Eddie Jones who played Superman’s Earth father Jonathan Kent in Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman has passed away. His death was announced on the Facebook page of the Interact Theatre Company.
“Our treasured longtime member, dear friend and trusted colleague, Eddie Jones, passed away today,” they wrote on a post dated July 6.
“Eddie was a true pillar of our company from its earliest days. An actor of keen wit and sharp instinct, when Eddie was on stage, you couldn’t take your eyes off him. When he was off-stage, his broad, bright smile would light up the room. Everyone who knew Eddie as a friend, or had the good fortune to share the stage with him, was touched by his gentle and generous nature. He will be deeply missed by all. ITC extends its deepest condolences to his dear, devoted wife Anita Khanzadian Jones, and extended family. May flights of angels sing thee to thy rest, Eddie,” they continued.
An actor whose other credits include the Invisible Man TV series and A League of Their Own, Jones did theater work for 45 years. He was born in 1937 in Washington, Pennsylvania. As Jonathan Kent opposite K Callan’s Martha and Dean Cain’s Clark, Eddie offered fatherly advice to a Man of Steel who navigated his new role as a superhero with his job and eventual romance at the Daily Planet with Teri Hatcher’s Lois Lane. Eddie Jones was a series regular for Lois & Clark for all four seasons of the series. Jones is the second major actor from Lois & Clark to pass away; Lane Smith, who played Perry White, died in 2005.
Eddie Jones is survived by his wife, director Anita Khanzadian-Jones, who he married in 1991. He is also remembered by a generation of fans who looked at his important role in Superman television history. He will most certainly be missed.
One of the highlights of the second season of Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman was “Tempus Fugitive” which saw Lane Davies as a time-traveling villain intent on killing Superman. Along the way, his character became the first to tell Lois Lane that “hello, duh… Clark Kent is Superman!” Of course, due to time travel shenanigans this was forgotten, though Lois figures it out a few episodes later anyway.
There is a piece of Lois & Clark trivia that we had not known before, though: Former Superman Christopher Reeve was the first actor offered the role of the sardonic Tempus! This would have filmed several months prior to his horse-riding accident. Larry Drake from L.A. Law was also considered at one point.
The revelation came out on the Comic Book Central podcast which Lane Davies guested on a while back and only just now caught our attention. Also revealed in the podcast: Lane Davies had auditioned for Lex Luthor, and — perhaps unsurprisingly — he and John de Lancie (Star Trek: The Next Generation’s “Q”) often would audition for the same roles! Where was our Q/Tempus crossover?
You can listen to the entire podcast here, in which Lane Davies reflects about his own career but more specifically, Lois & Clark and the several episodes he appeared in, working with two different H.G. Wells and Making America Great Again as “John Doe” decades before an orange criminal made it his catchphrase. He’s even asked what he would think Tempus would do if he made an appearance on Superman & Lois!
You might not need a MAX subscription to see some of the best Superman-related TV series and movies.
Variety broke the news today that Tubi is now streaming the first two Superman movies with Christopher Reeve as well as the two seasons of Krypton which starred Cameron Cuffe… and coming at the end of December, they are adding Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman TV show featuring Teri Hatcher.
(Before you ask: Smallville is still on Hulu!)
In addition to those productions, several DC animated movies will be streaming on Tubi as well as series such as Gotham and Batwoman. Several of the DC movies of recent years including The Batman, Wonder Woman, Suicide Squad, and Aquaman will also be available. There’s also the time Warner Bros. produced a Marvel show: Blade: The Series, which featured some episodes by Geoff Johns, is also coming to Tubi.
Tubi streaming is ad-supported, so there will be ads, but thankfully, it’s a considerably lighter add than The CW app which shows those irritating ForHers commercials 18 times repeatedly within an hour. You can find Tubi at tubi.com.
It was a love triangle built for two. And while most are celebrating the anniversary of the premiere of The X-Files this week, it’s not the only show to hit a big 30 year milestone. Yes, Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman premiered 30 years ago today (September 12), and hitting that big number is bringing up a lot of memories for this writer.
Developed by Deborah Joy LeVine, Lois & Clark focused on… well, Lois and Clark… even moreso than his costumed alter ego of Superman, who still appears. The two-hour pilot episode which aired on September 22, 1993 is to this day one of my favorite Superman “movies;” one thing that makes it special is that this Clark Kent is a good guy even before he puts on tights and a cape. Dean Cain played Clark with a worldly earnestness that could both attract and annoy Lois simultaneously. Teri Hatcher as Lois Lane was walking proof of why Clark Kent would fall for her so quickly. She was feisty, determined, and brilliant.
I was a teenager when Lois & Clark hit the air in 1993. It premiered the same night as NBC’s heavily-promoted seaQuest DSV from Steven Spielberg, and back in those days, there was no DVR and no later streaming so I had to watch one and tape the other. Sadly, I taped seaQuest, which meant I wouldn’t get to see the Lois & Clark pilot again until repeats much later. At school, my TV Production teacher loved the show and we’d often talk about it. My 11th grade English teacher scared me, telling me he thought Lois & Clark was going to be cancelled at the end of the season. Fortunately, it wasn’t, but in the pre-Internet age, I had no way of knowing, and I remember watching the Season 1 finale with the thought that it could possibly be the last. Imagine being in the pre-spoiler era and seeing that cliffhanger at the end of “Barbarians at the Planet!”
