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Clayface
Clayface
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Clayface
The different versions of Clayface as depicted in Batman Villains Secret Files & Origins #1 (October 1998). From top to bottom: Sondra Fuller, Peter Malley (Clay-Thing), Preston Payne, Cassius Payne, Matt Hagen and Basil Karlo.
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearance(Karlo)
Detective Comics #40 (June 1940)
(Hagen)
Detective Comics #298 (December 1961)
(Payne)
Detective Comics #478 (August 1978)
(Fuller)
The Outsiders #21 (July 1987)
(Cassius)
Batman: Shadow of the Bat #27 (May 1994)
(Malley)
Batman #550 (January 1998)
(Russell)
Catwoman (vol. 3) #1 (January 2002)
(Williams)
Batman: Gotham Knights #60 (February 2005)
Created by(Karlo)
Bill Finger (writer)
Bob Kane (artist)
(Hagen)
Bill Finger (writer)
Sheldon Moldoff (artist)
(Payne)
Len Wein (writer)
Marshall Rogers (artist)
(Fuller)
Mike W. Barr (writer)
Jim Aparo (artist)
(Cassius)
Doug Moench (writer)
Kelley Jones (artist)
(Malley)
Doug Moench (writer)
Kelley Jones (artist)
(Russell)
Ed Brubaker (writer)
Darwyn Cooke (artist)
(Williams)
A. J. Lieberman (writer)
Javier Pina (artist)
In-story information
Alter egoBasil "Baz" Karlo
Matthew "Matt" Hagen
Preston "Bill" Payne
Sondra Fuller
Cassius "Clay" Payne
Peter Malley
"Todd Russell"
Johnny Williams
Adaptations:
Chris Cassius
Ethan Bennett
Tanner Freyr
Virginia Devereaux
SpeciesMetahuman
Team affiliations(Karlo)
Secret Society of Super Villains
Injustice League
Batman Family
(Hagen)
Anti-Justice League
(Fuller)
Strike Force Kobra
(All)
Mud Pack
Notable aliases(Karlo)
Ultimate Clayface
Clayface-Prime
(Fuller)
Lady Clay
(Malley)
Dr. Peter Malley
Clay-Thing
Abilities(All):

(Karlo, Hagen, & Fuller):

  • Power replication

(Payne):

(Cassius):

  • Bio-fission

(Malley):

  • Death glare

Clayface is an alias used by several characters appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Most incarnations of the character possess clay-like bodies and shapeshifting abilities, and all of them are adversaries of the superhero Batman. In 2009, Clayface was ranked as IGN's 73rd-greatest comic book villain of all time.[1]

Both a prominent enemy and ally of Batman, Clayface has appeared in various forms of non-comics media; he has been voiced by Ron Perlman in the DC Animated Universe (DCAU) and Alan Tudyk in both Harley Quinn and the DC Universe (DCU) animated series Creature Commandos, among others, with live-action versions of the character appearing on the television series Gotham, portrayed by Brian McManamon, and Pennyworth, portrayed by Lorraine Burroughs.

The character will headline a self-titled film (2026) written by Mike Flanagan and will be portrayed by Tom Rhys Harries, also set in the DCU.

Publication history

[edit]

Created by Bill Finger and Bob Kane, the original Clayface, Basil Karlo, appeared in Detective Comics #40 (June 1940) as a B-list actor who began a life of crime using the identity of a villain that he had portrayed in a horror film.[2] Kane stated that the character was partially inspired by the 1925 Lon Chaney version of Erik from The Phantom of the Opera and that his name was derived from Boris Karloff and Basil Rathbone.[3] The character only appeared twice in the Golden Age, but was the inspiration for the shape-shifting Silver Age version.[4]

In the late 1950s, Batman began facing a series of science fiction-inspired foes, including Matthew Hagen, a treasure hunter who was given vast shapeshifting powers and resiliency by exposure to a pool of radioactive protoplasm and became the second Clayface. He retained the title for the next several decades of comic book history.[5]

In the late 1970s, Preston Payne became the third Clayface.[6] A scientist suffering from hyperpituitarism, Preston Payne used the second Clayface's blood to create a cure for his condition. While the shapeshifting was brief tenure, he then became a clay-like creature that needed to pass his new condition on to others to survive with his melting touch.

