The series was officially picked up on May 6, 2015, after receiving a full series commitment in September 2014. Following a full season order on November 30, 2015, it transitioned to The CW for its second season going forward.
Kara Zor-El was sent toEarth fromKrypton as a 13-year-old by her parents,Zor-El andAlura. Kara was tasked with protecting her infant cousin,Kal-El, but her spacecraft was knocked off course and trapped in thePhantom Zone for 24 years. By the time her spacecraft crash-landed on Earth, Kal-El had already grown up and becomeSuperman. The series begins 12 years later, with Kara embracing her superhuman powers and adopting the superhero alias "Supergirl".[7]
Season 1
InSeason 1, Kara reveals her powers to become National City's protector.[8] She discovers that numerous criminals her mother imprisoned have escaped to Earth, including her auntAstra and her uncleNon. Kara works with her adoptive sisterAlex Danvers, theGreen MartianJ'onn J'onzz,James Olsen, and tech genius Winn Schott to fight these threats.
Season 2
InSeason 2, Kara and her allies face tensions between humans and extraterrestrials while investigatingProject Cadmus, run by Lillian Luthor,Lex Luthor's mother. Kara befriendsLena Luthor, Lillian's adoptive daughter, and navigates her romantic feelings forMon-El, a prince fromDaxam, Krypton's neighboring planet. Meanwhile, James becomes the vigilanteGuardian, Alex begins datingMaggie Sawyer, and J'onn forms a bond withM'gann M'orzz, aWhite Martian.
Season 3
InSeason 3, Kara grapples with Mon-El's departure, only for him to return from the 31st century, where he has founded theLegion and marriedImra Ardeen. J'onn reunites with his father,M'yrnn J'onzz, and Kara's new friend, Samantha Arias, unknowingly transforms into the world-killing weaponReign.
Season 4
InSeason 4, Kara confronts rising anti-alien sentiments fueled by Lex Luthor, who manipulatesBen Lockwood into forming a human-first group, the Children of Liberty, forcing her to fight against prejudice and for thecivil and political rights of aliens. Meanwhile, a Kara clone, dubbedRed Daughter, trains inKasnia to fight Supergirl at Lex's request. Tensions arise as Col. Lauren Haley joins the DEO, demanding that Supergirl reveal her identity, which she refuses to do.
Season 5
InSeason 5, Kara and her friends face a new threat,Leviathan, while adjusting to life on the newly created Earth-Prime following themultiverse-alteringCrisis on Infinite Earths. Kara also faces challenges working under Lex Luthor, as Leviathan continues their covert operations.
Season 6
InSeason 6, the final season, Lex seeks to continue the Anti-Monitor's work by conquering the multiverse and imprisons Kara in thePhantom Zone, where she discovers her father is also trapped. After being rescued, Kara and her team face the fifth-dimensional impNyxlygsptlnz, who escaped the Phantom Zone and seeks revenge on her father. Lex eventually allies with Nyxlygsptlnz, leading to the final showdown in the series.
Melissa Benoist stars as the series' titular character, Supergirl.
Melissa Benoist asKara Zor-El / Kara Danvers / Supergirl: AKryptonian living in National City, who must embrace her powers after previously hiding them. She assists her adoptive sister Alex as part of theDepartment of Extra-Normal Operations (DEO) as she discovered the truth that her adoptive father also worked for the DEO so they would not take her, while Alex's co-workers at the DEO help her perfect her powers.[7][9][10] Kara worked asCat Grant's assistant at CatCo.[11] Benoist expressed her excitement over portraying the character, and being able to "[tell] a story about a human being really realizing their potential and their strength".[12]Malina Weissman (seasons 1-2) andIzabela Vidovic (seasons 3-4 & 6) portray a young Kara.[13][14]
Mehcad Brooks asJames "Jimmy" Olsen /Guardian (seasons 1–5; guest: season 6): A formerDaily Planet photographer, James moved to National City and became the newart director for his former colleague, Cat Grant, at CatCo Worldwide Media. He is initially a potential love interest for Kara.[10][11][15] Among his reasons for moving across the country are his breakup with his fiancée, Lucy Lane,[16] and keeping an eye on the newly revealed Supergirl for Superman. While working at theDaily Planet, James received thePulitzer Prize for taking the first photograph of Superman. In the second season, James becomesGuardian.[17] In the fourth episode of season 5, James decides to leave National City to run his hometown newspaper. He returns in the series finale to assist the Superfriends in the final battle against Lex and Nyxly and attend Alex and Kelly's wedding.