There were some changes as Season 2 began. Deborah Joy LeVine was out, and the Daily Planet set was refurbished. The Season 2 premiere makes a joke about e-mail as if it’s a thing Lois Lane has never heard of. The Season 2 premiere “Madame Ex” aired on the first night I was ever on the Internet… and I remember how all of us on the Prodigy message boards for the show had some questions. “Where’s Cat? Where’s Jack? Where’s the real Jimmy?” (Justin Whalin replaced Michael Landes for Season 2 onward. Eventually, we all came to accept and love him. We also gave a name to his black and white checkered shirt – “Ned.”) Season 2 started a little rough, but by “Season’s Greedings” (penned by Dean Cain himself), the magic was back. Later episodes in Season 2 finally got the lead characters together, and we got to meet such fun characters as Dr. Friskin (Lois’ therapist) and the sarcastic and witty time traveler “Tempus” who was accompanied by H.G. Wells.
By the end of Season 2, there were several places for FoLCs – or Fans of Lois & Clark – to congregate. It was around that time that a friend and I launched the “Krypton Club Newsletter,” an online mailing list and newsletter that ultimately led to the website you are reading now. An issue of the newsletter even went out the night that I graduated from high school. Elsewhere, a photo of Teri Hatcher wrapped in Superman’s cape was the most downloaded photo on the Internet once upon a time! Fans gathered on places such as AOL message boards as well as an IRC channel called #loiscla. (I acknowledge that most readers don’t recall what IRC even is.)
The summer between Seasons 2 and 3 was brutal. In the Season 2 finale, “And The Answer Is…,” Clark proposed to Lois, even though they hadn’t been dating very long by that point. We had to wait four months for the Season 3 premiere “We Have A Lot To Talk About” to find out what would happen next. Well… some of us did. One Krypton Club subscriber managed to get us an unfinished copy of the season premiere a month early. We then were going into the AOL chat room for the show and started reciting dialogue, and no one knew that what we were sharing was for real. Shhh. There was a FoLCFest where fans gathered; I didn’t attend that, but I did visit the studio with some friends and took a studio tour in the summer of 1995, where we were able to meet Dean Cain and Justin Whalin, and our poor tour guide is said to have gotten in big trouble for allowing us to stop and talk to them. Later in Season 3, I interviewed Executive Producer Brad Buckner for the Krypton Club Newsletter, and he invited my friends and I to hang out on the set and see some filming! The episode was “It’s A Small World After All” and it was so great to see a Lois who remembers who she is (more on that in a moment). I got to walk by in a scene, but none of my takes were used. We were able to meet the other cast members that we hadn’t met before, though we waited for the end of the to approach Teri so we wouldn’t bother her.
And about Lois remembering… Season 3 is when Lois & Clark pulled a bait and switch that the audience never really forgave the show for. In February, Lois and Clark were going to be married. Ads for the episode promoted them as if they were the best marriage since Michael & Lisa Marie, Charles & Di, Burt & Loni… all couples who had recently divorced… but those weren’t enough clues. When audiences saw what was really going on, they were mad, and it didn’t help that the clone/amnesia arc ran for about two months once reruns were factored in.
Season 4 got the characters actually married fast, but the damage was done. Even though Warner Bros. and ABC had made a deal to renew the show for Season 5, they renegotiated, and instead the network picked up a season of a different short-lived series. There was talk about TNT picking up some new episodes to get to the magic number of 100, but with Teri getting pregnant and other factors getting in the way, it was never meant to be. Some of us, as fans, wrote our own “fifth seasons” in fanfiction form. That was a lot of fun to do, and ours, at least, came out on Sunday nights just like new episodes of the series would have.
Lois & Clark was also a special series to me as it was one my father and I would watch together every week. Sadly, he passed away on May 26, 1997… only a few days after it was announced that the show was canceled. At the time, I was a bit relieved, not really wanting to be in a world where I’d be watching without him. Selfish, perhaps… but those final three episodes that ABC burned off in the summer weren’t the same without my Dad to watch with me.
I made lifelong friends from Lois & Clark, some of whom I still speak to on a regular basis. (A special shoutout goes to my friend Kat!) Fandom was much different in the pre-social media era. In many ways, it was good in that you gathered fans who all loved the same thing, and this show was special in that everyone was pretty much agreed on the preferred relationship in the series – it was in the title, and no one was shipping Lois & Dan “Plunger Boy” Scardino or something. Things did get a little less fun in Season 4 when a certain group of fans over-moderated the “WBTV forums” at the time, which is something I tried to avoid with the KryptonSite forums, not always successfully.
Dean and Teri would both guest star on Smallville and appear in multiple episodes of Supergirl, even both appearing in the same episode but not crossing paths. They say they’d like to do a reunion but I believe that about as much as I believe the Smallville animated show will actually happen. But, today belongs to the memory of the show that was – Lois & Clark… a fantastic series.
Want five episodes to check out? It’s nearly impossible to pick just five, but here we go: “Pilot” (Season 1) – “The Green, Green Glow of Home” (Season 1) – “The House of Luthor” (Season 1) – “Tempus Fugitive” (Season 2) – “We Have A Lot To Talk About” (Season 3). All are available on the MAX streaming service!