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Mad Hatter (DC Comics)

The Mad Hatter (Jervis Tetch) is a supervillain appearing in comic books published by DC Comics, commonly as an adversary of the superhero Batman. He is modeled after the Hatter from Lewis Carroll's novel Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, a character often called the "Mad Hatter" in adaptations of Carroll.[1] He is also a scientist who invents and uses technological mind control devices to influence and manipulate the minds of his victims. He is one of Batman's most enduring enemies and belongs to the collective of adversaries that make up Batman's rogues gallery.[2]

Mad Hatter
Mad Hatter on the cover of Gotham Central #20 (August 2004)
Art by Michael Lark
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceBatman #49 (October 1948)
Created byBill Finger (writer)
Lew Sayre Schwartz (artist)
Bob Kane (concept)
In-story information
Alter egoJervis Tetch
SpeciesHuman
Team affiliationsSecret Six
Secret Society of Super Villains
Wonderland Gang
Notable aliasesFez
The Fedora Fanatic
Abilities
  • Genius-level intellect
  • Mind control via hats

The Mad Hatter has been substantially adapted from the comics into various forms of media, including feature films, television series, and video games. He has been voiced by Roddy McDowall in the DC animated universe, Peter MacNicol in the Batman: Arkham video game series, and Griffin Newman in Harley Quinn. He has also been portrayed in live-action by David Wayne in the 1960s Batman series, and Benedict Samuel in the Fox series Gotham. A variation of the character named Liam Crandle appeared in the third season premiere of the Arrowverse series Batwoman, portrayed by Amitai Marmorstein.

Publication history and characterization

Created by Bill Finger and Lew Sayre Schwartz, the Mad Hatter made his first appearance in Batman #49 (October 1948).[3] Jervis Tetch is fascinated with hats of all shapes and sizes, as well as the Lewis Carroll's children's book Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and its sequel Through the Looking-Glass, particularly favoring the chapter "A Mad Tea Party".[4] According to Dr. Blakloch of Arkham Asylum:

Jervis is obsessive-compulsive, and highly delusional. He's got an immature self-image, so he identifies more with children than adults. Oh and he's a genius, too. (BPD)[5]

Blakloch also notes that when agitated, Tetch begins rhyming as a defence mechanism.[6] Tetch often quotes and makes reference to Carroll's Wonderland novels, and sometimes even fails to discern between these stories and reality. In addition to his obsession with Lewis Carroll, Tetch has also shown an additional obsession for hats. In Secret Six, he will not eat a piece of food that does not have a hat on it, and states that he is not interested in the sight of his naked teammate Knockout because she is not wearing a hat.[7] In the graphic novel Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth, it is strongly implied that he is a pedophile.[8] His storylines in Streets of Gotham #4 and Jeph Loeb and Tim Sale's Batman: Haunted Knight also imply an unhealthy fixation on children, such as when he kidnaps a young Barbara Gordon and forces her into a tea party dressed as Alice, as well as kidnapping other runaway children and dressing them up like characters from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.[9]

Fictional character biography

Backstory

Growing up, Tetch was a lonely, awkward child, shunned by other children and living in his own fantasy world.[10] As an adult, he becomes a neuroscientist, and at some point moves into a boarding house owned by Ella Littleton. There he befriends Ella's daughter, Connie, and her friends in her junior high school computer club, sometimes helping them with their projects. A few years later, when Connie is in high school, she gets pregnant. Fearing the reaction of her extremely strict mother, Connie lies to her and claims she had been raped by someone on her high school's baseball team, the Gotham Hawks. Ella, in turn, approaches Tetch for help and convinces him that the Gotham Hawks are "bad kids". Tetch agrees to use his mind control technology on a member of the team, making him use a pipe bomb to kill the other players. Although this is Tetch's first known criminal act, his involvement in the locker room bombing would not be discovered until years later.[11]

Criminal career

Golden Age

 
Jervis Tetch / The Mad Hatter in his first appearance in Batman #49 (October 1948).

In his first appearance as the Mad Hatter, Tetch attempts to steal a trophy from the Gotham Yacht Club, and begins a crime spree that ends when he is foiled by Batman while he is trying to rob spectators from a high society horseshow.[3] Tetch is subsequently sent to Arkham Asylum (although his fate is not revealed until Detective Comics #510).[12] The Mad Hatter is not seen again in the Golden Age of Comic Books.

Silver Age

In the Silver Age of Comic Books, an impostor Mad Hatter appears and clashes with Batman many times. He is revealed as an impostor when the Mad Hatter finally reappears, claiming to have "disposed of the impostor" (although the impostor would return one last time in Detective Comics #573 in 1987). Accompanied by several henchmen and a pet chimpanzee (named "Carroll Lewis", although the Mad Hatter claims that the chimp refuses to tell him how it came to have that moniker), the Mad Hatter kidnaps Lucius Fox, the C.E.O. of Wayne Tech. Although he holds Lucius Fox for ransom, the Mad Hatter also unveils a device allowing him to copy the knowledge in Fox's brain, which he intends to use to make an additional fortune. However, Lucius Fox is rescued by Batman, who also captures the Mad Hatter and his henchmen.[13]

The Mad Hatter's next appearance marks the first time he is portrayed in comics with the mind-controlling devices for which he would eventually become best known. Allying himself with other villains in an attempt to kill Batman, Hatter uses a mind-controlling hat on Scarecrow, forcing the villain (who had been paralyzed with fear) to fight. When Batman overcomes his attackers, Tetch flees and appears to die on a bridge under the wheels of a train. In actuality he had escaped by jumping onto a truck that had been passing underneath the bridge.[14] Subsequent encounters with Batman resulted in Tetch being sent to Arkham.[15]

During another early encounter with Batman, the Mad Hatter escapes from Arkham in time for Halloween, and makes his home in an old mansion that had been abandoned after a gruesome murder years before. Retreating deeply into his delusions about Wonderland, Tetch offers sanctuary to runaway children, asking them in return to dress up as characters from Alice in Wonderland and attend his tea parties, where he serves them drugged tea to keep them sedated. Around this time, the teenage Barbara Gordon comes to Gotham City, having been adopted by her uncle, Commissioner Jim Gordon, following the death of her parents. Barbara sneaks out against her uncle's orders, and goes to Gotham Park, where she soon finds herself being chased by a group of masked men with knives. The group surround her, and begin implying that they will molest or rape her, provoking her to scream for help. The Mad Hatter appears and scares the men away with his gun. Tetch takes her to his "Wonderland", where she is expected to play the role of Alice. When she refuses to drink tea and asks to leave, Tetch angrily smashes a teapot, scaring another of the runaways into sneaking away while Tetch's attention is on Barbara. The boy leads the police and Batman to Tetch's hideout, and Tetch is defeated by Batman while Commissioner Gordon rescues Barbara.[9]

When Black Orchid visits Arkham Asylum, attempting to find out more about her past from Poison Ivy, she is assisted by Tetch. After Ivy refuses to help Orchid, Tetch tries to cheer her up. He also reveals he has been helping other inmates at Arkham, such as bringing Ivy things to make her plant-animal hybrids with. "I believe in helping people," he explains. "We were all put here for a purpose, I say. But it's still nice to get a thank-you." Tetch is delighted to receive a small flower as thanks for his help.[16] Tetch is also aware of Animal Man's identity as Buddy Baker. He is seen laughing hysterically in Arkham with the final page of "The Return with the Man of the Animal Powers", the second Animal Man story, after which he is dragged back to his cell.[17]

In the Knightfall saga, the Mad Hatter is the first to strike, following the breakout from Arkham. He invites all criminals to a tea party to which Batman and Robin would come. One of the criminals was Film Freak, on whom Tetch uses a mind control device, sending him to find the person that broke them out of Arkham. Batman and Robin come and defeat the Mad Hatter as Film Freak is defeated by Bane. In Robin: Year One, millionaire third-world dictator Generalissimo Lee hires the Mad Hatter to kidnap a number of young girls using his mind control devices. The Mad Hatter does so by implanting the devices in Walkmen, which he gives out to girls at Dick Grayson's school. The young Robin manages to defeat the Mad Hatter, however.[18]

Another plan consisted of implanting his devices in "free coffee and donuts" tickets he handed out in front of the police stations in Gotham. That plan had him controlling most of the cops in the city, inciting them to steal for him, and ultimately to riot. He even had Gotham police detectives Crispus Allen and Renee Montoya break into a bank for him. Sasha Bordeaux helped Batman stop him this time around.[19] The Mad Hatter shows up in Gotham City after it is rocked by a devastating earthquake. He adds to his body count, callously murdering a policeman. His goal is to unearth a trove of valuables, which in the end turn out to be classic hats. Tetch's role in the deaths of the Gotham Hawks High School Baseball team is eventually discovered by detectives in the Gotham City Police Department. Tetch, imprisoned at Arkham at the time, is interviewed to try to find his motive. After sending the police away, telling them that the team had been "bad kids" and that they "deserved it", Tetch contacts Ella Littleton and warns her that the police might uncover her role in the bombing. Tetch had given her one of his mind-controlling hats years before, which she used to try to take control of a guard and try to help Tetch escape from Arkham. The Hatter is caught as he tries to escape, and the mind-controlled guard fires on police before dying in return fire. Tetch himself is shot multiple times and left in critical condition. Distraught at the news, Elle Littleton inadvertently tells her daughter Connie that Tetch had killed the team for her, to "avenge her honor". Connie informs the police of everything that had happened, and Ella Littleton is arrested.[11] While working with Black Mask, the Mad Hatter implants a mind control chip directly into Killer Croc's brain, which causes him to mutate again due to the virus he had been injected with by Hush and the Riddler. Killer Croc embarks on a quest to get payback on those responsible for his mutation, and starts with the Mad Hatter. Batman arrives in time to save him, but Killer Croc escapes. During Infinite Crisis, the Mad Hatter is first seen being roundly beaten by Argus, and then later fighting with the Secret Society of Super Villains during the Battle of Metropolis.