Chyler Leigh asAlexandra "Alex" Danvers / Sentinel: Kara's human adoptive sister. She is a physician, bioengineer, scientist and government agent who serves as Hank Henshaw's right hand at the DEO.[11][18][19] She also meets and befriends police detective Maggie Sawyer and begins to develop feelings for her, forcing Alex to confront her sexuality. Jordan Mazarati and Olivia Nikkanen portray a young Alex.[20][14]
Jeremy Jordan asWinslow "Winn" Schott Jr. / Toyman (seasons 1–3; guest: seasons 5–6): A tech expert who worked alongside Kara at CatCo, he is Kara's best friend and serves as one of her allies, helping her develop her costume and aiding her in her adventures. Winn has unrequited feelings for Kara and is a rival with James for her affection.
David Harewood asJ'onn J'onzz / Martian Manhunter: The head of the DEO who takesHank Henshaw's likeness after Henshaw is killed in Peru while hunting J'onn. J'onn takes Henshaw's likeness to reform the DEO from within as well as to watch over Alex and Kara.[11][18] The evolution of Henshaw was discussed during the filming of the pilot, with the executive producers jokingly saying that Harewood would be a good actor to play the Martian Manhunter in a potential television series, to whichDC Comics'Geoff Johns asked why it could not be done inSupergirl. Harewood reflected that he had difficulty "find[ing] an angle to play Hank Henshaw" in the pilot, and became excited when he was told about the change to his character's backstory.[21] Harewood also recurred in the series as the real Hank Henshaw, who becameCyborg Superman.[22]
Calista Flockhart asCatherine J. "Cat" Grant (season 1; guest: seasons 2–3 & 6): The outwardly shallow and superficial, but inwardly sweet, founder of the media conglomerate CatCo Worldwide Media, who feels, since she "branded" Kara as "Supergirl", that she has proprietary custody over the new hero.[11][23]
Chris Wood asMon-El / Mike Matthews (seasons 2–3; guest: seasons 5–6): A prince from the planetDaxam with similar powers to Superman and Supergirl, Mon-El lands on Earth in the pod at the end of season one.[24][25][26]
Floriana Lima asMargarita "Maggie" Sawyer (season 2; recurring: season 3): A detective for the National City Police Department who takes a special interest in the cases involving aliens and metahumans.[27] The first openly gay character introduced, Maggie dates Alex Danvers, even becoming engaged. However, this is broken off. Lima became a recurring actress for the third season, departing in the season's fifth episode. Lima noted the role was only intended to last for one season.[28]
Katie McGrath asLena Kieran Luthor (seasons 3–6; recurring: season 2):[29] The CEO of L-Corp (formerly known as Luthor Corp) and the younger paternal half-sister ofLex Luthor. Camille Marty portrays a young Lena.[30]
Odette Annable asSamantha "Sam" Arias / Reign (season 3; guest: season 5): Another Kryptonian sent to Earth as an infant and single mother to her daughter Ruby. Samantha's villainous alternate personality, Reign, emerges in the middle of season 3, but she is unaware of it and her alter ego's actions.[31][32]
Sam Witwer asBenjamin Lockwood / Agent Liberty (season 4; guest: season 5): The brilliant, ruthless, and terrifying founder and figurehead of Children of Liberty, a human-supremacist hate group that supports a human-first world order.[34]
Nicole Maines asNia Nal / Dreamer (seasons 4–6): A soulful youngtransgender woman with a fierce drive to protect others and the newest addition to the CatCo reporting team. The character is the first transgender superhero on television.[35]
April Parker Jones as Colonel Lauren Haley (season 4): A hardline career military woman who lives and dies by the orders of her commanding officers. Dedicated to her country, she always acts in its best interest — even if it's not her own.[35]
Azie Tesfai as Kelly Olsen (seasons 5–6; recurring: season 4): James's younger, no-nonsense sister, recently returned to the United States following a military tour overseas.
Andrea Brooks asEve Teschmacher (season 5; recurring: seasons 2–4; guest: season 6): A former CatCo assistant who became part of Lena's research team at L-Corp before being revealed as a dastardly turncoat spy working forLex Luthor.
Julie Gonzalo asAndrea Rojas / Acrata (seasons 5–6): A CEO of Obsidian Tech who is the new editor-in-chief of Catco Worldwide Media and an old friend of Lena Luthor.
Staz Nair as William Dey (seasons 5–6): A new star reporter at Catco Worldwide Media who is secretly remains under the London Times newspapers' employ and undercover to investigates Andrea Rojas, suspecting that she is a criminal.
