

TOP 50 MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS EPISODES SERIES
The three appeared alongside each other in over a dozen episodes of "Power Rangers in Space" in 1998 and reunited briefly in the follow-up series "Power Rangers Lost Galaxy." In terms of feature films, Banning plied his trade in comedies like "Playing for Keeps" and "That's Adequate," but he was best known for his turn as a hot dog vendor in the Chuck Norris action flick "Top Dog."įrazier's career began in the 1960s when he began cutting his teeth in the theater. His introduction coincided with a new direction for Bulk and Skull, who were known for their madcap antics before they became the straight arrows to the alien-obsessed professor.
TOP 50 MIGHTY MORPHIN POWER RANGERS EPISODES TV
He later showed up in TV shows like "Renegade," "Silk Stalkings," "The Invisible Man," and "The Chronicle," but his biggest role was in "Power Rangers." Professor Phenomenus Ingenious first appeared in the third episode of "Power Rangers in Space," becoming the new foil to the hapless bully duo Bulk (Paul Schrier) and Skull (Jason Narvy). Udonna's husband died fighting them, and she was determined to put them back where they belonged, recruiting a new team of Rangers to help her in her quest.īorn Jacob Becker, Banning first appeared onscreen in a 1974 episode of "Apple's Way," a short-lived CBS sitcom. She learned magic from the Mystic Mother (the reformed Rita Repulsa) and put those skills to use when the Morlocks (the main villains in the "Power Rangers Mystic Force" series) broke free. She wasn't exactly prolific in terms of television, either, but Rutter was beloved by fans of "Power Rangers Mystic Force," acting as a badass mentor for the young Mystic Rangers. She returned to the big screen in 1992 with a role in the comedy "The Footstep Man," a film about a sound technician, but yet another decade would pass before she was seen in another movie - 2002's "This Is Not a Love Story." She took a lengthy break from acting after that, not appearing onscreen for a decade. It was released to positive reviews and still holds up well to this day, with a solid 80% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.

Rutter got her start in the 1981 film "Strange Behavior," an Illinois-set slasher that paid homage to the pulp horror films of the 1950s.
