Ventriloquist (comics)

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The Ventriloquist


The Ventriloquist, from Batman #475 (1992).
Art by Norm Breyfogle.

Publisher DC Comics
First appearance Detective Comics #583 (February 1988)
Created by Alan Grant
John Wagner
Norm Breyfogle
Characteristics
Alter ego Arnold Wesker
Affiliations Secret Society of Super Villains
Abilities Suffers from dissociative identity disorder, which manifests in his psychotic dummy, Scarface.

The Ventriloquist is a DC Comics villain, an enemy of Batman. He first appeared in Detective Comics #583 (February 1988).

Contents

[edit] History

A meek, quiet man, the Ventriloquist plans and executes his crimes through a dummy named Scarface, with the dress and persona of a 1920s gangster, complete with pinstripe suit, cigar, and Tommy gun.

Born into a powerful Mafia Family, Arnold Wesker developed multiple personality disorder after seeing his mother murdered by an assassin from a rival Family. Growing up, his only outlet was ventriloquism, which he mastered, forming an act with a dummy he named Scarface. Eventually, the Scarface dummy took on his repressed anger, becoming another personality Wesker was convinced was real. When Wesker turned to crime, he let the Scarface personality do the dirty work, including robbery and murder. Wesker is dominated by the Scarface personality, who barks orders at him and degrades him with verbal abuse.Wesker always submits with a timid "Yes, Mr. Scarface." Wesker was never able to enunciate the letter "D" in his act, and replaces them with the letter "G" instead. For example, Scarface often calls the ventriloquist "Gummy" instead of "Dummy."

In the Riddler story The Riddle Factory (published in 1995), it was revealed that a gangster named "Scarface" Scarelli had once been active in Gotham, though had apparently died long before Batman's era. This may mean that Wesker's alter ego was somehow based on this individual.

He is one of many villains in the Rogues Gallery to be confined to Arkham Asylum when Batman apprehends him. One particularly memorable and amusing series of events concerning him took place during the Knightfall saga, after Bane had destroyed Arkham and released its inmates. Unable to find Scarface, the Ventriloquist uses a sock puppet in his place for a short time. After robbing a toy store, he procures a number of other hand puppets to fill in for Scarface, including one of a police officer whom he refers to as "Chief O'Hara" (in a likely reference to the character from the popular 1960s Batman TV show).

He was once apparently killed, and in a bizarre twist, Scarface appeared to still talk and act alive before he was destroyed. This death appears to have been retconned in "One Year Later" (presumably due to the events of the Infinite Crisis crossover). Wesker appeared as one of the members of the Secret Society of Super Villains that faced the Jade Canary, who pitched Scarface off the top of a roof.

The death of the Ventriloquist. Art by Don Kramer.
The death of the Ventriloquist. Art by Don Kramer.

In Detective Comics #818, an issue in what would later become the book "Batman: Face the Face", Wesker is shot in the stomach, and then twice in the head by an unseen assailant. The puppet Scarface is stepped on and its head crushed. The dying Wesker uses Scarface's hand to leave a clue regarding his murder: A street name. Later in the storyline, it is revealed that Tally Man, acting as an enforcer for the Great White Shark, is responsible for the murder.

[edit] Scarface and Sugar

A new female Ventriloquist, a blonde named Sugar by Scarface, has surfaced and is hinted to be an old character long thought dead. She more compatible partner than Wesker was, since Scarface no longer substitutes "g" for "b" and is much more compliant with Scarface's brutal methods.

[edit] Appearances in other media

[edit] DC Animated Universe

The Ventriloquist and Scarface appeared in Batman: The Animated Series, where they were voiced by George Dzundza. In this depiction, he is a master ventriloquist and can pronounce every sound perfectly as Scarface.

In his first appearance, "Read My Lips," his activities and persona were unknown to the authorities. When Gotham Police are baffled by a series of crimes executed with clockwork-like precision, Batman investigates the case and discovers that the crimes are planned by a mob boss known as Scarface. He traces Scarface to his lair — a deserted mannequin warehouse — and discovers, to his astonishment, that the crime czar is a wooden dummy, manipulated by a mild-mannered man called the Ventriloquist. Even worse, as he makes further developments, he realizes Arnold Wesker, the ventriloquist, has split personality and it is the dummy who manipulates the Ventriloquist(in this version, Scarface has yellowish, almost Hispanic-looking skin, has a cigarette hanging from his mouth, is dressed in a blue suit, and has a tommy-gun constantly tucked under his arm).

Scarface and his gang prove to be very effective when they managed to capture Batman by developing the spying device he put on the Ventriloquist tie and organize a fake hit to get the vigilante. Probably as a homage to the classic villain plots from the 1960s Batman TV series, Scarface ties and hangs Batman and sets him to fall into a pit full of mannequin hands with sharpened nails pointing up. At this point, by faking and projecting the voice of the Ventriloquist, Batman plays both of Wesker's personalities, setting them to fight against each other. That way, he made enough time to set himself free and defeat the gang. During the fight, Muggsy, one of the main Scarface thugs, accidentally shoots and destroys the dummy, apparently traumatizing Wesker.

