List of mayors of Gotham City

This page lists all of the known Mayors of Gotham City in DC Comics.

Known Mayors of Gotham City

Mayors in the comic books

Several mayors of Gotham City have appeared in the comic book series that collectively form the "Batman Family" of titles:

  • A version of Mayor Aubrey James appears in the TV series Gotham, portrayed by Richard Kind. A mayor around the time of the deaths of Thomas and Martha Wayne, James is in Carmine Falcone's pocket alongside Commissioner Gillian B. Loeb and has often been contacted by the Court of Owls. Superficially congenial, he is indifferent and contemptuous of most of Gotham's citizens and ruthless towards anyone who would endanger his political and criminal associations. In Season Two, he is kidnapped by Theo Galavan and Tabitha Galavan as part of Theo's plot to run for mayor which also involved having Jerome Valeska killing Deputy Mayor Harrison Kane at a hospital charity event. Even though Aubrey was later rescued, he mentioned in court that Oswald Cobblepot was the one who captured him and made him lie about Galavan's involvement presumably out of fear that Galavan would take revenge on him. In Season Three, Aubrey James was with Nathaniel Barnes when he held a press conference about the Indian Hill escapees. When Valerie Vale asked if Wayne Enterprises had any connection to Indian Hill, Aubrey James and Nathaniel Barnes had no knowledge of it. In the episode "Mad City: Look Into My Eyes," Aubrey James mentions at a press conference stating that the elected Gotham City officials have run Gotham City since Theo Galavan's death and want him to be reinstated. Oswald Cobblepot crashes the press conference and challenges him to an election since he was the one who drove away the monsters that plagued Gotham City. In the episode "Mad City: New Day Rising," Oswald successfully wins the election against Aubrey James and becomes the new Mayor of Gotham City. In the episode "Heroes Rise: The Dark and Delicate Obsessions," Aubrey James is reinstated as Mayor of Gotham City at the time when Oswald Cobblepot goes missing. In the episode "Heroes Rise: The Primal Riddle," Riddler takes Mayor Aubrey James hostage using a neck bomb on him in order to draw out the Court of Owls. With some information from Tabitha Galavan, Gordon lures Riddler to the empty police station where the frequency there disabled Riddler's remote for the neck bomb on Mayor James. Upon Riddler being persuaded to accompany Gordon to meet the Court of Owls, he lets Mayor James go. In the episode "Heroes Rise: Destiny Calling," it was mentioned that Mayor Aubrey James called in the National Guard to help deal with the chaos caused by the Alice Tetch Virus.
  • Lloyd Bochner provides the voice of Mayor Hamilton Hill in Batman: The Animated Series. In Batman Beyond, there is a high school named after him.
  • Hamilton Hill is the new mayor of Gotham City at the start of Season 5 of The Batman voiced by Lex Lang. In a diversion from the comics and Batman: The Animated Series, this version of Hill is an African-American.
  • Hamilton Hill briefly appears in the Young Justice episode "Alpha Male" voiced by Corey Burton. He and several friends are shown on a hunting trip in India. After accidentally stumbling upon scientific equipment built by the Brain, Hill and the others are shot by Monsieur Mallah. A headline in a Gotham newspaper later reveals that Hill survived, albeit with serious injuries.
  • Hamilton Hill is mentioned in Batman: Arkham Origins. His name is on a building. According to one of the Gotham Intel files by Anarky, he was mentioned to have been involved in a sex scandal and to be in Rupert Thorne's pocket. In the DLC titled "Cold, Cold Heart", Hill is trying to recover with reports of him considering having Peter Grogan replace Gillian B. Loeb as police commissioner following his death at the hands of Joker (who was disguised as Black Mask during the events of the game proper). However, protests erupt over Loeb's corruption which was also exposed as well as evidence linking Grogan to the Maroni family. By the end of the game, it is mentioned that Hamilton Hill has ultimately resigned from office after Batman captures Mr. Freeze and Penguin and exposes Ferris Boyle.