Sondra Fuller of Strike Force Kobra used the terrorist group's technology to become the fourth Clayface, also known as Lady Clay. She formed the Mud Pack with the original and third Clayfaces. During this era, the original Clayface used the DNA of Payne and Fuller to become the Ultimate Clayface (as he now called himself).

Sometime after the Mud Pack event, Payne and Fuller had a son named Cassius "Clay" Payne, who, as the fifth Clayface, also had metahuman shapeshifting powers.

In a 1998 storyline, Dr. Peter Malley later uses a sample of Cassius Payne's skin to become Clay-Thing.

The Todd Russell version of Clayface was introduced in Catwoman (vol. 3) #4 (May 2002), and the Johnny Williams version of Clayface was introduced in Batman: Gotham Knights #60 (February 2005).

Fictional character biography

[edit]

Basil Karlo

[edit]

Golden Age

[edit]

The original version of Clayface, Basil Karlo, first appeared in Detective Comics #40 (June 1940).[7] He is a B-list actor who is driven insane when he hears that a remake of the classic horror film he had starred in, Dread Castle, would be shot without him acting in the film, even though he is to be one of the advising staff. Donning the costume of Clayface, a villain he once played in a different movie, he begins killing the actors playing characters he killed in the order and way they die in the film, along with someone who knew his identity. Last, he plans to murder the actor playing the Clayface killer. He is foiled by Batman and Robin.[8]

He reappears after the prison ambulance he is riding in plunges off a cliff. He once again dons the mask of Clayface and targets Bruce Wayne's fiancée, Julie Madison. Once again, the Dynamic Duo foil his plans.[9]

Silver Age

[edit]

While Earth-One's version of Clayface has a similar history, he was only seen in a flashback as Alice Chilton reminiscences about Bruce Wayne's growth from when her son Joe Chill shot Thomas Wayne and Martha Wayne to his path to becoming Batman.[10]

Clayface was later killed by John Carlinger during his attack on Carlinger's yacht.[11]

Post-Crisis

[edit]

In the Post-Crisis continuity, Karlo languishes in a prison hospital, when the current Clayface (Sondra Fuller) visits him out of curiosity. Karlo proposes an alliance between all living Clayfaces to kill Batman and did an attempt to resurrect Matt Hagen. He even arranges for a small piece of the remains of Matt Hagen to be gathered to make him a post-mortem member of the "Mud Pack" as the group called itself. Even though the "Mud Pack" is defeated, Karlo injects himself with blood samples from Preston Payne and Sondra Fuller, gaining the abilities to shapeshift and melt with a touch; he becomes the self-declared "Ultimate Clayface". He is defeated by the combined efforts of Batman and Looker of the Outsiders by overloading his abilities, making him melt into the ground. He literally sinks into the Earth's crust when he loses control of his powers;[12][13] he survives, however, and now his body sports crystals similar to quartz that endow him with greater power. Karlo escapes his underground prison when Gotham City is struck by a great cataclysm. He captures Batman and is about to kill him, but he gets into a feud with Mr. Freeze about who has a right to kill Batman. Using that distraction, Batman soundly defeats both of them.[14]

In Batman: No Man's Land, Karlo holds Poison Ivy prisoner in Robinson Park. After she is freed from her prison by Batman, Ivy battles and defeats Karlo, sinking him deep into the ground. Clayface is apparently destroyed in this battle.[15]

In Infinite Crisis, Clayface resurfaces as a member of Alexander Luthor Jr.'s Secret Society of Super Villains.[16]

Later, he seeks to increase his already formidable powers by absorbing Wonder Woman (a clay construct similar to him), giving him an amount of powers that border on invulnerability. While he is successful in absorbing some of the heroine's powers, causing her to regress to a teenage appearance resembling Donna Troy, he is ultimately returned to normal when Wonder Woman and Donna trick Clayface into entering a train carriage with Wonder Woman while she was disguised as Donna, Donna subsequently using the Lasso of Truth to swing the carriage around and turn it into a mystical centrifuge, causing the clay Clayface had taken from Wonder Woman to split away from him and re-merge with Wonder Woman due to the differences between the two types of clay.[17]

Basil Karlo is among the members of the Injustice League and is among the villains seen in Salvation Run.

