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===Outsider Leader?===
===Outsider Leader?===
In the absence of Batman, the Outsiders will be led by a new Owlman. A Trick or Treat tease from the Oct. 2008 of DC Nation ("THE OWL AND THE BUTLER ARE THE SAME PERSON") hints that it will be Alfred Pennyworth behind the mask.
In the absence of Batman, the Outsiders will be led by a new Owlman. A Trick or Treat tease from the Oct. 2008 of DC Nation ("THE OWL AND THE BUTLER ARE THE SAME PERSON") hints that it will be Alfred Pennyworth behind the mask. In "Origins & Omens: Outsiders #15", however, Alfred takes the role of leader of the Outsiders unmasked (directing them remotely). Owlman is Roy Raymond Jr, a television broadcasting video vigilante, now, but not formerly, in costume.


===Other continuities===
===Other continuities===

Revision as of 17:14, 22 February 2009

Alfred Pennyworth
File:BatmanGothamKnightsCVR42.jpg
Cover of Batman: Gotham Knights #42 (June 2003).
Pencils by Brian Bolland.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceBatman #16 (April-May 1943)
Created byBob Kane
Jerry Robinson
In-story information
Full nameAlfred Thaddeus Crane Pennyworth
Team affiliationsBatman Family
Secret Intelligence Service
Outsiders
Supporting character ofBatman, Robin
Notable aliasesThaddeus Crane, Thaddeus Middleton, the Eagle, the Outsider

Alfred Thaddeus Crane Pennyworth is a fictional character that appears in comic books published by DC Comics The character first appears in Batman #16 (April-May 1943), and was created by writer Bob Kane and artist Jerry Robinson. Alfred serves as Batman’s (and Bruce Wayne's) tireless butler, assistant, confidante and surrogate father figure, in modern interpretations this has gone to the point where Alfred was Bruce's legal guardian following the death of his parents. He has sometimes been called "Batman's batman."[1][2] Alfred also provides comic relief, as his sometimes sarcastic and cynical attitude often adds humor to dialogue occurring between himself and the obsessed Batman. Alfred is a vital part of the Batman mythos, and appears in most other media adaptations of the character.

The character of Alfred has been consistently popular over the years, having received a nomination for the R.A.C. "Squiddy" Award for Favorite Supporting Character in 1994 and for Best Character in 2001. He was also nominated for the Wizard Fan Award for Favorite Supporting Male Character in 1994.[3]

Fictional character biography

When Alfred first appeared, he was overweight and clean-shaven; however, when the 1943 Batman serial was released, William Austin, the actor who played Alfred, was trim and sported a thin moustache. DC editors wanted the comic Alfred to resemble his cinematic counterpart, so in Detective Comics #83 (January 1944), Alfred vacationed at a health resort, where he slimmed down and grew a mustache. This look has remained with the character ever since, even surviving his "death"[4] and resurrection.[5]

Alfred was originally conceived as a comedic foil for Batman and Robin. In most early tales, he made bumbling attempts to be a detective on a par with the young masters. He was given a four-page feature of his own,[6] and the feature lasted thirteen issues, skipping Batman #35, with the last story in Batman #36.[7] The stories followed a simple formula with Alfred somehow managing to solve a crime and catch the culprits entirely by accident. After that, the comedic aspects of the character were downplayed.

Pre-Crisis

File:Alfredoriginal.jpg
Alfred as he originally looked in Batman #16, his first appearance.

The Pre-Crisis comics (i.e., comics published by DC Comics between 1938 and 1986) established Alfred as a retired actor and intelligence agent who followed the deathbed wish of his dying father, Jarvis, to carry on the tradition of serving the Wayne family. To that end, Alfred introduced himself to Bruce Wayne and Dick Grayson at Wayne Manor and insisted on becoming their butler. Although the pair did not want one, especially since they did not want to jeopardize their secret identities with a servant in the house, they did not have the heart to reject Alfred.

Initially, Alfred discovered their identities by accident. While fighting a burglar in Batman #16 (Alfred's first appearance), he accidentally hit a switch and opened a sliding panel leading to the Batcave. This was revised in Batman #110 (September 1957): during his first night at Wayne Manor, Alfred awoke to moaning and followed the sound to the secret door to the staircase to the Batcave and met his would be employers in their superhero identities (Batman had been injured while out in the field). As it turned out, the wounds were actually insignificant, but Alfred's care convinced the residents that their butler could be trusted. Since then, Alfred included the support staff duties of the Dynamic Duo on top of his regular tasks.

