Wilma Deering
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Wilma Deering is a fictional character featured in the various iterations of Buck Rogers which have spanned many media over the years.
Through all the versions of Buck Rogers, Wilma Deering has maintained some clear characteristics. She is a sometimes romantic interest for Buck, always a loyal defender of Earth, and an attractive and smart woman. She is generally depicted as having a spunky attitude and a penchant for getting herself into trouble. As with other science fiction heroines from the pulp sf genre and others, she has sometimes been depicted as a damsel in distress but mostly as an assertive adventurer in her own right. In this way, her character resembles that of Dale Arden of the Flash Gordon comic books and movie serials, and also the character of Lois Lane from Superman.
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[edit] Pulp Origins
Wilma Deering appears in the very first Buck Rogers story, Armageddon 2419 A.D., and the basic elements are present. She is depicted as adventurous, heroic and beautiful, and of course a romantic interest for the hero.
[edit] Comic Strip
Wilma features in the Buck Rogers comic strip from very early on, as she is one of the first people of Earth to meet Buck when he awakens in the 25th century. Depicted from the start as a love interest, Wilma is initially almost a stock character heroine just as Dr. Huer is a stock "brainy scientist." Her character does develop over time, however, into the more familiar spunky adventurer.
[edit] 1939 Serial
The character of Wilma Deering was of course featured in the 1939 Buck Rogers movie serial which starred Buster Crabbe. The role of Wilma was played by Constance Moore, in what would come to be her first highly recognized film role. In the serial, Buck Rogers and Buddy Wade awake in the 25th century to find out that the world has been taken over by the outlaw army of Killer Kane. Along with Wilma Deering, who is a Lieutenant in this incarnation, Buck and Buddy join in the fight to overthrow Kane with the help of Prince Tallen of Saturn and his forces. In this serial, Wilma is essentially the faithful sidekick, and her relationship with Dr. Huer is akin to that of a daughter.
[edit] 1979 Movie and series
Colonel Wilma Deering was portrayed by popular actress/model Erin Gray in the made for TV movie and subsequent NBC television series Buck Rogers in the 25th Century. Initially, Wilma was depicted as a cold, emotionless soldier and pilot, with little interest in Captain Rogers. However, along with some of the changes made to the storyline to accommodate a weekly series, Wilma Deering's character became warmer and more playful. Often, it was Wilma that came to the rescue of Buck, as opposed to the other way round. Erin Gray has commented that her role as Colonel Deering was an inspiration for many women who watched the program, particularly with regard to careers in the military.
Revisions to the program in its second season changed Wilma from the central role of a Colonel directing Earth's space defense, to more of a co-pilot role on the spaceship Searcher. This change was never entirely explained, but along with Buck and Twiki, hers was the only character viewed central enough to migrate to the revamped show.
Actress Juanin Clay was at one point tapped to play Col. Deering in the television series; however, she lost this role when Erin Gray decided to reprise her role from the original TV movie.
[edit] Buck Rogers XXV Roleplaying Game
The character of Wilma Deering in the Buck Rogers roleplaying game is a more dystopic figure, in keeping with the themes of the game.
In the role playing game Wilma is a native of the Chicagorg Arcology on Earth, and is described as an 8th level Terran warrior and a freedom fighter. Both her parents were killed by RAM, the evil organization that runs the corrupt Earth government in the game. Her biography indicates she was imprisoned for attacking RAM installations, and escaped later becoming a privateer. After several months, Wilma returned to Earth to officially join NEO, the rebel organization, and resumed her effort to free her home world from RAM.
This version of Wilma is a tall woman with strawberry blonde hair and an explosive temper, and once again is both a foil and love interest for Buck Rogers.
[edit] Buck Rogers: A life in the Future
Another incarnation of Wilma Deering appears in the 1995 novel Buck Rogers: A Life in the Future by Martin Caidin. This version of Deering is said to be a top pilot in the Space Corps, and continues the tradition of falling in love with the time-displaced test pilot, Buck Rogers.
[edit] External links
- Interview with Erin Gray on the podcast The Future And You (anecdotes about how she broke into Hollywood and how she feels about being remembered as Wilma Deering)