"One Year Later"/Secret Six

Tetch is revealed to have been involved in the plot by the Great White Shark to frame Harvey Dent for murdering various Gotham criminals in the Detective Comics storyline Face The Face. The capacity in which he is involved is left vague, however.[20] Tetch's base of operations in Gotham City is destroyed following a search for an atomic weapon, by the former Robin, Tim Drake, and the current Captain Boomerang, Owen Mercer. A recording of Tetch appears on a monitor screen and tells them that the roof will be the final hat they will ever wear as it falls down on them. Robin and Boomerang narrowly escape the building. He is later approached by Cat-Man, and he joins the members of the Secret Six to oppose the Secret Society of Super Villains; they have recruited him in hopes of a defense against Doctor Psycho's mind control abilities. When Rag Doll attacks the Secret Six under Dr. Psycho's control, Tetch puts on what he calls his "thinking cap" and goes into a seizure. After the Six crash-land, they are attacked by the Doom Patrol, who come close to apprehending the Six until Mad Hatter steps in and uses his mind control abilities to subdue the Doom Patrol singlehandedly, going so far as to almost make Elasti-Girl eat Beast Boy before Scandal stops him.

In a later issue of Secret Six, Tetch reveals that he has designed a hat to make him happy beyond the measures of what illegal drugs can. He also states that he has planted miniature listening devices around the House of Secrets to keep tabs on his fellow members. After revealing the true motives of Scandal Savage to leave the team, the Secret Six go after her, finding themselves at Vandal Savage's temple in the mountains, where Doctor Psycho starts attacking the team. Tetch easily gets the upper hand on Doctor Psycho until Cheshire appears and stabs him in the back with a poisoned dagger. Scandal tends to Hatter's wound, and Catman administers an antidote to Tetch. While the Six face off against Cheshire and Vandal Savage, Hatter takes on Doctor Psycho one on one, and emerges victorious despite his injuries, gravely injuring Dr. Psycho with Cheshire's dagger. At the end of the miniseries, Hatter saves Scandal from falling to her death, and the Six befriend him. As Hatter stands atop Savage's destroyed base with Rag Doll, he promises to be a very good friend in return. Rag Doll then pushes Hatter off the roof, seemingly to his death, saying there was "only room for one dandy freak on the team". However, it is revealed on the final page that Tetch survived the fall. Heartbroken, he vows revenge on the rest of the Six. Prior to the events of Gotham Underground, Tetch falls victim to his own mind control devices at the hands of Tweedledum and Tweedledee. The two force him to "lead" a gang of Wonderland-related criminals called the Wonderland Gang through various gimmicky heists before Batman deduces the Tweeds to be the true masterminds. Once the three are returned to Arkham, the Hatter quickly exacts revenge on the two, manipulating them into a bloody brawl with his mind control chips.[21]

Gotham Underground and Salvation Run

More recently, Mad Hatter appears in Gotham Underground #1 (August 2007), alongside Scarecrow, Hugo Strange, the Penguin, and Two-Face, who have gathered together to assist him in escaping Gotham in light of the disappearance of other villains due to the Suicide Squad and Amanda Waller kidnapping and deporting villains offworld in Countdown to Final Crisis. During their meeting, however, the Suicide Squad break into the building and arrests them. He is later seen on the Hell World in Salvation Run #2 (January 2008), confirming that he has indeed been deported off-world. He appears briefly during the final issue as the Parademons attack, and escapes the Hell Planet alive thanks to Lex Luthor's device.

DC Infinite Halloween Special

In the first issue of DC Infinite Halloween Special, Hatter recounts a first-person perspective story of a small boy whose parents are murdered before his eyes by a blood-sucking humanoid bat. The story follows closely the actual origin story of Batman and is a close approximation of the Red Rain 'universe' (noted in the Countdown Presents: The Search for Ray Palmer series as Earth-43), wherein Batman is, in fact, a vampire.

"Final Crisis"

In the 2008 DC storyline "Final Crisis", Dan Turpin has been approached by the Question with regards to a recent string of child disappearances related to a mysterious group called The Dark Side Club. Turpin subsequently discovers that the club is led by Darkseid, who has taken on a human form after the events of Death of the New Gods. He is gathering a group of children together and infusing them with the Anti-Life Equation as part of his broader plan to enslave and devastate the human race. In Final Crisis #2 (2008), Turpin discovers that Tetch played an instrumental role in assisting Darkseid in gathering the children together through the use of his mind-control hats. Turpin, overcome with a violent rage that he himself does not understand, viciously beats Tetch. Upon threats of brain damage, Tetch confesses that the children have been taken to Blüdhaven. Confused and unsure of himself, Turpin then leaves and boards a bus to Blüdhaven. Final Crisis Secret Files and Origins #1 also reveals that Darkseid's Justifiers helmets are a combination of Apokoliptic technology and the Hatter's mind control circuitry.[volume & issue needed]

Secret Six redux

Secret Six #6 (February 2009) reveals that Mad Hatter has hired the Six to break Tarantula out of Alcatraz, to deliver her as well as a "Get Out of Hell Free" card created by Neron to Gotham City. Doing so has put the Six directly in the line of retribution from Junior, Ragdoll's psychotic sister. Junior believes that the Neron card is key to saving her soul from eternal damnation, and will stop at nothing to reclaim it from Tarantula and the Six. It seems that Junior's wrath is not the motivation behind Tetch's hiring the Six to perform this mission. He has made it clear his intention is to ensure the Six safely reach Gotham. The story is ongoing, and Tetch's full plan has yet to be revealed, although it is made clear in the same issue that Tetch intends to murder each member of the Six as part of his revenge. Tetch observes as the Six battle Junior and his goons on Gotham Bridge and when the battle ceases he confronts them, telling them how they betrayed him. Rag Doll throws Tetch's hat over the edge and Tetch jumps off after it.

"Batman: Life After Death"

Tetch next shows up, seemingly uninjured from his battle with the Secret Six, working with the Penguin, who is planning on killing the new Black Mask.[22] He assists the Penguin in attaching a mind control device to a gas mask, which is placed on Batman's head to turn him into a puppet to assassinate Black Mask. The plot fails, and Batman recovers before killing Black Mask.[23] Following this, Tetch is shown once again incarcerated in Arkham. He hires Deathstroke the Terminator and the Titans to free him, and escapes just prior to a massive prison riot.[24]

The New 52

In September 2011, The New 52 rebooted DC's continuity. In this new timeline, Jervis Tetch is portrayed as suffering from hypogonadism, which prevents him from physically maturing. He begins taking testosterone-enhancing drugs that permanently impair his mental stability. His parents commit him to Arkham Asylum after he has a drug-induced psychotic breakdown, during which he begins referring to himself as "the Mad Hatter". He is eventually freed by the White Rabbit.[25] He uses his mind control technology to make a passenger train full of people commit suicide, assisted by his henchmen, the Tweed Brothers.[26] He then uses his technology to drive several Gothamites insane. Batman eventually foils his plan and throws him through a glass rooftop.[27]

Mad Hatter and the Tweed Brothers next appear after Black Mask escapes Arkham Asylum. When Black Mask attempts to regain control over his False Face Society, he comes into conflict with the Mad Hatter, who sees Black Mask as a rival due to Black Mask's similar mind control abilities. Both the Mad Hatter and Black Mask engage in battle, only for Batman to intervene and subdue them both.[28]

The Mad Hatter resurfaces, selling his mind control hats all over Gotham and holding casting calls at his missile launch facility base, all to recreate a “perfect day” he had years before at a theme park with his childhood sweetheart, Alice. He creates a replica of the theme park in his base and takes control of all the people he sold the hats to all to become the pedestrians in the park. He goes to Alice's house, where he finds to his dismay that she has become an alcoholic and a drug addict. He bludgeons her to death to “put her out of her misery”. He attempts to cast a new Alice with “mind controlled girls”, but ultimately kills them for falling short of his ideal. In frustration, he makes his mind control subjects walk into the sewer and drown themselves.[citation needed]

The Mad Hatter becomes obsessed with Bruce Wayne's new girlfriend, Natalya Trusevich, and has the Tweed Brothers kidnap her. She spurns the Mad Hatter's advances, but he realizes she knows Batman's secret identity and torture her for the information. In the end, she refuses to give the information, and he throws her out of a helicopter to her death. An enraged Batman hunts him down and nearly drowns him, only to revive him at the last minute when his conscience gets the better of him.[29]

DC Rebirth

In the Watchmen sequel Doomsday Clock, Mad Hatter is among the villains.[30]

Characterization

Skills and abilities

While the Mad Hatter has no inherent superpowers, he is a brilliant 'neurotechnician' with considerable knowledge on how to dominate and control the human mind, either through hypnosis or direct technological means. Usually, the Hatter places his mind control devices in the brims of hats, but has been known to utilize other devices as well.[18] More recently, he has been able to directly influence the minds of others at a distance without any apparent equipment. However, this is most likely not a newly emerging superhuman ability; more likely, his skill at miniaturizing and concealing technology, and advances upon his original technology, have probably allowed him to develop technology that permits him to use a device hidden upon his person (such as in his hat) to project mindcontrolling powers in the manner of a meta-human ability such as telepathic powers.

The Mad Hatter is not above using his own inventions on himself, such as creating a hat that can cause him both extreme bliss, as well as return him to lucidity when he deems it necessary. Despite his small stature, the Mad Hatter has been known to exhibit surprising strength and agility from time to time. In the graphic novel Madness, the Mad Hatter is shown as impressively holding his own in a fistfight with Batman atop a moving train.

Appearance

The Mad Hatter has gone through many changes in his physical appearance over the years, but the basic look remains the same. In his debut, he was a very short brown (or auburn) haired man. When he reappeared in the early 1980s, he was depicted as of average height, with blonde hair. In later years, he was short again but with white hair. Today, Tetch has red hair much like his impostor did, but his size and height still seem to vary. Constants throughout his depictions are a slightly overlarge head and (more recently) very large teeth. In Secret Six #6 (December 2006), Tetch claims to suffer from macrocephaly.[31]

Reception

The character of the Mad Hatter has been analyzed as a stereotypical depiction of a villainous European in fiction.[32]

Other characters named Mad Hatter

 
The impostor Mad Hatter

After the real Jervis Tetch/Mad Hatter had been sent to Arkham Asylum following his debut, a very different Mad Hatter appeared, who claimed to be Jervis Tetch. This Mad Hatter first appeared in Detective Comics #230 (April 1956) by Bill Finger, and Sheldon Moldoff, and, unlike the original, was tall, red-headed, stocky and sported a gaudy mustache.[33] He was primarily a thief who was obsessed with completing his private collection of hats from all nations, cultures, and historical periods. He often constructed various weaponry concealed inside his hats like flame-throwers and buzzsaws.[33]

The headgear he wanted most was, of course, Batman's cowl. In numerous attempts, he tried to de-cowl Batman.[34][35] After many tries, he was successful by spraying the cowl with a radioactive substance. Batman then went to nuclear lab and as he was preparing to leave, he set off the radiation detectors. He then had to remove it and handed it to one of Mad Hatter's henchmen who was disguised as one of the lab workers. No sooner did the Mad Hatter put it in his collection than Batman and Robin arrived. They had traced the cowl with their "super sensitive Geiger counter" in the Batplane.

