes that all Princesses are evil and oppressing the people of Etheria. Adora is a protege in her squadron and is promoted to Force Captain during the series' premiere episode with a pending active duty assignment ahead of her colleagues. Her world view greatly changed during events that resulted in her finding the Sword of Protection and being captured by two rebels, Princess Glimmer and her best friend Bow. Though her captors opened her eyes to the truth of the Horde's actions, Adora only joined the Rebellion as the second She-Ra in recorded Etherian history upon witnessing the Horde's atrocities firsthand during the Battle at Thaymor. After her defection, she struggled in both mastering her powers as She-Ra and gradually winning the friendship of those in the Princess Rebellion who were slow to trust her. These adjustments proved very difficult for Adora as she caused a rift between her and Catra, her former best friend and rival in the Horde who saw Adora's defection as a personal betrayal. Throughout the series, it was hinted that Adora and Catra harbored romantic feelings for each other. This was confirmed in the series finale episode "Heart - Part 2", in which the two mutually confessed their love for each other and kissed, allowing Adora to channel her powers and save Etheria from the alien menace known as Horde Prime.

Powers, abilities and appearance

Compared to the original version of the character, Adora has a much younger appearance, only becoming considerably taller as She-Ra (8-Feet instead of her usual 5 ft 6). In addition, She-Ra's costume is much more practical in this incarnation; she wears a full tunic that covers her upper torso with metallic epaulets while wearing bike-short type leggings under her skirt. She now wears practical armored boots with flat soles. In the season 1 finale, She-Ra wears a golden battle armour very similar to when her 2002 twin brother He-Man wears a snake armour in his Season 2.[19]

In the second season She-Ra uses a new power discovered in her sword, which can transform it into any kind of weapon or piece of equipment. But her control over the transformations is not perfect.

After destroying the Sword of Protection in the season 4 finale, Adora couldn't transform until halfway through season 5, after which she gained a new unnamed appearance for She-Ra (the fandom dubbed it She-Ra 2.0): she wore her long golden hair in a regular ponytail that reached down to her back, wore a different diadem/headpiece with smaller wings, white pants with golden bracelets for her thighs and longer golden arm bands while the sword became a mystic projection that turns into a slimmed-down battle blade.

Reception

On Rotten Tomatoes, the first season of the show received the approval rating of 100% based on 24 reviews. In 2019, the show was nominated to three TV-Show awards.[20][21][22] In 2020, the animated series was nominated to five TV-Show awards.[23][24][25] It won an Emmy in the category Outstanding Daytime Promotional Announcement - Network or Program.[26]

In other media

Masters of the Universe film (1987)

She-Ra was originally intended to appear in Masters of the Universe and concept art by production designer William Stout was even commissioned, but director Gary Goddard felt it would be best to concentrate on He-Man for the first film. (It would be the only film.) [27][28] She-Ra was planned to appear in the sequel; the sequel film was cancelled and rewritten into Cyborg, with She-Ra's equivalent character, Nady Simmons, portrayed by Deborah Richter.

Masters of the Universe Classics (2008–2015)

She-Ra appears in the Mattel Masters of the Universe toyline launched in 2008, which attempts to create a new canon by merging selected portions of existing media together with new story elements. The story is told via a combination of mini-comics packaged with the action figures and the biographies printed on the toy packaging.

In this version of events, Hordak arrived on Etheria after being trapped in the dimension of Despondos by King Grayskull. His apprentice Skeletor kidnaps Adora and sends her to Etheria. After being raised by the Horde and becoming She-Ra (as in the cartoon series), she eventually returns to Eternia with several of her friends and allies, to help He-Man defeat Hordak, who has overthrown King Randor and conquered the planet. She-Ra follows her brother into space on their New Adventures to the planet Primus, and together they battle the Horde Empire's ruler Horde Prime. At some point in the future, she would end up returning in the new, villainous persona of Despara.[29]

DC Comics (2012–present)

In December 2012, She-Ra appeared in her own DC Comics series as a lead-in to her introduction into the He-Man and the Masters of the Universe comic series.[30] Adora's introduction is an updated retelling of her classic origin story.[31] Although she was still kidnapped as a baby and raised by the Horde, Adora's personality and life are made much more violent and tragic when compared to her animated counterpart.

Rather than being a kind woman who has been under the mind control of Shadow Weaver, Despara (Adora's Horde name) is a brutal force captain who is fully aware of the Horde's cruel and evil nature and, although she has some reservations, serves them willingly. Rather than having already taken over the planet of Etheria, instead, Despara leads the Horde in taking over Eternia and driving He-Man, King Randor and the Masters into hiding so as to rebel against the Horde. Due to a connection between herself and Teela, Adora begins to break free of the Horde's will, and begins her journey into becoming She-Ra.