In Final Crisis, Clayface joins Libra's Secret Society of Super Villains. He triggers an explosion at the Daily Planet under Libra's orders when Lex Luthor orders Libra to do something that will draw Superman to them.[18]

Black Mask attempts to control Karlo by implanting a device in his body. He escapes Black Mask, but is captured and imprisoned by the Outsiders.[19]

The New 52

[edit]

In 2011, "The New 52" rebooted the DC universe. His origin is given in the Batman: The Dark Knight storyline “Clay”. As a child, Basil Karlo came from a poor family. Still, they were able to afford the necessities. Karlo, desperate to become noticed, decided to join his school’s acting program, but was repeatedly turned down. As Karlo grew up, he joined more and more acting programs, and kept getting denied. One day, Karlo heard from a fellow actor Penguin had access to a chemical formula that would make anyone a great actor. Karlo sought out Penguin, and, finding him, used the formula excitedly. Penguin handed over the formula as he had no use for it. Karlo learned he could become malleable. Soon, he was a successful actor, appearing in horror and romance films frequently. But, soon, Penguin was losing money due to a gang war, and called upon Karlo to give it to him. Turning to crime, Karlo became a killer, and slowly lost his sanity. When he decided to become an actor again, he lashed out at a cast member and was fired. He then realized he had swapped DNA too much to hold his general form together, and became a massive clay creature, able to imitate any and all features except his own. As a part of the "Death of the Family" storyline, Poison Ivy breaks Basil Karlo out of Arkham Asylum, claiming she wants to marry him.[20] This turns out to be a ruse, however; Ivy is using him as part of a larger scheme. Upon realizing this, he seeks revenge.[21] Karlo later returns with a new plan: to use his DNA-duplication abilities to impersonate Bruce Wayne and take control of Wayne Enterprises. He even guesses that Wayne is Batman's true identity. However, Batman plants false evidence to suggest that he anticipated Karlo's attempt to take his DNA and tricked him into taking a fake sample. Batman eventually stops Karlo by trapping him in a security system that can only be deactivated with Karlo's original DNA, reasoning that he has changed too much for his original DNA to be present in his system.[22]

DC Rebirth

[edit]

In 2016, DC Comics implemented a relaunch of its books called "DC Rebirth", which restored its continuity to a form much as it was prior to "The New 52". Basil Karlo is re-imaged as a handsome young actor who was disfigured in a car accident. In a desperate bid to salvage his career, he began abusing an industrial make-up chemical known as "Re-Nu" which, when combined with clay and putty, warps flesh into new shapes and forms; a secret he discovered from his father Vincent Karlo, a former special effects artist. However, the chemical is long out of production, and Karlo resorts to theft when he can no longer purchase it legally. Batman apprehends him during one such robbery, which reveals his secret to the world. Karlo's career is ruined, and his girlfriend Glory Griffin dumps him. Batman attempts to get Karlo to testify against the creator of Re-Nu, Roland Daggett, but he refuses. Instead, he attempts to break into the warehouse where the police are holding his stolen stash of Re-Nu. He is exposed to a massive dose of the chemical in the process and is transformed into a clay-like metahuman. Driven mad, he rampages on the set of the film he was fired from. Batman attempts to evacuate the set, but Clayface flings him off into the distance and begins massacring everyone in sight. As an added bit of revenge, Clayface disfigures Glory, who is working on the film as a production assistant, before Batman apprehends him.[23] This incident leads Glory to become Mudface of the Victim Syndicate.[24]

In the 2016 Batman story arc "Night of the Monster Men", the villainous Professor Hugo Strange uses a serum to transform living and dead human beings into monsters. Batman initially suspects Karlo, who has broken out of Arkham Asylum. Realizing Karlo needs treatment more than imprisonment, Batman asks him to join his team.[25] Karlo agrees, and working with Batman, Nightwing, Batwoman, Orphan, and Spoiler helps to defeat Strange's monsters. The government agency A.R.G.U.S. creates a quarantine zone encompassing the neighborhood where the creature died, nicknaming it "Monstertown".[26] A.R.G.U.S. consultant Victoria October, takes charge of "Monstertown", the area of Gotham City affected by Strange's serum.[26] Clayface patrols the sewers beneath Monstertown, retrieving monsters who were created by leaking serum.[27]