Ironically, Alfred's loyalty would lead him to become a member of Batman's rogue's gallery. While pushing Batman and Robin out of the way of a falling boulder, Alfred was seemingly killed in Detective #328 (June 1964). It was revealed in Detective #356 (October 1966) that he had been revived by a scientist named Brandon Crawford. His attempt at regeneration resulted in a dramatic change: Alfred awoke from his apparent death with pasty white skin with circular markings, superhuman powers, including telekinesis, and a desire to destroy Batman and Robin. Calling himself The Outsider, he indirectly battled the Dynamic Duo on a number of occasions, using others as his puppets – the Grasshopper Gang in Detective #334, Zatanna in Detective #336, and even the Batmobile itself in Detective #340 – and generally only appeared as a mocking voice over the radio. He did not physically appear in the comics until Detective #356, when he is bathed again in the rays of the regeneration machine during a struggle with Batman, and returns to normal, with no memory of his time as a supervillain. His time as the Outsider is collected in Showcase Presents: Batman Volumes 1 and 2.

Alfred was later reunited with his long-lost daughter, Julia Remarque, though this element was not included in Post-Crisis comics. Her mother was the DC war heroine Mademoiselle Marie, whom Alfred had met while working as an intelligence agent in occupied France during the Second World War.

Post-Crisis

In the Post-Crisis comics' continuity, Alfred has been the Wayne Family butler all of Bruce's life, and had helped his master establish his superhero career from the beginning. In addition he was Bruce's legal guardian following the deaths of his parents. Alfred's history has been modified several times over the years, creating assorted versions. In one such version Alfred was hired away from the British Royal Family by Bruce's parents, and he virtually raised Bruce after they were murdered.

Meanwhile another version of Alfred's Post-Crisis life was slightly more closely linked to his pre-Crisis counterpart. In this version Alfred was an actor on the English Stage, who agreed to become the Waynes' butler, only so as to honor the dying wish of his father. At the time he begins working for the Waynes, Bruce is but a young child. After several months, Alfred voices the desire to quit and return home to continue his life as an actor. However, these plans are momentarily forgotten when young Bruce returns home, after getting into a fight with a school bully. Alfred teaches Bruce to handle the bully strategically, rather than using brute force. Following Alfred's advice, Bruce manages to take care of his bully problem. Upon returning home, Bruce requests that Alfred stays, and Alfred agrees without a second thought. After the Waynes' murders, Alfred raises Bruce.

Alfred would later aid Bruce in raising Dick Grayson, Jason Todd and Tim Drake, all of whom would be adopted by Bruce Wayne and become his partner Robin. He also had close friendships with other members of the Bat-Clan including Barbara Gordon and Cassandra Cain. Alfred often acts as a father-figure to Bruce, and a grandfather to Dick, Jason and Tim. However, due to his rather cold personality, Bruce Wayne makes sure that at least some degree of the business relationship between the two always exists. He is also highly respected by those heroes who are aware of his existence, including Superman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern and the original Teen Titans.

Alfred has also been romantically linked to Dr. Leslie Thompkins, though his relationship with her never came to anything, particularly after she apparently allowed Stephanie Brown to die from neglect. He also developed feelings for Tim Drake's stepmother, but again, nothing came of it.

During the events of Knightquest, Alfred accompanies Wayne to England, and becomes enraged when Wayne insists on endangering his own health while paraplegic. This was the culmination of several weeks of Wayne's self-destructive behavior, and when Wayne returns to Gotham, Alfred remains in England, tendering his resignation. He spends some time vacationing in Antarctica and The Bahamas before returning to England. Dick Grayson tracks him down several months later and convinces him to return to Wayne Manor. In that story, it was revealed he had walked out of his own wedding years earlier.

His resourcefulness came to the fore in the No Man's Land storyline, especially in Legends of the Dark Knight #118. Batman is missing for weeks, leaving Alfred alone to watch his city for him. He uses his skills as an actor, storyteller, medic, and spy to survive and collect information on the recently destroyed society. Alfred even uses hand-to-hand combat in a rare one-panel fight sequence between him and a pair of slavers that ends with his rescue by Batman.

In Batman #677, agents of Batman's mysterious enemy the Black Glove attack and beat Alfred in front of Bruce and Jezebel Jet, severely injuring him. In the same issue, a reporter from The Gotham Gazette suggests to Commissioner Gordon that Alfred may be Bruce's biological father, and that this may be a reason for the murder of Martha Wayne. This however ends up discredited in Batman #681 and then again in #683, in which Alfred points out the person shown in the evidence photos does not look like him at that age.

In Batman And The Outsiders Special, Alfred is seen apologizing at the grave's of Thomas and Martha Wayne at the loss of Bruce, commenting that he grieves as a parent, regarding Bruce as his son. Later, a secret panel in Alfred's room opens, the result of a failsafe planted by Bruce in the event of his death. Bruce leaves his one final task, and also gives him a emotional goodbye, telling Alfred he had discovered Alfred was his biological father. This revelation, beyond perhaps explaining Alfred's devotion to the orphaned heir beyond the obligations of a loyal family servant, also indicates at some point before Bruce's birth Alfred and Mrs. Wayne had a love affair.