Later on, in Batman #297 (March 1978), the impostor Mad Hatter claimed to have gone straight, but that turned out to be a lie.[36] In 1981, it was revealed that he was in fact an impostor when the real Jervis Tetch returned. The real Hatter claimed to have killed his impostor, but the impostor Mad Hatter reappeared alive in 1987 in Detective Comics #573, where he ended up being beaten by Batman.[37] He was treated to a cameo appearance in Secret Origins (vol. 2) #44 (1989) where he is seen in his cell at Arkham making paper hats in the story "His Name is Clayface III". Upon seeing him, one Arkham guard tells another: "He could murder ya a thousand different ways if we let 'im have any real hat--! But that doesn't stop him from tryin'!"[38] The impostor Mad Hatter appeared in Batman #700 (2010) under the moniker the "Hatman", as well as in a flashback to his Mad Hatter days.[39]

Alternative versions

As one of Batman's most recognizable and popular opponents, the Mad Hatter appears in numerous comics that are not considered part of the regular DC continuity, including:

  • In the Batman comic strip, the Mad Hatter is a computer programing genius who discovered that his products were depleting the ozone layer. Jervis Tetch is betrayed by his business partners to keep him from reporting to the EPA. Injected with hallucinogens, Tetch was driven permanently mad, and his partners had him locked up in Arkham Asylum. There, he realized that he was driven mad with poisons from his own industry, just as hatters were, and that he was himself now “mad as a hatter!” He became obsessed with hats, which he used as a tool for revenge. After creating a mind-controlling computer chip, Tetch gave a rigged hat to the Arkham warden and secretly took control of Asylum. He then sent rigged hats to his business partners, forcing them to commit suicide. Realizing that he had a good thing going, Tetch used Arkham as his base of operations, robbing banks and experimenting his technology on inmates like the Joker, before he was eventually stopped by Batman and Harvey Dent.
  • In the Elseworlds tale Batman: Crimson Mist- the third part of the trilogy that began with Batman & Dracula: Red Rain, which saw Batman become a vampire, the Mad Hatter makes a cameo during the vampire Batman's assault on Arkham Asylum, in which Batman kills and beheads him.[40]
  • An aged version of Mad Hatter appears in the first issue of the 2010 Batman Beyond limited series. According to a now elderly Bruce Wayne, the Mad Hatter "burnt out" his mind years earlier during his final confrontation with Batman, and has since spent his days locked up in the mental institution wing of a hospital in Neo Gotham after Arkham Asylum closed down. By now, he has become harmless.[41] In the Justice League Beyond story arc "Flashdrive", the Mad Hatter is portrayed as having died, presumably from old age. His body is kept in a vault beneath Wayne Manor with the rest of Batman's deceased rogues.[42]
  • In the Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles crossover, the Mad Hatter is turned into a mutant rabbit by the Shredder, along with other mutated inmates of Arkham Asylum. After Shredder being defeated by Batman and the Turtles, the police scientists have managed to turn Jervis and the rest of inmates at Arkham back to normal and are currently in A.R.G.U.S. custody.[43]
  • Jervis Tetch appears in the 2017 series Batman: White Knight. This version's technology is used by Jack Napier (who in this reality was a Joker who had been force fed an overdose of pills by Batman which temporarily cured him of his insanity) to control Clayface. Particles from Clayface's body were then slipped into the drinks of other Batman villains so that Napier could control them by way of Clayface's ability to control parts of his body that had been separated from him. He assists Neo Joker in stealing his technology back from Napier so she can control the villains, and he remains as her sidekick for the rest of the story.
  • In Mother Panic: Gotham A.D., the Mad Hatter is depicted as having been killed by the Joker during his short-lived heroic stint.[44]

In other media

Television

Live-action

 
 
Mad Hatter, as portrayed by David Wayne in the live-action Batman series (left) and by Benedict Samuel in Gotham (right).
  • The Mad Hatter appears in the 1960s Batman TV series, portrayed by David Wayne. While this version is referred to as Jervis Tetch, his appearance is based on the imposter Mad Hatter as the series was produced before he was revealed as such. Additionally, he wears a trick top hat containing a set of mechanical eyes capable of firing hypnotic beams that render victims unconscious and is obsessed with stealing hats, particularly Batman's cowl.
  • Jervis Tetch appears in Gotham, portrayed by Benedict Samuel.[45][46] Introduced in season three, this version is a professional hypnotist who can control people's minds via his voice and a "ticking" device. He is also known for dressing himself, his henchmen, and his victims as characters from Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland as well as creating a virus from his sister Alice's blood that turns people into homicidal maniacs. In season four, Tetch joins Jerome Valeska's "Legion of Horribles" to assist them in spreading chaos throughout Gotham and acquires his "Mad Hatter" moniker from Oswald Cobblepot. In season five, Tetch was put in charge of Ace Chemicals and brainwashed Jim Gordon and Leslie Thompkins as part of his plan to make Bruce Wayne relieve his parents' death.
  • An original incarnation of the Mad Hatter named Liam Crandle appears in the Batwoman episode "Mad as a Hatter", portrayed by Amitai Marmorstein.[47][48] He is a mentally ill teenager and a fan of Alice, seeing her as a victim of society. After buying Jervis Tetch's hat online, he holds Mary Hamilton's graduation ceremony hostage, only to be foiled by Batwoman, Batwing, and Alice. Crandle is later incarcerated while Tetch's hat is confiscated.

Animation

 
Jervis Tetch/The Mad Hatter as depicted in Batman: The Animated Series, voiced by Roddy McDowall.
 
The Mad Hatter as he was later depicted in The New Batman Adventures, again voiced by McDowall.
  • The Jervis Tetch incarnation of the Mad Hatter appears in The Batman/Superman Hour episode "A Mad, Mad Tea Party", voiced by Ted Knight. This version has trained white rabbits, a hat-shaped car, and henchmen dressed as Wonderland characters.
  • The Jervis Tetch incarnation of the Mad Hatter appears in series set in the DC Animated Universe (DCAU), voiced by Roddy McDowall. This version is British with blonde hair and a large overbite gives him a Cheshire Cat-like smile.
    • Introduced in the Batman: The Animated Series episode "Mad as a Hatter", the shy and kind Tetch is a technical and electronic genius who experiments with animals using mind-controlling microchips stored within hats to stimulate brain waves. He falls in love with his secretary, Alice Pleasance, who does not reciprocate his feelings. Donning the guise of the Mad Hatter and using Alice in Wonderland as inspiration, he attempts to win Alice's affection by taking her out on the town after her boyfriend dumps her. However, she misinterprets the gesture as a way to cheer her up and unwittingly spurns his affections. Driven over the edge, Tetch uses his microchips to turn Alice into his robotic puppet until Batman defeats him. Episode writer Paul Dini once claimed that the episode was inspired by a true story involving a technical designer who had unrequited feelings for someone at work and committed a workplace shooting.[49] In the episode "Perchance to Dream", Tetch uses an electronic helmet to trap Batman in a virtual reality realm that gives him his greatest desires in an attempt to remove the Dark Knight from his life. Once he gets free however, Batman defeats Tetch and leaves him for the police. In the episode "The Worry Men", Tetch creates the eponymous dolls using his chips to hypnotize Gotham's elite into giving him large sums of money so he can acquire an island where he can live in peace. However, Batman stops him and gives Tetch his own "Worry Man" to stop him from committing more crimes. Tetch also makes minor appearances in the episodes "Trial" and "Make 'Em Laugh".
    • Tetch returns in The New Batman Adventures episode "Animal Act". In this series, he was redesigned to resemble a short, thin, rodent-like man with a paler complexion and dark green outfit.
    • Tetch also appears in the Superman: The Animated Series episode "Knight Time". After discovering Bruce Wayne was hypnotized by mind-controlling nanites, Superman and Robin join forces to find Tetch, who they believe is the culprit. Upon capturing him, however, they find that he is not responsible. Tetch examines the nanites and, based on the highly advanced technology used in their composition, speculates that they are of extraterrestrial origin. The heroes later discover the nanites were created by Brainiac.
    • While Tetch does not appear in Batman Beyond, when asked about his fate, the show's creator Paul Dini jokingly stated that he along with the Riddler reformed and started running a men's clothing store.[50]
  • The impostor Mad Hatter appears in Batman: The Brave and the Bold.
  • The Jervis Tetch incarnation of the Mad Hatter appears in the Young Justice Outsiders episode "Triptych", voiced by Dwight Schultz.
  • The Jervis Tetch incarnation of the Mad Hatter appears in the Harley Quinn episode "Another Sharkley Adventure", voiced by Griffin Newman. This version comes off as a creep and pervert to others due to his abnormal behavior, though he repeatedly denies these claims. Tetch kidnaps Harley Quinn and Batgirl and attempts to use them as test subjects for his mind-controlling hats, with which he plans to enslave Gotham's citizens, though the former manages to talk him into releasing her by claiming they are both villains. However, Harley quickly regrets abandoning Batgirl and returns to rescue her. After Batgirl comments that Harley is not as villainous as she believes herself to be, the latter beats Tetch to death with her baseball bat to prove her otherwise.