LaMonica Garrett asMar Novu / Monitor (season 5; guest: season 4): A multiversal being testing different Earths in the multiverse in preparation for an impending "crisis", providing the Book of Destiny to John Deegan, releasing J'onn J'onzz'sbrother, and retrieving the corpse ofLex Luthor. He made his first appearance in the Arrowverse crossover "Elseworlds".
Garrett also portraysMobius / Anti-Monitor, the Monitor's polar opposite, an evil being dedicated to ending the multiverse.[36][37]
Peta Sergeant as Nyxlygsptlnz "Nyxly" (season 6): A 5th Dimension Imp princess who Kara meets in the Phantom Zone, who desires revenge on her father for banishing her and killing her brother, and is willing to do whatever is necessary to get it.[38]
Berlanti cited inspiration from actressGinger Rogers for the character's portrayal, a concept that resonated with executive producer Schechter.[40][41]
On September 20, 2014,CBS committed to the series, planning a premiere for the2015–16 television schedule. In January 2015, CBS Entertainment chairwomanNina Tassler described the series as aprocedural drama blending serialized arcs with crime-solving elements.[42]
Adler noted thatSuperman's role would be minimal to maintain focus on Supergirl. In November 2015, CBS ordered seven more episodes, bringing the total forSeason 1 to 20.[50][51]
On May 12, 2016, it was announced that the series would move toThe CW forSeason 2, premiering in October 2016.[52][53][54]
Concerns were raised aboutCalista Flockhart's availability, as her contract required filming inLos Angeles; she eventually returned in a recurring capacity.[55][56]
The series was renewed forSeason 3 in January 2017, with Jessica Queller andRobert Rovner taking over as co-showrunners.[57][58][59]
Supergirl's design was intended to be a modern take on the classic look of the character.
The original Supergirl costume was designed byColleen Atwood, who previously worked onArrow andThe Flash. Atwood aimed to "embrace the past" while modernizing the look.[42]
Melissa Benoist noted the costume’s short skirt as daunting but accepted it as part of the challenge.[12][67]
The design featured a high-neck top, pleated skirt, tights, and boots, with practical elements like a cape fastened to an undersuit and Eurojersey fabric.[21][68][69]
Reception was mixed. Natalie Abrams ofEntertainment Weekly praised the modern update and the more covered look, whileScreen Rant’s Andrew Dyce applauded the nostalgic elements.[70][71][72]
Conversely,E! Online andTV Guide criticized the outfit for its colors and resemblance to a Halloween costume.[73][74]
In thefifth season, Supergirl’s costume was redesigned to feature pants, a practical departure from the skirt.[75]
The show had an estimated production cost of $3 million per episode, among the highest for a freshman series.[80][52]
InSeason 2, production moved toVancouver to cut costs, with filming beginning July 25, 2016, and ending April 26, 2017.[52]
"When I was a child, my planet, Krypton, was dying. I was sent to Earth to protect my cousin. But my pod got knocked off-course, and by the time I got here, my cousin had already grown up to become... Superman. And so, I hid my powers, until recently when an accident forced me to reveal myself to the world. To most people, I am an assistant at CatCo Worldwide Media. But in secret, I work with my adoptive sister for the D.E.O. to protect my city from alien life and anyone else that means to cause harm. I am Supergirl!"
- Opening monologue from the first season.