Outsider Leader?

In the absence of Batman, the Outsiders will be led by a new Owlman. A Trick or Treat tease from the Oct. 2008 of DC Nation ("THE OWL AND THE BUTLER ARE THE SAME PERSON") hints that it will be Alfred Pennyworth behind the mask. In "Origins & Omens: Outsiders #15", however, Alfred takes the role of leader of the Outsiders unmasked (directing them remotely). Owlman is Roy Raymond Jr, a television broadcasting video vigilante, now, but not formerly, in costume.

Other continuities

In Frank Miller and Jim Lee's All Star Batman and Robin the Boy Wonder Alfred is a much tougher individual with a typically robust Miller-esque back-story. Following Batman's assault on the corrupt Gotham City police, who are readying to beat and probably kill the pre-Robin Dick Grayson, Alfred and Vicki Vale are caught in the devastating car wreckage Batman creates (not aware of their presence) and Vale is badly hurt. Alfred is seen, shirtless and muscled, applying a tourniquet and generally taking control of the situation. The boxouts in the frame describe him as having been a medic in the RAF and as ex-British Secret Service. Later in the series he is seen working out with a punching bag, again with a muscular physique, brooding about Bruce as "my DEMON-- my black-eyed, brilliant, willful ANGEL".

Alfred appears in the Elseworlds series Superman & Batman: Generations. He serves the Wayne family before dying in 1967, but his spirit remains around to give Bruce advice. In Generations 2, he makes his final appearance in 1975, when he convinces the ghost of Dick Grayson not to kill the Joker. He manages to convince Dick to pass over, but in the process his own soul crosses over, meaning he cannot come back. Alfred also plays a prominent role in the "Vampire Batman" trilogy where Batman is turned into a vampire to fight Dracula, forging Batman's weapons to use against the remaining members of Dracula's 'family' and subsequently working with Commissioner Gordon after Batman succumbs to his vampiric instincts and begins to kill his old enemies. At the conclusion of the trilogy, with Gordon being hunted by Two-Face and Killer Croc, Alfred sacrifices his life to allow Batman to drink his blood, giving his old master the strength to save Gordon and Gotham itself one last time before he is killed.

Name

Alfred introduced himself as the son of a butler named Jarvis in one of his early appearances, and the convention being that British butlers are known by their surnames, it was unclear whether Jarvis was his father's first or last name, the latter case which would have made Alfred's name Alfred Jarvis. Whether by coincidence or not, the name "Jarvis" was later used for the Avengers' butler, Edwin Jarvis, a character with many similarities to Alfred.

Alfred's name was later given officially as Alfred Beagle.[8] This name was subsequently given to the an alternate version of the character from the world of Earth-Two, and Pennyworth became Alfred's accepted surname in the mainstream continuity.[9] Alfred has also used the alias “Thaddeus Crane”, which is derived from his middle names.[10] His full name of Alfred Thaddeus Crane Pennyworth was depicted on his tombstone in Superman/Batman: Generations.

The Beagle surname was brought back into continuity (post-Crisis on Infinite Earths but pre-Infinite Crisis) as Alfred's original name as an actor and Cold War spy. He adopted the "Pennyworth" surname after his brief intelligence career, based on a comment from his handler that his life wasn't even worth a penny (in reference to a cyanide pill concealed within a fake penny).

Grant Morrison's run has referred to the Beagle surname as a possible stage name.

Family

  • Jarvis: Alfred's father in pre-crisis continuity.
  • Mademoiselle Marie: A war heroine with whom Alfred has a daughter in pre-crisis continuity.
  • Julia Remarque: Alfred's daughter by Mademoiselle Marie.
  • Wilfred Pennyworth: Alfred's brother, Wilfred is referenced in the late 1960s and early 1970s[11] and is mentioned in the 1997 film Batman and Robin.
  • Daphne Pennyworth: Niece of Alfred Pennyworth and daughter of Wilfred Pennyworth, Daphne briefly appeared in the late 1960s/early 1970s.
  • Margaret "Peg" Wilson: Alfred's sister, Margaret is referred to in Batman and Robin. It is mentioned that she and her husband are deceased.
  • Barbara Wilson: Daughter of Alfred's sister Margaret in Batman and Robin, this version of Batgirl was depicted as Alfred's niece instead of Commissioner Gordon's daughter because Gordon only had a background presence in the film series.