He-Man: The Most Powerful Game in the Universe (2012)

She-Ra appeared in the 2012 handheld video game He-Man: The Most Powerful Game in the Universe.[32]

References

  1. J. Michael Straczynski [@straczynski] (July 16, 2018). ""The original He-Man bible was written in large measure by Larry DiTillio; Larry and I later co-wrote the bible for the She-Ra series. Filmation, being Filmation, never wanted any credits on those docs so I don't know if they survive with or without the credits."" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  2. J. Michael Straczynski [@straczynski] (July 16, 2018). ""Larry and I created the character and her world (after Filmation/Mattel named her She-Ra)..."" (Tweet) via Twitter.
  3. Baer, Brian C. (7 March 2017). How He-Man Mastered the Universe: Toy to Television to the Big Screen. McFarland. ISBN 9781476665900. Retrieved 15 November 2018 via Google Books.
  4. Hiltzik, Michael A. (1985-02-17). "Licensing Plays a Growing, Risky Role in Toy Business". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-11-17.
  5. "Remembering She-Ra and He-Man: Interview with Lou Scheimer". Animation World Network. Retrieved 2009-10-02.
  6. "By The Power of Grayskull: HE-MAN ART Show!". Newsarama. Retrieved 2010-02-02.
  7. "MOTU Chronicles Podcast Episode 9 (Larry DiTillio interview)". iTunes. Retrieved 2010-09-05.
  8. She-ra shows that woman can be fighters to "The Best of She-Ra: Princess of Power Review". IGN. 2006-08-03. Retrieved 2009-09-21.
  9. "Video: A He-Man for All Seasons". Time. 1985-01-07. Retrieved 2020-06-09.
  10. "The Best of She-Ra – Princess of Power". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2009-11-05.
  11. "A Psychedelic Stallion: MOTUC Swiftwind Review". MTV. Archived from the original on 2014-10-27. Retrieved 2020-06-09.
  12. Villarreal, Phil (August 4, 2006). "Phil Villarreal's Review: Still a surefire hit with 6-year-olds". Arizona Daily Star. Retrieved 2009-10-20.
  13. Boyd, Phoebe-Jane (29 December 2017). "She-Ra is the superhero needed to fight back against Marvel's male dominion – Phoebe-Jane Boyd". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 December 2017 via www.theguardian.com.
  14. "Was She-Ra A Feminist Superhero?". Jezebel. Retrieved 2016-08-02.
  15. "She-Ra and the Fight Against the Token Girl". Atlantic. Retrieved 2016-08-02.
  16. Claudia Mitchell; Jacqueline Reid-Walsh, eds. (30 December 2007). "She-Ra: Princess of Power". Girl Culture: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. p. 531. ISBN 978-0-313-33909-7. Retrieved 2015-03-04.
  17. Sherrie A. Inness, ed. (16 January 2004). ""It's a Girl Thing": Tough Female Action Figures in the Toy Store". Action Chicks: New Images of Tough Women in Popular Culture. Palgrave Macmillan US. p. 82. ISBN 978-1-4039-8124-0. Retrieved 2015-03-04.
  18. Derek Johnson (22 March 2013). Media Franchising: Creative License and Collaboration in the Culture Industries. NYU Press. p. 58. ISBN 978-0-8147-4389-8. Retrieved 2015-03-04.
  19. "She-Ra gets a makeover! A first look at the new Netflix series and meet the cast". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 18 May 2018.
  20. "'She-Ra and the Princesses of Power' Receives Emmy Nomination". Anime. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  21. Yang, Rachel (2019-01-25). "'Crazy Rich Asians,' 'The Favourite' Among GLAAD Media Award Nominees". Variety. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  22. "The 20th Annual Golden Trailer Award Winners". Golden Trailer Awards. 2019-05-30. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  23. Caruso, Ryan Schwartz,Nick; Schwartz, Ryan; Caruso, Nick (2019-12-08). "Critics' Choice Awards 2020: Fleabag, Watchmen, When They See Us, Unbelievable Among TV Nominees". TVLine. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  24. "Artios Awards: 'Succession,' 'Pose,' 'Dead to Me' Among Casting Society TV, Theater Nominees". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  25. "GLAAD Media Awards: 'Booksmart,' 'Bombshell,' 'Rocketman' Among Nominees". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  26. "2020 Daytime Emmy Awards: The winners". USA TODAY. Retrieved 2020-07-12.
  27. Sawyer, James (February 24, 2010). "Q & A With Director Gary Goddard!". MOTU Movie.
  28. Sawyer, James (June 29, 2010). "Q & A With Production Designer William Stout". MOTU Movie.
  29. "She-Ra™ Figure". Mattycollector.com. 2011-07-15. Retrieved 2012-09-26.
  30. "It's She-Ra 2.0: The dramatic beginning". CNN. Retrieved 2012-12-14.
  31. "Abnett Preps She-Ra's Return in More Grown-Up "Masters of the Universe" – Comic Book Resources". CBR. 2014-05-06. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
  32. "New Update Introduces She-Ra To 'He-Man: The Most Powerful Game in the Universe'!". MTV. Retrieved 2020-06-09.

Further reading

  • Andrade, Jessica. (2003) “The Gender Politics of Female Action Heroes in Television and Films.” Bachelor's thesis, University of Washington
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