Film

Video games

Lego Batman

Batman: Arkham

The Jervis Tetch incarnation of the Mad Hatter appears in the Batman: Arkham series, voiced by Peter MacNicol.[55]

  • According to Batman: Arkham Asylum writer Paul Dini, the Mad Hatter was originally planned to appear in the game in a level where Batman discovers him in a child's hedge maze within the titular asylum's Botanical Gardens while Poison Ivy controls her plants to slow Batman down. However, the idea did not fit the game's tone and the Mad Hatter's appearance was dropped.[56]
  • In his first physical appearance in Batman: Arkham City, it is revealed that Tetch was being manipulated by Hugo Strange into conducting inhumane behavior control experiments on Arkham Asylum patients for the latter's purposes in exchange for a consistent supply of tea and multiple "Alices" for Tetch to do with as he pleases. As of the game, Tetch became an inmate of Strange's city-prison, Arkham City, where he has formed his a small gang of mind-controlled henchmen.
  • In the prequel Batman: Arkham Origins, a younger Tetch has yet to call himself the "Mad Hatter", struggles to perfect his mind control technology, and has his first encounter with Batman after challenging him to rescue his latest "Alice".
  • As of Batman: Arkham Knight, Tetch has taken to speaking in cryptic rhymes. In the DLC side mission "Wonderland", Tetch turns himself into the GCPD and demands to speak with Batman, challenging him to find and rescue three police officers he has taken hostage. Once the Dark Knight finds two of them, Tetch hypnotizes him into seeing a storybook-esque world in an attempt to make Batman kill the third officer and become his latest "Alice". However, Batman once again resists Tetch's mind control, escapes the hallucination, and incarcerates Tetch.[57]

Miscellaneous

See also

References

  1. ^ Brooker, Will (2004). Alice's Adventures: Lewis Carroll in Popular Culture. Continuum International Publishing Group. pp. 152–153. ISBN 0-8264-1433-8.
  2. ^ Cowsill, Alan; Irvine, Alex; Manning, Matthew K.; McAvennie, Michael; Wallace, Daniel (2019). DC Comics Year By Year: A Visual Chronicle. DK Publishing. p. 55. ISBN 978-1-4654-8578-6.
  3. ^ a b Bill Finger (w), Bob Kane and Lew Sayre Schwartz (p), Charles Paris (i). "The Scoop of the Century" Batman 49 (1948), DC Comics
  4. ^ Fleisher, Michael L. (1976). The Encyclopedia of Comic Book Heroes, Volume 1: Batman. New York City: Macmillan Publishing. pp. 268–269. ISBN 0-02-538700-6. Retrieved 29 March 2020.
  5. ^ Ed Brubaker (w), Michael Lark (p), Stefano Gaudiano (i), Lee Loughridge (col), Clem Robins (let), Matt Idelson and Nachie Castro (ed). "Unresolved, Part Two" Gotham Central 20 (August 2004), New York City: DC Comics
  6. ^ Ed Brubaker (w), Michael Lark (p), Stefano Gaudiano (i). "Unresolved" Gotham Central 20 (August 2004), New York City: DC Comics
  7. ^ Brian K. Vaughan (w), Rich Burchett (p), John Lowe (i). "Mimsy Were the Borogroves" Detective Comics 787 (December 2003), DC Comics
  8. ^ Grant Morrison (w), Dave McKean (a). Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth (1989), New York City: DC Comics
  9. ^ a b Jeph Loeb (w), Tim Sale (a). Batman: Haunted Knight (1995), New York City: DC Comics
  10. ^ Gail Simone (w), Brad Walker (p), Jimmy Palmiotti (i). "Six Degrees of Devastation" Secret Six 6 (January 2007), New York City: DC Comics
  11. ^ a b Ed Brubaker (w). "Unresolved" Gotham Central 19-22 (July–October 2004), New York City: DC Comics
  12. ^ Greenberger, Robert (2008). The Essential Batman Encyclopedia. Del Rey. pp. 241–242. ISBN 9780345501066.
  13. ^ Gerry Conway (w). "Head Hunt by a Mad Hatter" Detective Comics (January 1981), New York City: DC Comics
  14. ^ Gerry Conway (w). "All My Enemies Against Me" Detective Comics (January 1981), New York City: DC Comics
  15. ^ Rovin, Jeff (1987). The Encyclopedia of Supervillains. New York: Facts on File. p. 199. ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.
  16. ^ Neil Gaiman (w), Dave McKean (a). "Going Down..." Black Orchid 2 (September 1991), New York City: DC Comics
  17. ^ Grant Morrison (w), Chaz Truog (p), Mark McKenna (i), Tatjana Wood (col), John Costanza (let), Karen Berger and Art Young (ed). "Fox on the Run" Animal Man 10 (April 1989), New York City: DC Comics
  18. ^ a b Javier Pulido, Chuck Dixon and Scott Beatty (w), Robert Campanella (i), Lee Loughridge (col), Sean Konot (let), Dennis O'Neill (ed). "Year One" Robin: Year One 1 (October 2000), New York City: DC Comics
  19. ^ Greg Rucka (w), Shawn Martinbrough (p). "Unknowing" Detective Comics 758-760 (July 2001), New York City: DC Comics
  20. ^ James Robinson (w), Leonard Kirk (p), John Kalisz (col), Travis Lanham (let), Michael Siglain and Peter Tomasi (ed). "Face the Face, Part Three" Detective Comics 818 (June 2006), New York City: DC Comics
  21. ^ Detective Comics #841. DC Comics.
  22. ^ Tony S. Daniel (w), Tony S. Daniel (p), Sandu Florea and Norm Rapmund (i), Ian Hannin (col), Jared K. Fletcher (let), Mike Marts (ed). "Life After Death, Part 4: Smoke and Mirrors" Batman 695 (January 2010), New York City: DC Comics
  23. ^ Tony S. Daniel (w), Tony S. Daniel (p), Ian Hannin (col), Jared K. Fletcher (let), Mike Marts (ed). "Life After Death, Part 5: Mind Games" Batman (April 2010), New York City: DC Comics
  24. ^ Eric Wallace (w), Fabrizio Fiorentino and Cliff Richards (p), Hi-Fi Design (col), Travis Lanham (let), Sean Ryan and Brian Cunningham (ed). "Family Reunions, Part One" Titans 28 (December 2010), New York City: DC Comics
  25. ^ Paul Jenkins and Joe Harris (w), David Finch (p), Richard Friend (i), Jeromy Cox (col), Sal Cipriano (let), Mike Marts and Rickey Purdin (ed). "Run Rabbit Run" Batman: The Dark Knight 3 (April 2012), New York City: DC Comics
  26. ^ Batman: The Dark Knight #4
  27. ^ Batman: The Dark Knight (vol. 2) #6
  28. ^ Tony S. Daniel (w), Romano Molenaar and Pere Pérez (p), Sandu Flores and Pere Pérez (i), Andrew Dalhouse (col), David Sharpe (let), Mike Marts, Harvey Richards and Katie Kubert (ed). Detective Comics Annual #2 (October 2012), New York City: DC Comics
  29. ^ Batman: The Dark Knight (vol. 2) #15-21
  30. ^ Doomsday Clock #6 (July 2018). DC Comics.
  31. ^ Secret Six #6 (December 2006)
  32. ^ Georg Drennig, "Otherness and the European as Villain and Antihero in American Comics," in Comics as a Nexus of Cultures, eds. Mark Berninger, Jochen Ecke, and Gideon Haberkorn (Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, 2010) 129-131.
  33. ^ a b Detective Comics #230
  34. ^ Batman #201
  35. ^ Batman #292
  36. ^ Batman #297
  37. ^ Detective Comics #573
  38. ^ Secret Origins (vol. 2) #44
  39. ^ Batman #700
  40. ^ Doug Moench (w), Kelley Jones (p), John Beatty (i), Gregory Wright (col), Todd Klein (let), Dennis O'Neill (ed). Batman: Crimson Mist (February 1999), New York City: DC Comics
  41. ^ Batman Beyond #2
  42. ^ Justice League Beyond: "Flashdrive"
  43. ^ Batman/Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #6. DC Comics/IDW
  44. ^ Mother Panic: Gotham A.D. #2
  45. ^ Burlingame, Russ (April 5, 2015). "Gotham To Introduce Clayface, Mr. Freeze and Mad Hatter in Season Two". Comic Book.com.
  46. ^ Ausiello, Michael (July 18, 2016). "Walking Dead Alum Joins Gotham Season 3 as Mad Hatter". TV Line.
  47. ^ Schaefer, Sandy (June 28, 2021). "Batwoman Will Debut Classic Batman Villains in Season 3 Along With New Versions". Comic Book Resources. Retrieved July 18, 2021.
  48. ^ Hatchett, Keisha (20 September 2021). "Batwoman Season 3: The Mad Hatter Has Entered the Chat in New Trailer". TVLine. Retrieved 23 September 2021.
  49. ^ "Batman: The Animated Series writer Paul Dini". Animationarena.com. Retrieved 2010-12-25.
  50. ^ ToyFare issue, 1999
  51. ^ "Remember when Courtney Love nearly played Harley Quinn in the sequel to Batman & Robin?". Flickeringmyth.com. 2016-08-05. Retrieved 2017-09-07.
  52. ^ "Batman Unchained/Triumphant the Cancelled Sequel | Comics Amino".
  53. ^ "Batman: The Long Halloween Part Two - Exclusive Trailer Debut". IGN. May 18, 2021. Retrieved May 19, 2021.
  54. ^ Newton, Andrew (31 August 2018). "LEGO DC Super-Villains Season Pass details revealed". Flickering Myth.
  55. ^ "Twitter / ericholmeslive: @johnboy34661029 Yes it is!". Twitter.com. Retrieved 2014-01-07.
  56. ^ Schramm, Mike (July 26, 2011). "Rocksteady and Paul Dini on the storytelling in Batman: Arkham City". Joystiq. AOL. from the original on October 21, 2012. Retrieved September 26, 2011.
  57. ^ "Batman: Arkham Knight - Wonderland Victim Locations and Guide". Shack News. November 3, 2016. Retrieved August 11, 2017.
  58. ^ The Batman Adventures #17
  59. ^ Justice League Unlimited #8
  60. ^ Injustice: Gods Among Us #15
  61. ^ Injustice: Gods Among Us: Year Five #14