Vancouver remained the filming base through the final season, with scenes shot throughout the city to depict National City.[81]
Review aggregation websiteRotten Tomatoes gave the first season ofSupergirl a 92% approval rating from critics, with an average rating of 7.53/10, based on 72 reviews. The site's consensus states: "Melissa Benoist shines asSuperman's plucky little cousin inSupergirl, a family-friendly comic-book adaptation that ditches cynicism for heart."[90]Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, reported "generally favorable reviews" with an assigned score of 75 out of 100, based on reviews from 38 critics.[91] Cliff Wheatley ofIGN gave the pilot episode a 7/10, praising Benoist's performance as Kara and the fun take on the Superman mythos.[98]
Rotten Tomatoes gave the second season a 92% approval rating from critics with an average rating of 7.88/10, based on 20 reviews. The site's consensus reads: "The arrival of the more famous cousin inSupergirl does nothing to detract from the show's lead, who continues to deliver strength, action, and relatability."[92] Metacritic reported "universal acclaim" with an assigned score of 81 out of 100, based on reviews from 4 critics.[93]
The third season holds a 78% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 15 reviews, with an average rating of 6.9/10. The critical consensus states: "Heavier themes lead to higher stakes, butSupergirl gives its eponymous heroine and her fellow supers plenty of room for growth, creating a well-balanced, engaging third season."[94]
The fourth season reports an 87% approval rating, with an average rating of 7.27/10 based on 7 reviews. The website's critic consensus reads: "Though it's a little tonally inconsistent,Supergirl's fourth season still soars thanks to strong, relevant writing brought to life by its charming cast."[95] The bookAdapting Superman: Essays on the Transmedia Man of Steel includes a chapter titled "Forging Kryptonite: Lex Luthor's Xenophobia as Societal Fracturing, fromBatman v Superman toSupergirl," which analyzes Lex Luthor's actions in Season 4 as "a representation exploring the cultural effects of encroaching xenophobia" from society to the family, reflecting the years following the 2016 United States presidential election.[99] In addition to making parallels of the political climate,[100][101] Phil Baker bears a similar likeness ofDonald Trump, who was the 45th President of the United States at the time of season 4's airing, and even quotes him a few times.[102]
Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gave the fifth season ofSupergirl an 92% approval rating from critics, with an average rating of 7.0/10, based on 8 reviews. The site's consensus states: "WhileSupergirl’s fifth season suffers from too many plot threads, it still delivers the heart, action, and timely storytelling fans expect from the series."[103]
For the sixth and final season, Rotten Tomatoes reported an 88% approval rating, with an average rating of 6.8/10, based on 6 reviews. The consensus reads: "In its final stretch,Supergirl struggles to juggle its many characters and subplots, but it still manages to close the story with an emotional and satisfying conclusion, led by Benoist's strong performance."[104]
In November 2014, Berlanti expressed interest inSupergirl existing in theArrowverse, the same universe as his other seriesArrow andThe Flash,[140][141] and in January 2015,The CW president Mark Pedowitz revealed that he was also open to a crossover between the series and networks (due to Berlanti executive producing all three and The CW being co-owned by CBS). However, CBS Entertainment chair Nina Tassler stated that month that "those two shows are on a different network. So I think we'll keepSupergirl to ourselves for a while."[142] In August 2015, Tassler revealed that while there were no plans at the time to do crossover storylines, the three series would have crossover promotions.[143]
Pedowitz regretted passing on the series when presented it in mid-2014, saying, "We hadn't launchedThe Flash yet, we weren't ready to take on another DC property. In hindsight we probably should've gone that direction...Sometimes you lose great shows."[144] In January 2016, during theTelevision Critics Association press tour, he said that The CW was still interested in a crossover withSupergirl if the producers could find a way to do it,[145] and Berlanti added that while no official conversations had taken place, internal ones had concerning how a crossover would work. He also noted that for a crossover to happen duringSupergirl's first season, it would have to be figured out "in the next month or so".[146] Glenn Geller, Tassler's successor at CBS, then stated on the matter, "I have to be really careful what I say here. Watch and wait and see what happens."[147]
On February 3, 2016, it was announced thatGrant Gustin, who appears asBarry Allen / Flash onThe Flash, would appear in the eighteenth episode of the first season, "Worlds Finest".[148] While no plot details on the episodes were released at the time, Ross A. Lincoln ofDeadline Hollywood noted that "the in-universe reason" for the crossover was due to Barry's ability to travel to various dimensions, thus implying thatSupergirl exists on an alternate Earth toArrow andThe Flash in a multiverse.[149]The Flash episode "Welcome to Earth-2" confirmed this, showing an image of Benoist as Supergirl during a sequence where characters travel through that multiverse.[150] The earth that the series inhabits is Earth-38 in the Arrowverse multiverse,[151] and has been informally referred to as "Earth-CBS" byMarc Guggenheim, one of the creators ofArrow.[152]