October offers to work on a means of returning Clayface to human form permanently.[28] She asks him to stay in his monstrous form for as long as possible so she can chart the mental degradation he undergoes the longer he remains nonhuman. She also acts as his counselor when he despairs of a cure.[27] October calls the Clayface persona a "fear response" that occurs Karlo's mind abandons empathy and embraces anger.[29] Batman has Clayface wear a high-technology forearm device (later replaced with a smaller wristband with a longer-lasting power source)[30] that enables him to regain human form without using his powers—reducing the psychotic effect being Clayface has on Karlo. The device is not a cure, as the Clayface DNA consumes Karlo's human DNA whenever he is locked into human form.[30] October gives him a "placebo" bracelet with messages from his close friend Cassandra Cain (Orphan), which helps him focus on retaining his sanity. After pushing past the twelve-hour mark, Clayface loses his sanity and attacks October. Orphan intervenes, saving her life by putting the real bracelet back on.[31]

Victoria cares deeply for Karlo,[29] and later calls him a "great friend".[32] October expresses a desire to test her cure on a less serious case, and Karlo tells her of Glory Griffin.[33] Karlo also tells Glory about the potential cure, although she refuses to forgive him for what he did to her.[31] Later, with the cure close to being finished, Clayface is captured by Glory when the villain First Victim takes over Arkham Asylum and releases her.[33] Glory removes Clayface's wrist controller, and he goes insane.[34][a] As Clayface rampages through Gotham to confront Batman, Batwoman obtains a weapon which can destabilize Karlo's molecular structure, killing him. During his attack on Old Wayne Tower, Karlo is accidentally doused with hundreds of gallons psychoactive mud, worsening his insanity.[29][b] October attempts to cure Karlo, but the effect is only temporary,[35] and Batwoman kills Karlo.[35] Three days later, October cures Glory Griffin, saying she did so only for the sake of Basil Karlo.[32]

Clayface did not die, however. Seven issues later, in Detective Comics #981, it is revealed that Karlo is still alive and retains his powers to some degree. For reasons unstated, October conspired with him to fake his death. Karlo leaves a message for Cassandra Cain and then allows October to take him out of Gotham City.[36][c]

In a flashback, Clayface is among the villains who protect Ingrid Karlsson during a riot. Before Ingrid was killed by an inmate using a rogue batarang despite the villains getting her away from the riot, she gave birth to Astrid Arkham, who would later become the Arkham Knight.[38]

Infinite Frontier

[edit]

In Infinite Frontier, Basil Karlo, bringing Killer Croc, Firefly, Cheshire, and Knockout as potential allies seeking a second chance. Then Karlo assures Selina that her Alleytown stronghold will inevitably come to a head with the Magistrate, which can be better served with formidable allies by her side. Clayface and Killer Croc attack Valley, giving Selina a chance to escape into the water, as the Magistrate Croc Tell Basil to retreat and before that Valley destroys Clayface with a grenade.[39]

In "DC All In", Basil Karlo puts together a Clayface gathering called the Fraternity of Mud at the restaurant Synesthesia. The gathering is accidentally crashed by Harley Quinn. When Karlo and the other Clayfaces swarm over Harley, they fall through the floor into a laboratory. When Harley uses formaldehyde on Clownface, the Clayfaces stop their attack. Harley learns that Synesthesia was owned by the sous chef who hired her to break in as it was going out of business and planned to collect the insurance money for supervillain damages caused by the Clayfaces.[40]

Matt Hagen

[edit]
Matt Hagen as Clayface on the cover of Detective Comics #298 (December 1961)

The second version of Clayface, Matthew "Matt" Hagen, first appeared in Detective Comics #298. A treasure hunter, Hagen finds a mysterious radioactive pool of protoplasm in a cave. Immersing himself in it by accident, he is transformed into a malleable clay-like form which could be shaped into almost anything he desires. This is only a temporary effect, however, requiring him to return to the pool periodically to maintain use of his powers. His criminal activities attracted the attention of Batman and Robin. Batman discovered his weakness and defeated him.[2][41]