External links

  • Mad Hatter at DC Database
  • Mad Hatter at Comic Vine

hatter, comics, hatter, jervis, tetch, supervillain, appearing, comic, books, published, comics, commonly, adversary, superhero, batman, modeled, after, hatter, from, lewis, carroll, novel, alice, adventures, wonderland, character, often, called, hatter, adapt. The Mad Hatter Jervis Tetch is a supervillain appearing in comic books published by DC Comics commonly as an adversary of the superhero Batman He is modeled after the Hatter from Lewis Carroll s novel Alice s Adventures in Wonderland a character often called the Mad Hatter in adaptations of Carroll 1 He is also a scientist who invents and uses technological mind control devices to influence and manipulate the minds of his victims He is one of Batman s most enduring enemies and belongs to the collective of adversaries that make up Batman s rogues gallery 2 Mad HatterMad Hatter on the cover of Gotham Central 20 August 2004 Art by Michael LarkPublication informationPublisherDC ComicsFirst appearanceBatman 49 October 1948 Created byBill Finger writer Lew Sayre Schwartz artist Bob Kane concept In story informationAlter egoJervis TetchSpeciesHumanTeam affiliationsSecret SixSecret Society of Super VillainsWonderland GangNotable aliasesFezThe Fedora FanaticAbilitiesGenius level intellect Mind control via hatsThe Mad Hatter has been substantially adapted from the comics into various forms of media including feature films television series and video games He has been voiced by Roddy McDowall in the DC animated universe Peter MacNicol in the Batman Arkham video game series and Griffin Newman in Harley Quinn He has also been portrayed in live action by David Wayne in the 1960s Batman series and Benedict Samuel in the Fox series Gotham A variation of the character named Liam Crandle appeared in the third season premiere of the Arrowverse series Batwoman portrayed by Amitai Marmorstein Contents 1 Publication history and characterization 2 Fictional character biography 2 1 Backstory 2 2 Criminal career 2 2 1 Golden Age 2 2 2 Silver Age 2 3 One Year Later Secret Six 2 4 Gotham Underground and Salvation Run 2 5 DC Infinite Halloween Special 2 6 Final Crisis 2 7 Secret Six redux 2 8 Batman Life After Death 2 9 The New 52 2 10 DC Rebirth 3 Characterization 3 1 Skills and abilities 3 2 Appearance 4 Reception 5 Other characters named Mad Hatter 6 Alternative versions 7 In other media 7 1 Television 7 1 1 Live action 7 1 2 Animation 7 2 Film 7 3 Video games 7 3 1 Lego Batman 7 3 2 Batman Arkham 7 4 Miscellaneous 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksPublication history and characterization EditCreated by Bill Finger and Lew Sayre Schwartz the Mad Hatter made his first appearance in Batman 49 October 1948 3 Jervis Tetch is fascinated with hats of all shapes and sizes as well as the Lewis Carroll s children s book Alice s Adventures in Wonderland and its sequel Through the Looking Glass particularly favoring the chapter A Mad Tea Party 4 According to Dr Blakloch of Arkham Asylum Jervis is obsessive compulsive and highly delusional He s got an immature self image so he identifies more with children than adults Oh and he s a genius too BPD 5 Blakloch also notes that when agitated Tetch begins rhyming as a defence mechanism 6 Tetch often quotes and makes reference to Carroll s Wonderland novels and sometimes even fails to discern between these stories and reality In addition to his obsession with Lewis Carroll Tetch has also shown an additional obsession for hats In Secret Six he will not eat a piece of food that does not have a hat on it and states that he is not interested in the sight of his naked teammate Knockout because she is not wearing a hat 7 In the graphic novel Arkham Asylum A Serious House on Serious Earth it is strongly implied that he is a pedophile 8 His storylines in Streets of Gotham 4 and Jeph Loeb and Tim Sale s Batman Haunted Knight also imply an unhealthy fixation on children such as when he kidnaps a young Barbara Gordon and forces her into a tea party dressed as Alice as well as kidnapping other runaway children and dressing them up like characters from Alice s Adventures in Wonderland 9 Fictional character biography EditBackstory Edit Growing up Tetch was a lonely awkward child shunned by other children and living in his own fantasy world 10 As an adult he becomes a neuroscientist and at some point moves into a boarding house owned by Ella Littleton There he befriends Ella s daughter Connie and her friends in her junior high school computer club sometimes helping them with their projects A few years later when Connie is in high school she gets pregnant Fearing the reaction of her extremely strict mother Connie lies to her and claims she had been raped by someone on her high school s baseball team the Gotham Hawks Ella in turn approaches Tetch for help and convinces him that the Gotham Hawks are bad kids Tetch agrees to use his mind control technology on a member of the team making him use a pipe bomb to kill the other players Although this is Tetch s first known criminal act his involvement in the locker room bombing would not be discovered until years later 11 Criminal career Edit Golden Age Edit Jervis Tetch The Mad Hatter in his first appearance in Batman 49 October 1948 In his first appearance as the Mad Hatter Tetch attempts to steal a trophy from the Gotham Yacht Club and begins a crime spree that ends when he is foiled by Batman while he is trying to rob spectators from a high society horseshow 3 Tetch is subsequently sent to Arkham Asylum although his fate is not revealed until Detective Comics 510 12 The Mad Hatter is not seen again in the Golden Age of Comic Books Silver Age Edit In the Silver Age of Comic Books an impostor Mad Hatter appears and clashes with Batman many times He is revealed as an impostor when the Mad Hatter finally reappears claiming to have disposed of the impostor although the impostor would return one last time in Detective Comics 573 in 1987 Accompanied by several henchmen and a pet chimpanzee named Carroll Lewis although the Mad Hatter claims that the chimp refuses to tell him how it came to have that moniker the Mad Hatter kidnaps Lucius Fox the C E O of Wayne Tech Although he holds Lucius Fox for ransom the Mad Hatter also unveils a device allowing him to copy the knowledge in Fox s brain which he intends to use to make an additional fortune However Lucius Fox is rescued by Batman who also captures the Mad Hatter and his henchmen 13 The Mad Hatter s next appearance marks the first time he is portrayed in comics with the mind controlling devices for which he would eventually become best known Allying himself with other villains in an attempt to kill Batman Hatter uses a mind controlling hat on Scarecrow forcing the villain who had been paralyzed with fear to fight When Batman overcomes his attackers Tetch flees and appears to die on a bridge under the wheels of a train In actuality he had escaped by jumping onto a truck that had been passing underneath the bridge 14 Subsequent encounters with Batman resulted in Tetch being sent to Arkham 15 During another early encounter with Batman the Mad Hatter escapes from Arkham in time for Halloween and makes his home in an old mansion that had been abandoned after a gruesome murder years before Retreating deeply into his delusions about Wonderland Tetch offers sanctuary to runaway children asking them in return to dress up as characters from Alice in Wonderland and attend his tea parties where he serves them drugged tea to keep them sedated Around this time the teenage Barbara Gordon comes to Gotham City having been adopted by her uncle Commissioner Jim Gordon following the death of her parents Barbara sneaks out against her uncle s orders and goes to Gotham Park where she soon finds herself being chased by a group of masked men with knives The group surround her and begin implying that they will molest or rape her provoking her to scream for help The Mad Hatter appears and scares the men away with his gun Tetch takes her to his Wonderland where she is expected to play the role of Alice When she refuses to drink tea and asks to leave Tetch angrily smashes a teapot scaring another of the runaways into sneaking away while Tetch s attention is on Barbara The boy leads the police and Batman to Tetch s hideout and Tetch is defeated by Batman while Commissioner Gordon rescues Barbara 9 When Black Orchid visits Arkham Asylum attempting to find out more about her past from Poison Ivy she is assisted by Tetch After Ivy refuses to help Orchid Tetch tries to cheer her up He also reveals he has been helping other inmates at Arkham such as bringing Ivy things to make her plant animal hybrids with I believe in helping people he explains We were all put here for a purpose I say But it s still nice to get a thank you Tetch is delighted to receive a small flower as thanks for his help 16 Tetch is also aware of Animal Man s identity as Buddy Baker He is seen laughing hysterically in Arkham with the final page of The Return with the Man of the Animal Powers the second Animal Man story after which he is dragged back to his cell 17 In the Knightfall saga the Mad Hatter is the first to strike following the breakout from Arkham He invites all criminals to a tea party to which Batman and Robin would come One of the criminals was Film Freak on whom Tetch uses a mind control device sending him to find the person that broke them out of Arkham Batman and Robin come and defeat the Mad Hatter as Film Freak is defeated by Bane In Robin Year One millionaire third world dictator Generalissimo Lee hires the Mad Hatter to kidnap a number of young girls using his mind control devices The Mad Hatter does so by implanting the devices in Walkmen which he gives out to girls at Dick Grayson s school The young Robin manages to defeat the Mad Hatter however 18 Another plan consisted of implanting his devices in free coffee and donuts tickets he handed out in front of the police stations in Gotham That plan had him controlling most of the cops in the city inciting them to steal for him and ultimately to riot He even had Gotham police detectives Crispus Allen and Renee Montoya break into a bank for him Sasha Bordeaux helped Batman stop him this time around 19 The Mad Hatter shows up in Gotham City after it is rocked by a devastating earthquake He adds to his body count callously murdering a policeman His goal is to unearth a trove of valuables which in the end turn out to be classic hats Tetch s role in the deaths of the Gotham Hawks High School Baseball team is eventually discovered by detectives in the Gotham City Police Department Tetch imprisoned at Arkham at the time is interviewed to try to find his motive After sending the police away telling them that the team had been bad kids and that they deserved it Tetch contacts Ella Littleton and warns her that the police might uncover her role in the bombing Tetch had given her one of his mind controlling hats years before which she used to try to take control of a guard and try to help Tetch escape from Arkham The Hatter is caught as he tries to escape and the mind controlled guard fires on police before dying in return fire Tetch himself is shot multiple times and left in critical condition Distraught at the news Elle Littleton inadvertently tells her daughter Connie that Tetch had killed the team for her to avenge her honor Connie informs the police of everything that had happened and Ella Littleton is arrested 11 While working with Black Mask the Mad