During the second season, Supergirl appears in "Invasion!", a crossover episode ofThe Flash,Arrow andLegends of Tomorrow,[152][153] when she's recruited by Barry Allen and Cisco Ramon at the end of "Medusa" to help fight off an invasion by theDominators.[154]Supergirl andThe Flash also featured in a musical crossover, featuring several covers of existing songs along with two original numbers.[26] Similar to "Invasion!", the crossover begins at the end of theSupergirl episode "Star-Crossed" and primarily takes place duringThe Flash episode "Duet", featuring theMusic Meister as the antagonist who puts both The Flash and Supergirl in a shared hallucination.[155] After "Invasion!", Guggenheim felt "If there's an appetite for it from the fans and from the network," the crossover next year could be "a proper four-part crossover."[156]
At the 2017Paleyfest event, Kreisberg reiterated the creative team's intention to do a full four-way crossover the following year.[157] AtSan Diego Comic Con in 2017, it was confirmed that another four-way crossover would take place, with Supergirl playing a larger role than the previous season. The four-way crossover event, titled "Crisis on Earth-X", took place on November 27 and 28, 2017, acrossSupergirl andArrow (on the first night) andThe Flash andLegends of Tomorrow (on the second night).[158][159]
In May 2018,Arrow starStephen Amell announced at The CWupfronts that the nextArrowverse crossover would featureBatwoman andGotham City. The crossover, titled "Elseworlds", aired in December 2018, ahead of a potential 2019 solo series for the character.[160][161]Supergirl was confirmed to have a participating episode in August, which closed out the three-part crossover, trading nights withThe Flash just for the event. Therefore, the show's participating episode aired on Tuesday, December 11.[162] The end of "Elseworlds" teased the next crossover event, "Crisis on Infinite Earths".[163]Supergirl's episode opened the five-part crossover on December 8, 2019, with the final two installments airing on January 14, 2020.[164] At the end of the event, the new Earth-Prime was formed, which saw Earth-38 merged with the former Earth-1 andBlack Lightning's earth, creating a fictional universe where all of the CW series exist together.[165]
In October 2019, The CW and Warner Bros. Television announced development on a spin-off series titledSuperman & Lois, withTyler Hoechlin andElizabeth Tulloch reprising their roles as Clark Kent / Superman and Lois Lane.[166] In January 2020,Superman & Lois was ordered to series.[167] The series premiered on February 23, 2021.[168][169] Originally presented as being set in the same continuity asSupergirl, the series was retroactively established to be set in an adjacent universe to the Arrowverse in its second season finale.[170]
In July 2015, a four-page preview comic entitledSister Act, written byAli Adler,Greg Berlanti andAndrew Kreisberg was released digitally online, and then a day later in the September 2015 issue ofTV Guide.[171]
Adventures of Supergirl: Beginning in January 2016, DC Comics launched a 13-issue bi-weekly digital comic (6 in print). Written bySterling Gates and drawn by a rotating team of artist including Bengal, Jonboy Meyers, Emanuela Lupacchino, and Emma Vieceli, the comic, while not directly tying into the show, tells stories set in the universe of the show.[172] The digital series was collected in print as a six-issue series published twice a month from May to July 2016,[173] and as a complete graphic novel in September of that year.[174]
They are also involved in theEarth-Prime miniseries launched in April 2022.[175]
Adventures of Supergirl (2016-09-21[176]): Includes Adventures of Supergirl #1-6.
In November 2017,Abrams Books began publishing a new trilogy ofSupergirl novels, written byJo Whittemore, aimed at middle-grade readers in tandem with a similar trilogy ofThe Flash novels.[177] The first,Supergirl: Age of Atlantis, was released on November 7, 2017, and features Supergirl dealing with a surge of new powered people in National City, as well as a mysterious humanoid sea creature captured by the DEO who is seemingly attracted by the new superpowered people.[178] A sequel,Supergirl: Curse of the Ancients, was released on May 1, 2018,[179] with a third novel, titledSupergirl: Master of Illusion, released on January 8, 2019.[180]
A guidebook for the series, published by Abrams, was released on March 12, 2019.Supergirl: The Secret Files of Kara Danvers: The Ultimate Guide to the Hit TV Show features "detailed profiles on characters and super powers, a heroes and villains gallery, episode guide, and more" from the first three seasons of the series.[181]
The video gameLego DC Super-Villains features DLC inspired bySupergirl in the "DC Super Heroes: TV Series DLC Character Pack". The DLC pack includes Supergirl as a playable character.[182]
^Adapting Superman : essays on the transmedia man of steel. John Darowski. Jefferson, North Carolina. 2021.ISBN978-1-4766-4239-0.OCLC1255711171.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
^Whittemore, Jo (November 7, 2017).Supergirl: Age of Atlantis. Harry N. Abrams.ISBN978-1419728143.
^Whittemore, Jo (May 2018).Supergirl: Curse of the Ancients. Harry N. Abrams.ISBN978-1419728662.
^Whittemore, Jo (January 8, 2019).Supergirl: Master of Illusion. Harry N. Abrams.ISBN978-1419731426.
^Brothers, Warner (March 12, 2019).Amazon.com: Supergirl: The Secret Files of Kara Danvers: The Ultimate Guide to the Hit TV Show (9781419731709): Warner Brothers: Books. Harry N. Abrams.ISBN978-1419731709.