Hagen later escapes from prison and decided to investigate the protoplasmic substance that turned him into Clayface so that he can find a way to prolong his powers. Clayface poses as wealthy civilians of Gotham to learn more about his criminal activities. Batman and Robin later confront Clayface at his hideout, using a combination of a freeze gun and the protoplasmic substance to defeat Clayface and return him to prison.[42]

Hagen eventually breaks out of prison and uses the protoplasmic pool to become Clayface again. This time, Batman defeats Clayface by immersing himself in the protoplasm, with the resulting battle causing Batman to destroy the cave that contained the protoplasmic pool.[43]

Clayface later appears as a member of Queen Bee's Anti-Justice League to capture the Justice League. They are defeated by the Justice League.[44]

During the "Crisis on Infinite Earths" storyline, Matt Hagen is killed by one of the Anti-Monitor's Shadow Demons, together with the Bug-Eyed Bandit.[45]

In Infinite Crisis, Hagen resurfaces and joins Alexander Luthor Jr.'s Secret Society of Super Villains.[46]

In Infinite Frontier, the Matt Hagen version of Clayface first appears as one of the escapees at Arkham Asylum. He briefly fought Batman before escaping into the sewers. By the time Batman caught up to Clayface, he tried to fool him in the form of Damian Wayne only for Batman to throw a net on him. When Clayface breaks free, Batman has Penny-One use the Batmobile's sonic cannon on him. Penny-One then tells Batman that it has alerted the police who will take Clayface back to Arkham Asylum.[47]

In "DC All In", Matt Hagen appears at a Clayface gathering called the Fraternity of Mud. When Harley Quinn accidentally crashes the gathering, Hagen and the other Clayfaces attack her. The Clayfaces stop their attack when Harley uses formaldehyde on Clownface.[40]

Preston Payne

[edit]

The third version of Clayface, Preston Payne, first appeared at the end of Detective Comics #477 before making his first full appearance in Detective Comics #478–479. Suffering from hyperpituitarism, Payne works at S.T.A.R. Labs-Gotham division searching for a cure. He obtains a sample of Matt Hagen's blood, and isolates an enzyme which he introduces into his own bloodstream. Although he is briefly able to shape his own appearance, this effect is short-lived: while on a date, his flesh begins to melt, and when he grabs his horrified girlfriend's arm, she completely dissolves into protoplasm. Payne builds an exoskeleton to support his body and contain his contagion, but he soon learns that he needs to transmit this dissolving contagion onto others to survive by touching them. During this time, his mental health starts to slip as he falls in love with a wax mannequin he names "Helena", thinking that she is the only woman who is immune to his touch.[48]

During the "Mud Pack" storyline, Sondra Fuller, the fourth Clayface, begins masquerading as the superheroine Looker and visits Payne at Arkham. That same night, he gets into an argument with Helena and unintentionally knocks her head off. Believing that he has killed her, Payne goes on a rampage until he is subdued by guards. Fuller, who is still using Looker's appearance and powers, rescues him and influences him to follow Basil Karlo's commands. Karlo ultimately betrays Payne and Fuller and takes samples of both their blood to inject into himself. Payne finally breaks free of Fuller's control and is about to kill her when she admits how sorry she is for using him. The two, after escaping, fall in love and go on to live together while on the run, leading to Fuller becoming pregnant with their child, Cassius.[49][50][51]

Payne next appears in the Justice League: Cry for Justice miniseries, having been coerced into working for Prometheus, who had threatened the life of his son. Prometheus had further mutated Payne, giving him back his old shapeshifting abilities, curing him of his contagion, and had him act as a decoy for the Justice League. When the ruse was discovered, an explosive device planted inside Payne's body detonates, killing him.[52]

Following The New 52 reboot and the DC Rebirth relaunch, Payne is reintroduced in Infinite Frontier. He first appears where Nightwing and Red Hood find him impersonating Red Hood and Batman. Red Hood subdued Clayface with a freeze gun. Later at the kitchen at Lineker's restaurant, Nightwing and Red Hood use a freezer to interrogate him on why he impersonated Red Hood. Clayface states that Red Hood is the most violent of the Batman family. Red Hood intimidates Clayface on who hired him to impersonate Red Hood. Clayface states it was a dealer named Wolfgang Bylsma who already planning to depart on an airplane to the Maldives. After freezing and shattering Clayface, Red Hood asks Nightwing to help pick up the pieces so that the feds can come pick him up.[53]