Skills, resources and abilities

Alfred is quite a brilliant man. He primarily keeps-up day-to-day operations of Batman’s home of Wayne Manor and maintains much of the equipment of the Batcave beneath it. A former actor, he can use his acting and disguise skills to help Batman in the field when necessary, and is even capable of impersonating Bruce Wayne on the telephone convincingly. He has also provided first aid up to and including suturing wounds and removing bullets, as well as occasional tactical support. With time, he has increased his surgical skills, and he's now able to perform arthroscopic surgery and other advanced medical procedures, thus limiting, if not eliminating at all, the need for hospital medical treatment even in front of grievous injuries.

While not as skilled at hand-to-hand combat as Bruce Wayne, Alfred is still nearly as resourceful. During a time at which he was kidnapped, he readily escapes and overcomes his captors without disturbing the cut of his suit. It was later mentioned that he had been kidnapped unsuccessfully 27 times (it should be noted, however, that these events take place in the Gotham Adventures comics, based on the animated adventures of Batman, and not within the standard DCU continuity).[12] In the recent Return of Ra's Al Ghul story, Ubu, Ra's massively muscled bodyguard and henchman, attempts to use Alfred as a hostage, only to be disabled by a well timed sucker punch from Alfred.

Presumably due to his lack of superpowers, the advanced combat training Bruce's other associates have, and Alfred's age, Alfred is the only member of the "Batman Family" that Bruce does not mind using a firearm, in his case favoring a shotgun.

In the 1960s TV series Batman, Alfred was skilled in swordsmanship and archery.

Current issues of the various Batman comics seem to indicate that Alfred is a pioneer in and has also mastered several fields of rose breeding (even creating his own, the "Pennyworth Blue"), computer programming, computer engineering, electrical engineering, chemical engineering, mechanical engineering, nanotechnology, and biotechnology as he single-handedly builds, programs, and maintains much of the Batman's next-generational technology such as the Batcomputer.[13]

In other media

Film

File:Alfredmgough.jpg
Michael Gough as Alfred, started from Batman to Batman & Robin.
File:Alfred nolanseries.jpg
Michael Caine as Alfred in Nolan's Batman movies.
  • William Austin was the first actor to portray Alfred, in the 1943 Batman serial. Austin's appearance influenced the change of Alfred's design from the original, fat, clean shaven Alfred.
  • Eric Wilton portrayed Alfred in the 1949 serial Batman and Robin.
  • Alan Napier portrayed Alfred in the 1966 Batman film starring Adam West and Burt Ward.
  • Michael Gough portrayed Alfred in the movies Batman (1989), Batman Returns (1992), Batman Forever (1995), and Batman and Robin (1997). In Batman & Robin, he was visited by his niece, Barbara Wilson, who becomes Batgirl. He is also a skilled technologist, as he programs his brain algorithms into the Batcomputer. Gough also portrayed Alfred in the BBC radio-drama presentation of the "Knightfall" story arc from the Batman comics, in a series of Onstar commercials featuring Batman, and a Diet Coke commercial from 1989.
  • Michael Caine portrays Alfred in the movie Batman Begins and its sequel The Dark Knight. In The Dark Knight, he reveals that he carried military-style operations in Burma on behalf of the local government with a group of friends, where he hunted down a forest bandit who threw valuable stones out for no apparent reason. He says that "some men just want to watch the world burn", very similar to the Joker. After Rachel Dawes is killed by the Joker, Alfred tells Bruce that when fighting against evil, things will always get worse before they improve, and exemplifies it by telling him that he and his men had to burn down the bandit's forest just to catch him.

Television

File:Pennyworth.jpg
Alan Napier as Alfred in Batman TV series.

Animation

Video games

He appears in LEGO Batman for the Playstation 3, Xbox 360 and Wii .[14]

An Easter egg in World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King shows a character named Alfred Copperworth, an obvious homage to Alfred Pennyworth, located in the Purple Parlor in the city of Dalaran. (Coincidentally, copper was the metal used to make the original U.S. penny.)

References

  1. ^ Mackie, Rob (2005-10-21). "Batman Begins review". The Guardian. Retrieved 2007-02-20. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |work= (help)
  2. ^ Tilley, Steve (2005-06-13). "Michael Caine one tough butler". CANOE. Edmonton Sun. Retrieved 2007-02-20. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  3. ^ Comic Book Awards Almanac
  4. ^ Detective Comics #328 in 1964
  5. ^ Detective Comics #356 in 1966
  6. ^ Batman #22 (April-May 1944)
  7. ^ Batman #32 (December 1945-January 1946)
  8. ^ Detective Comics #96 (February 1945)
  9. ^ Batman #216 (1969)
  10. ^ Batman #92 (June 1955)
  11. ^ Superman/Batman #37-42
  12. ^ Batman: Gotham Adventures #16
  13. ^ Batman Confidential #08 (October 2007)
  14. ^ Game Informer features a two-page gallery of the many heroes and villains who appear in the game with a picture for each character and a descriptive paragraph. See "LEGO Batman: Character Gallery," Game Informer 186 (October 2008): 92.