Hatter implants a mind control chip directly into Killer Croc s brain which causes him to mutate again due to the virus he had been injected with by Hush and the Riddler Killer Croc embarks on a quest to get payback on those responsible for his mutation and starts with the Mad Hatter Batman arrives in time to save him but Killer Croc escapes During Infinite Crisis the Mad Hatter is first seen being roundly beaten by Argus and then later fighting with the Secret Society of Super Villains during the Battle of Metropolis One Year Later Secret Six Edit Tetch is revealed to have been involved in the plot by the Great White Shark to frame Harvey Dent for murdering various Gotham criminals in the Detective Comics storyline Face The Face The capacity in which he is involved is left vague however 20 Tetch s base of operations in Gotham City is destroyed following a search for an atomic weapon by the former Robin Tim Drake and the current Captain Boomerang Owen Mercer A recording of Tetch appears on a monitor screen and tells them that the roof will be the final hat they will ever wear as it falls down on them Robin and Boomerang narrowly escape the building He is later approached by Cat Man and he joins the members of the Secret Six to oppose the Secret Society of Super Villains they have recruited him in hopes of a defense against Doctor Psycho s mind control abilities When Rag Doll attacks the Secret Six under Dr Psycho s control Tetch puts on what he calls his thinking cap and goes into a seizure After the Six crash land they are attacked by the Doom Patrol who come close to apprehending the Six until Mad Hatter steps in and uses his mind control abilities to subdue the Doom Patrol singlehandedly going so far as to almost make Elasti Girl eat Beast Boy before Scandal stops him In a later issue of Secret Six Tetch reveals that he has designed a hat to make him happy beyond the measures of what illegal drugs can He also states that he has planted miniature listening devices around the House of Secrets to keep tabs on his fellow members After revealing the true motives of Scandal Savage to leave the team the Secret Six go after her finding themselves at Vandal Savage s temple in the mountains where Doctor Psycho starts attacking the team Tetch easily gets the upper hand on Doctor Psycho until Cheshire appears and stabs him in the back with a poisoned dagger Scandal tends to Hatter s wound and Catman administers an antidote to Tetch While the Six face off against Cheshire and Vandal Savage Hatter takes on Doctor Psycho one on one and emerges victorious despite his injuries gravely injuring Dr Psycho with Cheshire s dagger At the end of the miniseries Hatter saves Scandal from falling to her death and the Six befriend him As Hatter stands atop Savage s destroyed base with Rag Doll he promises to be a very good friend in return Rag Doll then pushes Hatter off the roof seemingly to his death saying there was only room for one dandy freak on the team However it is revealed on the final page that Tetch survived the fall Heartbroken he vows revenge on the rest of the Six Prior to the events of Gotham Underground Tetch falls victim to his own mind control devices at the hands of Tweedledum and Tweedledee The two force him to lead a gang of Wonderland related criminals called the Wonderland Gang through various gimmicky heists before Batman deduces the Tweeds to be the true masterminds Once the three are returned to Arkham the Hatter quickly exacts revenge on the two manipulating them into a bloody brawl with his mind control chips 21 Gotham Underground and Salvation Run Edit More recently Mad Hatter appears in Gotham Underground 1 August 2007 alongside Scarecrow Hugo Strange the Penguin and Two Face who have gathered together to assist him in escaping Gotham in light of the disappearance of other villains due to the Suicide Squad and Amanda Waller kidnapping and deporting villains offworld in Countdown to Final Crisis During their meeting however the Suicide Squad break into the building and arrests them He is later seen on the Hell World in Salvation Run 2 January 2008 confirming that he has indeed been deported off world He appears briefly during the final issue as the Parademons attack and escapes the Hell Planet alive thanks to Lex Luthor s device DC Infinite Halloween Special Edit In the first issue of DC Infinite Halloween Special Hatter recounts a first person perspective story of a small boy whose parents are murdered before his eyes by a blood sucking humanoid bat The story follows closely the actual origin story of Batman and is a close approximation of the Red Rain universe noted in the Countdown Presents The Search for Ray Palmer series as Earth 43 wherein Batman is in fact a vampire Final Crisis Edit In the 2008 DC storyline Final Crisis Dan Turpin has been approached by the Question with regards to a recent string of child disappearances related to a mysterious group called The Dark Side Club Turpin subsequently discovers that the club is led by Darkseid who has taken on a human form after the events of Death of the New Gods He is gathering a group of children together and infusing them with the Anti Life Equation as part of his broader plan to enslave and devastate the human race In Final Crisis 2 2008 Turpin discovers that Tetch played an instrumental role in assisting Darkseid in gathering the children together through the use of his mind control hats Turpin overcome with a violent rage that he himself does not understand viciously beats Tetch Upon threats of brain damage Tetch confesses that the children have been taken to Bludhaven Confused and unsure of himself Turpin then leaves and boards a bus to Bludhaven Final Crisis Secret Files and Origins 1 also reveals that Darkseid s Justifiers helmets are a combination of Apokoliptic technology and the Hatter s mind control circuitry volume amp issue needed Secret Six redux Edit Secret Six 6 February 2009 reveals that Mad Hatter has hired the Six to break Tarantula out of Alcatraz to deliver her as well as a Get Out of Hell Free card created by Neron to Gotham City Doing so has put the Six directly in the line of retribution from Junior Ragdoll s psychotic sister Junior believes that the Neron card is key to saving her soul from eternal damnation and will stop at nothing to reclaim it from Tarantula and the Six It seems that Junior s wrath is not the motivation behind Tetch s hiring the Six to perform this mission He has made it clear his intention is to ensure the Six safely reach Gotham The story is ongoing and Tetch s full plan has yet to be revealed although it is made clear in the same issue that Tetch intends to murder each member of the Six as part of his revenge Tetch observes as the Six battle Junior and his goons on Gotham Bridge and when the battle ceases he confronts them telling them how they betrayed him Rag Doll throws Tetch s hat over the edge and Tetch jumps off after it Batman Life After Death Edit Tetch next shows up seemingly uninjured from his battle with the Secret Six working with the Penguin who is planning on killing the new Black Mask 22 He assists the Penguin in attaching a mind control device to a gas mask which is placed on Batman s head to turn him into a puppet to assassinate Black Mask The plot fails and Batman recovers before killing Black Mask 23 Following this Tetch is shown once again incarcerated in Arkham He hires Deathstroke the Terminator and the Titans to free him and escapes just prior to a massive prison riot 24 The New 52 Edit In September 2011 The New 52 rebooted DC s continuity In this new timeline Jervis Tetch is portrayed as suffering from hypogonadism which prevents him from physically maturing He begins taking testosterone enhancing drugs that permanently impair his mental stability His parents commit him to Arkham Asylum after he has a drug induced psychotic breakdown during which he begins referring to himself as the Mad Hatter He is eventually freed by the White Rabbit 25 He uses his mind control technology to make a passenger train full of people commit suicide assisted by his henchmen the Tweed Brothers 26 He then uses his technology to drive several Gothamites insane Batman eventually foils his plan and throws him through a glass rooftop 27 Mad Hatter and the Tweed Brothers next appear after Black Mask escapes Arkham Asylum When Black Mask attempts to regain control over his False Face Society he comes into conflict with the Mad Hatter who sees Black Mask as a rival due to Black Mask s similar mind control abilities Both the Mad Hatter and Black Mask engage in battle only for Batman to intervene and subdue them both 28 The Mad Hatter resurfaces selling his mind control hats all over Gotham and holding casting calls at his missile launch facility base all to recreate a perfect day he had years before at a theme park with his childhood sweetheart Alice He creates a replica of the theme park in his base and takes control of all the people he sold the hats to all to become the pedestrians in the park He goes to Alice s house where he finds to his dismay that she has become an alcoholic and a drug addict He bludgeons her to death to put her out of her misery He attempts to cast a new Alice with mind controlled girls but ultimately kills them for falling short of his ideal In frustration he makes his mind control subjects walk into the sewer and drown themselves citation needed The Mad Hatter becomes obsessed with Bruce Wayne s new girlfriend Natalya Trusevich and has the Tweed Brothers kidnap her She spurns the Mad Hatter s advances but he realizes she knows Batman s secret identity and torture her for the information In the end she refuses to give the information and he throws her out of a helicopter to her death An enraged Batman hunts him down and nearly drowns him only to revive him at the last minute when his conscience gets the better of him 29 DC Rebirth Edit In the Watchmen sequel Doomsday Clock Mad Hatter is among the villains 30 Characterization EditSkills and abilities Edit While the Mad Hatter has no inherent superpowers he is a brilliant neurotechnician with considerable knowledge on how to dominate and control the human mind either through hypnosis or direct technological means Usually the Hatter places his mind control devices in the brims of hats but has been known to utilize other devices as well 18 More recently he has been able to directly influence the minds of others at a distance without any apparent equipment However this is most likely not a newly emerging superhuman ability more likely his skill at miniaturizing and concealing technology and advances upon his original technology have probably allowed him to develop technology that permits him to use a device hidden upon his person such as in his hat to project mindcontrolling powers in the manner of a meta human ability such as telepathic powers The Mad Hatter is not above using his own inventions on himself such as creating a hat that can cause him both extreme bliss as well as return him to lucidity when he deems it necessary Despite his small stature the Mad Hatter has been known to exhibit surprising strength and agility from time to time In the graphic novel Madness the Mad Hatter is shown as impressively holding his own in a fistfight with Batman atop a moving train Appearance Edit The Mad Hatter has gone through many changes in his physical appearance over the years but the basic look remains the same In his debut he was a very short brown or auburn haired man When he reappeared in the early 1980s he was