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Adventures of Superman premiered on September 19th, 1952. The film Superman and the Mole-Men, released a year before the TV show, served as an hour-long pilot for the half-hour series. Though Adventures of Superman kept Kal-El’s origin and his alter ego Clark Kent the same as they were in the comics, the storylines were all original storylines derived by the show’s writers, rather than adaptations of the comics Superman appeared in. The show revolved around a four-person ensemble made up of Reeves’ Superman/Clark Kent, along with his Daily Planet colleagues Lois Lane, Jimmy Olsen, and Perry White (John Hamilton). The vast majority of the crimes Superman fought in Adventures of Superman were “street-level” โ given the show’s budget, episodic nature, and the limitations of visual effects back in the ’50s, Superman wasn’t facing off against Lex Luthor and stopping dimensional rifts like he did in James Gunn’s film this summer.
Reeves Played a Calm & Collected Hero

While actors like Christopher Reeve and David Corenswet make Clark Kent and Superman feel like two completely different characters on screen, George Reeves played Superman’s civilian identity as a capable reporter. His Clark Kent didn’t bumble and trip over his own shoes; rather, he was a serious, driven journalist who still maintained an approachable affability, much like Tom Welling‘s Clark Kent on Smallville. His Superman was similarly determined and rational, and given that Reeves was in his late 30s when he was cast as the hero, he imbued the Man of Steel with a paternal or teacherly warmth that was embraced by the many, many children who watched the series over its six seasons.