At the end of the episode, locked in Arkham Asylum, Wesker is shown in one of the workshops shaping some wood. After a nurse congratulates him, he rolls it over revealing it was a new dummy head. He takes a knife and makes a "scar" across the face, similar to the original Scarface's. However, the scenes when the dummy is destroyed became recurring in his future appearance, leading to Scar-face's temporary "death" until a new dummy is made. In "Trial" he didn't even die after his head was accidentally chopped off by The Scarecrow. One of the dummies, probably the one from "Read My Lips" (because of the several bullet holes), was featured as one of the items of the souvenir gallery of the Bat-cave in Batman Beyond. In the DVD commentary to "Read My Lips," Bruce Timm stated that the recurring destruction of the dummy was because, since he wasn't a "living" character, the Fox Kids censors placed no restrictions on its treatment; as a result, the production staff vented their darker impulses by finding a more gruesome way of destroying the dummy each time, culminating in grinding him to sawdust in a building's ventilation fans in his final major appearance.

After "Read My Lips," one of the last episodes of the first season, the character became so popular that when the series returned for a second season (The Adventures of Batman & Robin), he was cast as a regular among the enemies of Batman, making three more appearances (more than The Penguin). A reference to his sudden popularity was made in Harlequinade, when listing all their friends to the Joker she tries to mention him but she forgets his name.

Later, in The New Batman Adventures episode "Double Talk," Wesker finally stood up to and destroyed Scarface, thus seemingly ridding himself of his alternate personality. However, in the comic books and in his last appearance in "Over The Edge," it is implied that a normal life may be always just out of Wesker's reach, Although the episode is a dream sequence. (in this version, Scarface is redesigned to wear a lighter colored blue suit than the B:TAS one, and as a hat of the same color as well as having caucasian skin and being shorter altogether).

In an episode of Justice League entitled "A Better World," the League visits the alternate dimension populated by their alter egos the Justice Lords. In the alternate reality's Arkham Asylum, several lobotomized patients appear before them, courtesy of the alternate world's more ruthless Superman. Wesker is present in the dayroom, and though his forehead is unmarked, Scarface intriguingly bears the two burn scars indicative of the treatment, which apparently had the same psychological effect on Wesker.

In the DCAU-continuity comic books, Scarface has his speech impediment from the mainstream DC Universe version. This was explained by Scarface claiming that, while he was "in prison" after one of Wesker's arrests, he was involved in a fight where a fellow inmate tore his lips off.

[edit] The Batman

The Scarface robot holding Wesker.
The Scarface robot holding Wesker.

The Ventriloquist and Scarface also appear in The Batman, where they are voiced by Dan Castellaneta. In the series, Wesker is a ventriloquist who snapped when he was booed off the stage one night, and turned to a life of crime, with his first successful act being the robbery of each and every person in the audience who had booed him. The Scarface dummy itself is not cast in the mould of a 1920s gangster, but is based upon the character of Tony Montana in the 1983 film Scarface. In his debut episode, The Big Dummy, Wesker arranges for the theft of various gadgets which are used to construct a giant Scarface robot, which holds Wesker in its hand in a reversal of their roles. In the end, Scarface was "killed" after he was run over by a train, his last word to Wesker being "Dummy". Wesker was then taken to Arkham Asylum.

In the episode Fistful of Felt, Wesker returns with a new Scarface. It was then revealed that Wesker once had a TV show which was cancelled. After Batman stops them from stealing dollar molds from a treasury, Wesker and Scarface were seen in Arkham during Hugo Strange's therapy group with the Joker and the Penguin. Hugo Strange considered Wesker his main patient and "freed" Wesker from Scarface. Wesker started to do kids' parties with a puppet named Mr. Snoots, until Strange took the next stage into his hands. He placed Scarface in Wesker's apartment where he can see him, perhaps to see if Wesker is completely cured, and able to stand up to Scarface's overbearing demands. In a confrontation with Batman in a newly opened building for children, Scarface and Mr. Snoots started fighting and were both once again destroyed by a train. Wesker was then returned to Arkham.

In Both Batman: the Animated Series and The Batman, the Ventriloquist's henchmen are Rhino and Muggsy (voiced by Earl Boen and Townsend Coleman respectively in B:TAS; both voiced by John DiMaggio in The Batman).

[edit] Rhino

In many stories Wesker was accompanied by a loyal bodyguard named Rhino. In the Animated Series, his name is revealed to be Charles 'Rhino' Daley. Rhino was sometimes portrayed as genuinely believing Scarface to be the boss, but more often was shown as humouring Wesker (and sometimes forgetting and addressing the Ventriloquist directly, to Scarface's outrage). Rhino, as his name implies, is a massive human being and likely one of the strongest "normal" humans in the DC Universe.

[edit] Video Games

Ventriloquist and Scarface have appeared as a boss in the Batman: Dark Tomorrow game.

[edit] See also

Some films have touched on similar themes:

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