depicted as of average height with blonde hair In later years he was short again but with white hair Today Tetch has red hair much like his impostor did but his size and height still seem to vary Constants throughout his depictions are a slightly overlarge head and more recently very large teeth In Secret Six 6 December 2006 Tetch claims to suffer from macrocephaly 31 Reception EditThe character of the Mad Hatter has been analyzed as a stereotypical depiction of a villainous European in fiction 32 Other characters named Mad Hatter Edit The impostor Mad Hatter After the real Jervis Tetch Mad Hatter had been sent to Arkham Asylum following his debut a very different Mad Hatter appeared who claimed to be Jervis Tetch This Mad Hatter first appeared in Detective Comics 230 April 1956 by Bill Finger and Sheldon Moldoff and unlike the original was tall red headed stocky and sported a gaudy mustache 33 He was primarily a thief who was obsessed with completing his private collection of hats from all nations cultures and historical periods He often constructed various weaponry concealed inside his hats like flame throwers and buzzsaws 33 The headgear he wanted most was of course Batman s cowl In numerous attempts he tried to de cowl Batman 34 35 After many tries he was successful by spraying the cowl with a radioactive substance Batman then went to nuclear lab and as he was preparing to leave he set off the radiation detectors He then had to remove it and handed it to one of Mad Hatter s henchmen who was disguised as one of the lab workers No sooner did the Mad Hatter put it in his collection than Batman and Robin arrived They had traced the cowl with their super sensitive Geiger counter in the Batplane Later on in Batman 297 March 1978 the impostor Mad Hatter claimed to have gone straight but that turned out to be a lie 36 In 1981 it was revealed that he was in fact an impostor when the real Jervis Tetch returned The real Hatter claimed to have killed his impostor but the impostor Mad Hatter reappeared alive in 1987 in Detective Comics 573 where he ended up being beaten by Batman 37 He was treated to a cameo appearance in Secret Origins vol 2 44 1989 where he is seen in his cell at Arkham making paper hats in the story His Name is Clayface III Upon seeing him one Arkham guard tells another He could murder ya a thousand different ways if we let im have any real hat But that doesn t stop him from tryin 38 The impostor Mad Hatter appeared in Batman 700 2010 under the moniker the Hatman as well as in a flashback to his Mad Hatter days 39 Alternative versions EditAs one of Batman s most recognizable and popular opponents the Mad Hatter appears in numerous comics that are not considered part of the regular DC continuity including In the Batman comic strip the Mad Hatter is a computer programing genius who discovered that his products were depleting the ozone layer Jervis Tetch is betrayed by his business partners to keep him from reporting to the EPA Injected with hallucinogens Tetch was driven permanently mad and his partners had him locked up in Arkham Asylum There he realized that he was driven mad with poisons from his own industry just as hatters were and that he was himself now mad as a hatter He became obsessed with hats which he used as a tool for revenge After creating a mind controlling computer chip Tetch gave a rigged hat to the Arkham warden and secretly took control of Asylum He then sent rigged hats to his business partners forcing them to commit suicide Realizing that he had a good thing going Tetch used Arkham as his base of operations robbing banks and experimenting his technology on inmates like the Joker before he was eventually stopped by Batman and Harvey Dent In the Elseworlds tale Batman Crimson Mist the third part of the trilogy that began with Batman amp Dracula Red Rain which saw Batman become a vampire the Mad Hatter makes a cameo during the vampire Batman s assault on Arkham Asylum in which Batman kills and beheads him 40 An aged version of Mad Hatter appears in the first issue of the 2010 Batman Beyond limited series According to a now elderly Bruce Wayne the Mad Hatter burnt out his mind years earlier during his final confrontation with Batman and has since spent his days locked up in the mental institution wing of a hospital in Neo Gotham after Arkham Asylum closed down By now he has become harmless 41 In the Justice League Beyond story arc Flashdrive the Mad Hatter is portrayed as having died presumably from old age His body is kept in a vault beneath Wayne Manor with the rest of Batman s deceased rogues 42 In the Batman Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles crossover the Mad Hatter is turned into a mutant rabbit by the Shredder along with other mutated inmates of Arkham Asylum After Shredder being defeated by Batman and the Turtles the police scientists have managed to turn Jervis and the rest of inmates at Arkham back to normal and are currently in A R G U S custody 43 Jervis Tetch appears in the 2017 series Batman White Knight This version s technology is used by Jack Napier who in this reality was a Joker who had been force fed an overdose of pills by Batman which temporarily cured him of his insanity to control Clayface Particles from Clayface s body were then slipped into the drinks of other Batman villains so that Napier could control them by way of Clayface s ability to control parts of his body that had been separated from him He assists Neo Joker in stealing his technology back from Napier so she can control the villains and he remains as her sidekick for the rest of the story In Mother Panic Gotham A D the Mad Hatter is depicted as having been killed by the Joker during his short lived heroic stint 44 In other media EditTelevision Edit Live action Edit Mad Hatter as portrayed by David Wayne in the live action Batman series left and by Benedict Samuel in Gotham right The Mad Hatter appears in the 1960s Batman TV series portrayed by David Wayne While this version is referred to as Jervis Tetch his appearance is based on the imposter Mad Hatter as the series was produced before he was revealed as such Additionally he wears a trick top hat containing a set of mechanical eyes capable of firing hypnotic beams that render victims unconscious and is obsessed with stealing hats particularly Batman s cowl Jervis Tetch appears in Gotham portrayed by Benedict Samuel 45 46 Introduced in season three this version is a professional hypnotist who can control people s minds via his voice and a ticking device He is also known for dressing himself his henchmen and his victims as characters from Lewis Carroll s Alice s Adventures in Wonderland as well as creating a virus from his sister Alice s blood that turns people into homicidal maniacs In season four Tetch joins Jerome Valeska s Legion of Horribles to assist them in spreading chaos throughout Gotham and acquires his Mad Hatter moniker from Oswald Cobblepot In season five Tetch was put in charge of Ace Chemicals and brainwashed Jim Gordon and Leslie Thompkins as part of his plan to make Bruce Wayne relieve his parents death An original incarnation of the Mad Hatter named Liam Crandle appears in the Batwoman episode Mad as a Hatter portrayed by Amitai Marmorstein 47 48 He is a mentally ill teenager and a fan of Alice seeing her as a victim of society After buying Jervis Tetch s hat online he holds Mary Hamilton s graduation ceremony hostage only to be foiled by Batwoman Batwing and Alice Crandle is later incarcerated while Tetch s hat is confiscated Animation Edit Jervis Tetch The Mad Hatter as depicted in Batman The Animated Series voiced by Roddy McDowall The Mad Hatter as he was later depicted in The New Batman Adventures again voiced by McDowall The Jervis Tetch incarnation of the Mad Hatter appears in The Batman Superman Hour episode A Mad Mad Tea Party voiced by Ted Knight This version has trained white rabbits a hat shaped car and henchmen dressed as Wonderland characters The Jervis Tetch incarnation of the Mad Hatter appears in series set in the DC Animated Universe DCAU voiced by Roddy McDowall This version is British with blonde hair and a large overbite gives him a Cheshire Cat like smile Introduced in the Batman The Animated Series episode Mad as a Hatter the shy and kind Tetch is a technical and electronic genius who experiments with animals using mind controlling microchips stored within hats to stimulate brain waves He falls in love with his secretary Alice Pleasance who does not reciprocate his feelings Donning the guise of the Mad Hatter and using Alice in Wonderland as inspiration he attempts to win Alice s affection by taking her out on the town after her boyfriend dumps her However she misinterprets the gesture as a way to cheer her up and unwittingly spurns his affections Driven over the edge Tetch uses his microchips to turn Alice into his robotic puppet until Batman defeats him Episode writer Paul Dini once claimed that the episode was inspired by a true story involving a technical designer who had unrequited feelings for someone at work and committed a workplace shooting 49 In the episode Perchance to Dream Tetch uses an electronic helmet to trap Batman in a virtual reality realm that gives him his greatest desires in an attempt to remove the Dark Knight from his life Once he gets free however Batman defeats Tetch and leaves him for the police In the episode The Worry Men Tetch creates the eponymous dolls using his chips to hypnotize Gotham s elite into giving him large sums of money so he can acquire an island where he can live in peace However Batman stops him and gives Tetch his own Worry Man to stop him from committing more crimes Tetch also makes minor appearances in the episodes Trial and Make Em Laugh Tetch returns in The New Batman Adventures episode Animal Act In this series he was redesigned to resemble a short thin rodent like man with a paler complexion and dark green outfit Tetch also appears in the Superman The Animated Series episode Knight Time After discovering Bruce Wayne was hypnotized by mind controlling nanites Superman and Robin join forces to find Tetch who they believe is the culprit Upon capturing him however they find that he is not responsible Tetch examines the nanites and based on the highly advanced technology used in their composition speculates that they are of extraterrestrial origin The heroes later discover the nanites were created by Brainiac While Tetch does not appear in Batman Beyond when asked about his fate the show s creator Paul Dini jokingly stated that he along with the Riddler reformed and started running a men s clothing store 50 The impostor Mad Hatter appears in Batman The Brave and the Bold The Jervis Tetch incarnation of the Mad Hatter appears in the Young Justice Outsiders episode Triptych voiced by Dwight Schultz The Jervis Tetch incarnation of the Mad Hatter appears in the Harley Quinn episode Another Sharkley Adventure voiced by Griffin Newman This version comes off as a creep and pervert to others due to his abnormal behavior though he repeatedly denies these claims Tetch kidnaps Harley Quinn and Batgirl and attempts to use them as test subjects for his mind controlling hats with which he plans to enslave Gotham s citizens though the former manages to talk him into releasing her by claiming they are both villains However Harley quickly regrets abandoning Batgirl and returns to rescue her After Batgirl comments that Harley is not as villainous as she believes herself to be the latter beats Tetch to death with her baseball