In "DC All In", Preston Payne appears at a Clayface gathering called the Fraternity of Mud. It is mentioned that he and Sondra have separated and he is still carrying around Helena. When Harley Quinn accidentally crashes the gathering, Payne and the other Clayfaces attack her. The Clayfaces stop their attack when Harley uses formaldehyde on Clownface.[40]

Sondra Fuller

[edit]

The fourth version of Clayface, Sondra Fuller (also known as Lady Clay), first appeared in Outsiders #21. She is a member of Strike Force Kobra who is transformed into a shapeshifter by her employer Kobra's technologies. She agreed to going through with the process because she hates her own face. The process works and she becomes a member of Strike Force Kobra. Clayface possesses identical abilities to those of Matt Hagen, but they are permanent without the requirement for exposure to a source of protoplasm. She can additionally copy any special powers of the being she is mimicking. Clayface is defeated by the Outsiders, but got away.[2][54]

Later, after the Mud Pack forms and battles Batman, Fuller falls in love with Preston Payne. After Clayface-Prime (Karlo) is defeated, Preston Payne and Sondra Fuller escape and get married while on the run, and they have a child named Cassius "Clay" Payne, a play on boxer Muhammad Ali's birth name. After Abattoir kidnaps the child, the couple get into a fight involving Azrael/Batman. Batman eventually defeated them both, and Fuller was put into custody.[51]

The DC Rebirth version of Sondra Fuller appears in Doomsday Clock, where she claims that Kobra was not the person who gave her the powers of shapeshifting after all. Instead, she claims that her powers were the result of a government conspiracy to create superpowered beings. Her proclamation further adds to the global scandal known as the Supermen Theory, which suggests that the United States has been secretly creating superheroes and supervillains for an unknown/unstated purpose.[55] Clayface later accompanies Black Adam in his attack on the White House.[56]

In "DC All In", Sondra Fuller appears at a Clayface gathering called the Fraternity of Mud. It is mentioned that she and Preston have separated. When Harley Quinn accidentally crashes the gathering, Fuller and the other Clayfaces attack her. The Clayfaces stop their attack when Harley uses formaldehyde on Clownface.[40]

Cassius "Clay" Payne

[edit]

After the Mud Pack incident, Payne and Fuller escape and fall in love while on the run. They eventually have a child together named Cassius "Clay" Payne,[51] who becomes the fifth version of Clayface and debuted in Batman #550. The boy is separated from his parents and held in a government laboratory. The name "Cassius" is a pun on "Cassius Clay", the birth name of boxer Muhammad Ali.[57]

If a piece of him is separated from his body, it can grow a mind of its own, but it mostly thinks in an unstable form of what Cassius wants. If bonded with another human, it becomes a Clay-Thing; the piece can give that human Clayface-like abilities, such as becoming soft and malleable, being able to withstand bullets and other forms of harm, and could also manifest Payne's ability to melt objects; all this person would have to do to perform such an action is to think about it. Cassius finds it very painful and distressing to have pieces of himself taken, and will go to crazed lengths to recover them.

When Thomas Elliot attempted to give himself the shapeshifting abilities of the Clayfaces, he determined that Cassius is the only 'pure' Clayface in existence, as all others retain fragments of their former human DNA where Cassius is the only Clayface who was never human.

In an issue of Batman: Gotham Knights, Cassius is depicted as having the clay-like appearance of his mother and father, but can only stay in this form while awake.[58]

During the "Infinite Crisis" storyline, Cassius appears as a member of Alexander Luthor Jr.'s Secret Society of Super Villains.[59]

Following the "Final Crisis" storyline, Cassius attacks the National Guard on the roadblock, but when he was approached by General Immortus's team, he is able to recognize one of the team, Human Flame. Cassius attacks and blames him for Libra enslaving Earth. The Justice League arrives to end the fight as Human Flame and General Immortus's team teleport away, leaving Cassius to be captured. After the League interrogates him, he is taken to some FBI vehicles, but the measures to contain him prove to be useless; Cassius breaks loose, escaping into the desert.[60]

In "DC All In", Cassius Payne appears at a Clayface gathering called the Fraternity of Mud. When Harley Quinn accidentally crashes the gathering, Payne and the other Clayfaces attack her. The Clayfaces stop their attack when Harley uses formaldehyde on Clownface.[40]

Peter "Clay-Thing" Malley

[edit]

The sixth version of Clayface, known as the Clay-Thing, also debuted in Batman #550. Clay-Thing is created when a skin sample from Cassius Payne comes to life and merges with D.E.O. scientist Peter Malley. He has the ability to melt objects simply by looking at them. Clay-Thing is destroyed when Cameron Chase turns his own powers against him, and his remains are stored at the D.E.O. headquarters.