  • Hamilton Hill appears in the first two episodes of Batman: The Telltale Series voiced by Robert Pescovitz. Hill is running for re-election against Gotham District Attorney Harvey Dent, who is being financially backed by Bruce Wayne. As Hill had been in an alliance with Thomas Wayne and Carmine Falcone decades earlier where the three of them ran Gotham as a covert criminal enterprise, Hill leaked knowledge of Thomas Wayne's misdeeds and crimes to disgrace Bruce and thus undercut the support for Dent's mayoral bid. He also used the power of the Mayor's office to have the GCPD search and seize evidence from Wayne Manor, which he then leaked to Oswald Cobblepot as part of a mutually beneficial arrangement to disgrace Bruce. It is also revealed that Hill ordered Joe Chill to assassinate Thomas and Martha Wayne and make it look like a mugging as he apparently feared Thomas was becoming too volatile to control. Shortly before a mayoral debate against Dent, Bruce/Batman went to get more answers from Hill about Thomas' criminal endeavours, also finding out that Cobblepot had a vendetta against the Wayne's due to an old bargain that handed Cobblepot family land over to Thomas Wayne. Despite warnings from Bruce/Batman to stay away from the debate as Cobblepot was likely to attack it as part of his plan for a people's revolution in Gotham, Hill went anyway and was subsequently held hostage when Cobblepot and his forces stormed the venue. He was drugged with truth serum and as a result confessed his contempt for Gotham's poor, saying they should be incinerated. In the battle between Cobblepot's forces and the GCPD alongside Batman and Catwoman to free the hostages, Mayor Hill was shot and killed by Cobblepot as revenge for his role in depriving the Cobblepots of their family land, just after confessing his role in authorizing the deaths of Thomas and Martha Wayne. Following Mayor Hill's death, Harvey Dent is sworn in as the new Mayor of Gotham City.
  • Mayor Marion Grange appeared as a male in The Batman voiced by Adam West (who played Batman in the first television series). He is depicted as a friend of the Wayne Family even when Thomas Wayne and Martha Wayne were still alive. By season five, Marion Grange was succeeded by Hamilton Hill.
  • An African-American version of Marion Grange is featured in Beware the Batman, voiced by C.C.H. Pounder. In "Broken", Grange is held hostage by Humpty Dumpty in his revenge plot against the city's law enforcers due to her role as District Attorney during his court case. In "Nexus", she was nearly killed by a bomb planted by Anarky in a plot to frame Batman. In "Games", she is one of Humpty Dumpty's unwilling participants in his Murder Mystery game due to her involvement where an innocent man was sent to prison after being framed by Tobias Whale. After the trauma of the incident, Grange takes a leave of absence and steps down in "Hero" leading Harvey Dent to start his own campaign for mayor. She is eventually replaced by Deputy Mayor David Hull in "Epitaph."
  • In Beware the Batman, David Hull (voiced by James Patrick Stuart) is mentioned several times as the deputy mayor, standing in for Marion Grange after the Humpty Dumpty incident. In "Animal," Hull gives Harvey Dent authorization to deny Gordon's SWAT team to break up a riot at Blackgate Penitentiary. At the end of "Epitaph," Hull is revealed to have been sworn in the new Mayor of Gotham City after Grange resigns and Dent is hospitalized.

Alternate universes

Mayors of Gotham City in other media

Besides the media appearances of some of the mayors listed above, some media appearances have their own Mayors of Gotham City:

Television

Film

Video games

References

  1. Batman #12
  2. Detective Comics #68
  3. Detective Comics #179; "Mayor Bruce Wayne!" from Jan 1952
  4. Detective Comics #784
  5. Batman: Gotham Knights #19 (August 2001)
  6. http://www.therealbatmanchronologyproject.com/blog/the-strange-case-of-mayors-gill-and-hill/
  7. http://www.infiniteearths.org/dcu/msgboards/batmanchars4
  8. Detective Comics #699 (July 1996)
  9. Robin #28 (April 1996)
  10. Batman #562 (February 1999)
  11. Gotham Central #13
  12. Batman Eternal #2 (April 2014)
  13. Batman and Robin Vol. 2 #23.2
  14. The Dark Knight III: The Master Race #3
  15. Brick Heroes: Sets of Lego Batman
  16. http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/heat-vision/mariah-carey-joins-lego-batman-838356
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