bat to prove her otherwise Film Edit The Mad Hatter was considered by Mark Protosevich to appear in Batman Unchained the unproduced third Joel Schumacher Batman film but was dropped in favor of the Scarecrow and Harley Quinn 51 Rowan Atkinson and Robin Williams were considered for the role 52 The Jervis Tetch incarnation of the Mad Hatter appears in Batman Bad Blood voiced by Robin Atkin Downes This version works for the League of Assassins as one of Talia al Ghul s henchmen and helped turn Heretic a clone of Damian Wayne into the perfect soldier for the League After Heretic captures Batman Tetch reprograms his mind to follow Talia s orders and reveal his and his allies secrets After Batman helps the League infiltrate the World Tech Summit and take over Wayne Enterprises technologies Tetch brainwashes all of the attending politicians and dignitaries into obeying Talia However he is killed by a system overload caused in the ensuing battle between Batman s allies and Talia s henchmen The Mad Hatter makes a cameo appearance in Batman Unlimited Mechs vs Mutants voiced by an uncredited Alastair Duncan The 1960s Batman TV series incarnation of the Mad Hatter made a cameo appearance in Batman Return of the Caped Crusaders The impostor Mad Hatter makes a cameo appearance in Scooby Doo amp Batman The Brave and the Bold The Mad Hatter appears in Batman The Long Halloween voiced by John DiMaggio 53 Video games Edit The Mad Hatter appears as a boss in The Adventures of Batman amp Robin This version s appearance is based on that of the Batman The Animated Series version coupled with elongated eyelashes on his left eye similarly to Alex DeLarge s Additionally he commands an army of robots based on characters from Alice in Wonderland The Mad Hatter appears in DC Universe Online voiced by Aaron Mace The Mad Hatter appears in Scribblenauts Unmasked A DC Comics Adventure Lego Batman Edit Main article Lego Batman The Jervis Tetch incarnation of the Mad Hatter appears as a boss and unlockable character in Lego Batman The Videogame with vocal effects provided by Chris Edgerly This version is one of the Joker s lieutenants and is armed with a small handgun The Mad Hatter appears as an optional side boss and unlockable playable character in Lego Batman 2 DC Super Heroes voiced by Townsend Coleman The Mad Hatter appears again as a playable character in Lego Batman 3 Beyond Gotham voiced by Nolan North The Batman The Animated Series incarnation of the Mad Hatter appears as a playable character in Lego DC Super Villains via the Batman The Animated Series Level Pack DLC 54 Batman Arkham Edit Main article Batman Arkham The Jervis Tetch incarnation of the Mad Hatter appears in the Batman Arkham series voiced by Peter MacNicol 55 According to Batman Arkham Asylum writer Paul Dini the Mad Hatter was originally planned to appear in the game in a level where Batman discovers him in a child s hedge maze within the titular asylum s Botanical Gardens while Poison Ivy controls her plants to slow Batman down However the idea did not fit the game s tone and the Mad Hatter s appearance was dropped 56 In his first physical appearance in Batman Arkham City it is revealed that Tetch was being manipulated by Hugo Strange into conducting inhumane behavior control experiments on Arkham Asylum patients for the latter s purposes in exchange for a consistent supply of tea and multiple Alices for Tetch to do with as he pleases As of the game Tetch became an inmate of Strange s city prison Arkham City where he has formed his a small gang of mind controlled henchmen In the prequel Batman Arkham Origins a younger Tetch has yet to call himself the Mad Hatter struggles to perfect his mind control technology and has his first encounter with Batman after challenging him to rescue his latest Alice As of Batman Arkham Knight Tetch has taken to speaking in cryptic rhymes In the DLC side mission Wonderland Tetch turns himself into the GCPD and demands to speak with Batman challenging him to find and rescue three police officers he has taken hostage Once the Dark Knight finds two of them Tetch hypnotizes him into seeing a storybook esque world in an attempt to make Batman kill the third officer and become his latest Alice However Batman once again resists Tetch s mind control escapes the hallucination and incarcerates Tetch 57 Miscellaneous Edit The Jervis Tetch incarnation of the Mad Hatter appears in spin off comic books set in the DC Animated Universe In issue 17 of The Batman Adventures Tetch tries to force Alice Pleasance to marry him with a mind control chip but Robin forces the Dream Inducer onto Tetch s head which inadvertently causes him to suffer a permanent mental break with reality The happy yet vegetative Tetch is returned to Arkham Asylum while he lives out a happy life with Alice in his mind 58 In issue 8 of the Justice League Unlimited spin off comic book it was revealed that years of using his mind controlling technology had rotted Tetch s mind and driven him mad 59 The Mad Hatter appears in the Injustice Gods Among Us prequel comic book Terrified of being removed from Arkham Asylum by the Justice League he disappears with help from the Flash 60 Years later the Mad Hatter resurfaces to meet with Black Mask Bronze Tiger Man Bat Scarecrow Tweedledum and Tweedledee before they are interrupted by Damian Wayne and defeated by a Deadman possessed Bronze Tiger 61 See also EditList of Batman Family adversariesReferences Edit Brooker Will 2004 Alice s Adventures Lewis Carroll in Popular Culture Continuum International Publishing Group pp 152 153 ISBN 0 8264 1433 8 Cowsill Alan Irvine Alex Manning Matthew K McAvennie Michael Wallace Daniel 2019 DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle DK Publishing p 55 ISBN 978 1 4654 8578 6 a b Bill Finger w Bob Kane and Lew Sayre Schwartz p Charles Paris i The Scoop of the Century Batman 49 1948 DC Comics Fleisher Michael L 1976 The Encyclopedia of Comic Book Heroes Volume 1 Batman New York City Macmillan Publishing pp 268 269 ISBN 0 02 538700 6 Retrieved 29 March 2020 Ed Brubaker w Michael Lark p Stefano Gaudiano i Lee Loughridge col Clem Robins let Matt Idelson and Nachie Castro ed Unresolved Part Two Gotham Central 20 August 2004 New York City DC Comics Ed Brubaker w Michael Lark p Stefano Gaudiano i Unresolved Gotham Central 20 August 2004 New York City DC Comics Brian K Vaughan w Rich Burchett p John Lowe i Mimsy Were the Borogroves Detective Comics 787 December 2003 DC Comics Grant Morrison w Dave McKean a Arkham Asylum A Serious House on Serious Earth 1989 New York City DC Comics a b Jeph Loeb w Tim Sale a Batman Haunted Knight 1995 New York City DC Comics Gail Simone w Brad Walker p Jimmy Palmiotti i Six Degrees of Devastation Secret Six 6 January 2007 New York City DC Comics a b Ed Brubaker w Unresolved Gotham Central 19 22 July October 2004 New York City DC Comics Greenberger Robert 2008 The Essential Batman Encyclopedia Del Rey pp 241 242 ISBN 9780345501066 Gerry Conway w Head Hunt by a Mad Hatter Detective Comics January 1981 New York City DC Comics Gerry Conway w All My Enemies Against Me Detective Comics January 1981 New York City DC Comics Rovin Jeff 1987 The Encyclopedia of Supervillains New York Facts on File p 199 ISBN 0 8160 1356 X Neil Gaiman w Dave McKean a Going Down Black Orchid 2 September 1991 New York City DC Comics Grant Morrison w Chaz Truog p Mark McKenna i Tatjana Wood col John Costanza let Karen Berger and Art Young ed Fox on the Run Animal Man 10 April 1989 New York City DC Comics a b Javier Pulido Chuck Dixon and Scott Beatty w Robert Campanella i Lee Loughridge col Sean Konot let Dennis O Neill ed Year One Robin Year One 1 October 2000 New York City DC Comics Greg Rucka w Shawn Martinbrough p Unknowing Detective Comics 758 760 July 2001 New York City DC Comics James Robinson w Leonard Kirk p John Kalisz col Travis Lanham let Michael Siglain and Peter Tomasi ed Face the Face Part Three Detective Comics 818 June 2006 New York City DC Comics Detective Comics 841 DC Comics Tony S Daniel w Tony S Daniel p Sandu Florea and Norm Rapmund i Ian Hannin col Jared K Fletcher let Mike Marts ed Life After Death Part 4 Smoke and Mirrors Batman 695 January 2010 New York City DC Comics Tony S Daniel w Tony S Daniel p Ian Hannin col Jared K Fletcher let Mike Marts ed Life After Death Part 5 Mind Games Batman April 2010 New York City DC Comics Eric Wallace w Fabrizio Fiorentino and Cliff Richards p Hi Fi Design col Travis Lanham let Sean Ryan and Brian Cunningham ed Family Reunions Part One Titans 28 December 2010 New York City DC Comics Paul Jenkins and Joe Harris w David Finch p Richard Friend i Jeromy Cox col Sal Cipriano let Mike Marts and Rickey Purdin ed Run Rabbit Run Batman The Dark Knight 3 April 2012 New York City DC Comics Batman The Dark Knight 4 Batman The Dark Knight vol 2 6 Tony S Daniel w Romano Molenaar and Pere Perez p Sandu Flores and Pere Perez i Andrew Dalhouse col David Sharpe let Mike Marts Harvey Richards and Katie Kubert ed Detective Comics Annual 2 October 2012 New York City DC Comics Batman The Dark Knight vol 2 15 21 Doomsday Clock 6 July 2018 DC Comics Secret Six 6 December 2006 Georg Drennig Otherness and the European as Villain and Antihero in American Comics in Comics as a Nexus of Cultures eds Mark Berninger Jochen Ecke and Gideon Haberkorn Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company 2010 129 131 a b Detective Comics 230 Batman 201 Batman 292 Batman 297 Detective Comics 573 Secret Origins vol 2 44 Batman 700 Doug Moench w Kelley Jones p John Beatty i Gregory Wright col Todd Klein let Dennis O Neill ed Batman Crimson Mist February 1999 New York City DC Comics Batman Beyond 2 Justice League Beyond Flashdrive Batman Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 6 DC Comics IDW Mother Panic Gotham A D 2 Burlingame Russ April 5 2015 Gotham To Introduce Clayface Mr Freeze and Mad Hatter in Season Two Comic Book com Ausiello Michael July 18 2016 Walking Dead Alum Joins Gotham Season 3 as Mad Hatter TV Line Schaefer Sandy June 28 2021 Batwoman Will Debut Classic Batman Villains in Season 3 Along With New Versions Comic Book Resources Retrieved July 18 2021 Hatchett Keisha 20 September 2021 Batwoman Season 3 The Mad Hatter Has Entered the Chat in New Trailer TVLine Retrieved 23 September 2021 Batman The Animated Series writer Paul Dini Animationarena com Retrieved 2010 12 25 ToyFare issue 1999 Remember when Courtney Love nearly played Harley Quinn in the sequel to Batman amp Robin Flickeringmyth com 2016 08 05 Retrieved 2017 09 07 Batman Unchained Triumphant the Cancelled Sequel Comics Amino Batman The Long Halloween Part Two Exclusive Trailer Debut IGN May 18 2021 Retrieved May 19 2021 Newton Andrew 31 August 2018 LEGO DC Super Villains Season Pass details revealed Flickering Myth Twitter ericholmeslive johnboy34661029 Yes it is Twitter com Retrieved 2014 01 07 Schramm Mike July 26 2011 Rocksteady and Paul Dini on the storytelling in Batman Arkham City Joystiq AOL Archived from the original on October 21 2012 Retrieved September 26 2011 Batman Arkham Knight Wonderland Victim Locations and Guide Shack News November 3 2016 Retrieved August 11 2017 The Batman Adventures 17 Justice League Unlimited 8 Injustice Gods Among Us 15 Injustice Gods Among Us Year Five 14External links EditMad Hatter at DC Database Mad Hatter at Comic Vine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mad Hatter DC Comics amp oldid 1135534148, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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