"Todd Russell"

[edit]

The seventh version of Clayface debuted in Catwoman (vol. 3) #1 (January 2002), but is not actually shown until Catwoman (vol. 3) #3 (March 2002). This character does not remember his true identity, but it is said that he resembles actor Todd Russell. Struggling with his memory loss, he used aliases such as Brian, Greg, and Todd. Having the power to change into virtually any shape and size, he preys upon prostitutes in Gotham's East End until Catwoman is able to contain his severed head inside of a freezer. There are very few background details given about this character's past. He was in the Army, suffered injuries, and was subsequently experimented on before losing most of his memory and discovering his new powers.[61] After his capture, he is held captive and further experimented upon for almost two years at S.T.A.R. Labs in Gotham before being freed by Catwoman.[62]

In "DC All In", Todd Russell appears at a Clayface gathering called the Fraternity of Mud. When Harley Quinn accidentally crashes the gathering, Russell and the other Clayfaces attack her. The Clayfaces stop their attack when Harley uses formaldehyde on Clownface.[40]

Johnny Williams

[edit]
Johnny Williams as Clayface on the cover of Batman: Gotham Knights #69 (November 2005). Art by Claudio Castellini

The eighth version of Clayface, Johnny Williams, debuted in Batman: Gotham Knights #60 (February 2005).[63] Williams is a former firefighter who is transformed into a clay-based creature after an explosion in a chemical plant. He first discovers his transformation after he accidentally kills a prostitute; horrified and stricken with guilt, he plans to commit suicide.

Before he can do so, he is approached by Hush and the Riddler, who tell him that the chemicals turned him into the latest Clayface. They begin to manipulate Williams, promising a cure if he does their bidding. This includes pretending to be Tommy Elliot (Hush's true identity) and Jason Todd to hurt Bruce Wayne.[64][65]

Elliot also takes some samples from Williams to try and determine how he can duplicate the shapeshifting aspects of Clayface without losing his original form, also using these samples to infect Batman's ally Alfred Pennyworth with a virus that allows Hush to exert some degree of control over Alfred, forcing him to commit murder. Eventually, Williams realizes he is being manipulated and Hush will never help him after Hush tries to steal a sample of Cassius.

Knowing that he is going to die, Williams offers Batman assistance against Hush in exchange for protecting his family. He redeems himself by providing Batman with a sample of himself so that Batman can find a cure for the virus infecting Alfred.[66]

Powers and abilities

[edit]

Each of the Clayfaces have different powers, but they all share the ability to shapeshift.

  • In his earliest appearances, Basil Karlo had no superpowers, but wore a clay mask. In later comics, his body is made out of mud upon taking the cell samples from Clayface III and IV, thus enabling him to gain their powers combined.[67] In The New 52, these are improved to a level, in which he can mimic the DNA of others.[68]
  • Matt Hagen has temporary shapeshifting, voice mimicry, and a malleable clay-like body, which allows him to manipulate his physical features at will. He must reimmerse himself in a pool of protoplasm that gave him his powers to recharge them every 48 hours or else he would regress back into his human form. Later, Hagan duplicated the protoplasm by scientific means, but only for five hours before needing to be renewed.[69]
  • Preston Payne originally had an amorphous physiology, yet ended up gaining the ability to melt people with his touch. He has immense strength from his anti-melting exoskeleton.[70] Preston's metamorphic abilities were later restored by Prometheus.[71]
  • Sondra Fuller has powers identical to Clayface II, except these superpowers are permanent.[72]
  • Cassius "Clay" Payne possesses the combined powers of both his parents.[73] If a piece of him is separated from his mass, it can develop its own consciousness and even "bond" with human hosts to transform them into "Clay-Things". Hush has noted that Cassius is essentially the only "pure" Clayface as the only one who was never human to begin with, all other Clayfaces retaining some aspect of their human DNA that prevents others simply taking samples to imitate their transformations.
  • Peter Malley gained similar abilities like Clayface V, but is capable of dissolving people via eye contact.[74]
  • Both "Todd Russell" and Johnny Williams have shape-changing capabilities.[75][76]

Other characters named Clayface

[edit]

John Carlinger

[edit]

John Carlinger was a renowned actor and director who held a film exhibition aboard the yacht Varania III. Basil Karlo, the original Clayface, assaulted Carlinger with murderous intent because Carlinger neglected to "invite" him to the event, but Carlinger killed Karlo instead. Feeling threatened by a few actors attending the exhibition who were rumored to be demanding an audit of his production company's finances, Carlinger used Karlo's alter ego to mask his true identity and intentions when he gunned these actors down in cold blood. Batman deduced "Clayface's" true identity by the water-solubility of his makeup, revealing it to be a type of makeup used by modern actors instead of the greasepaint Karlo was more likely to use. Batman punched Carlinger's lights out and exposed his murder scheme.[11]

In "DC All In", John Carlinger appears at a Clayface gathering called the Fraternity of Mud. His history of his encounter with Basil Karlo and the identity theft remains intact, with Carlinger expressing remorse for the incident. When Harley Quinn accidentally crashes the gathering, Carlinger and the other Clayfaces attack her. The Clayfaces stop their attack when Harley uses formaldehyde on Clownface.[40]

The Clayface of Japan

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The ninth version of Clayface, the Clayface of Japan, debuted in Batman Incorporated #6 (June 2011) as part of "The New 52".[77] Batman tasks Batman Japan (Jiro Osamu) to fight the Clayface of Japan about 2+12 months into his Batman Incorporated venture.[78] Not much is known about this Clayface, except that he resembles all of the previous Clayfaces and seems to have their same set of powers. Presumably, this Clayface, as a rival to Osamu, is a native of Japan. Batman states that this Clayface is a newcomer, a samurai, and operates in or around Hokkaido.[79]

Clayface clones

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In "The New 52", a villain named Jeffrey Bode makes several short-lived clones of Clayface.[80]

Clownface

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The being known as Clownface began as a stray piece of Clayface's body that became unattached and gained enough sentience to morph itself into a mute old man. This man was found and taken to Arkham Manor because of his unresponsiveness.[81] Later, the Joker infected this portion of Clayface with Joker venom, morphing it into a separate entity dubbed Clownface.[82]

In "DC All In", Clownface appears at a Clayface gathering called the Fraternity of Mud. When Harley Quinn accidentally crashes the gathering, Clownface and the other Clayfaces attack her. The Clayfaces stop their attack when Harley uses formaldehyde on Clownface.[40]

Alternative versions

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In other media

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Television

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Live-action

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Clayface as he appears in Birds of Prey.
  • The Matt Hagen incarnation of Clayface appears in the opening credits of Batman (1966), but was replaced in show with False-Face (portrayed by Malachi Throne).
  • The Cassius Payne incarnation of Clayface appears in the Birds of Prey episode "Feat of Clay", portrayed by Kirk Baltz. This version is a sculptor who is inspired by other people's pain and gains his powers from a special formula created specifically for him by a crooked scientist. Sometime prior to the series, Payne was hired by the Joker to kill Catwoman, but was defeated and imprisoned in Arkham Asylum. In the present, his son Chris Cassius (portrayed by Ian Reed Kesler) takes the formula for himself and gains the ability to turn people into clay. Upon learning of what happened, Payne breaks out of Arkham to stop him despite running afoul of the Birds of Prey. Chris is eventually defeated by Helena Kyle while Payne turns himself in.
  • Basil Karlo appears in Gotham, portrayed by Brian McManamon.[89][90][91] This version is a deceased actor who was revived by Hugo Strange and Ethel Peabody using octopus DNA, which gave him the ability to alter his face to resemble anyone he wants.
  • An original incarnation of Clayface appears in the third season of Pennyworth, portrayed by Lorraine Burroughs. This version is a P.W.E., an enhanced being who can alter her appearance to perfectly mimic someone else's, who poses as Virginia Devereaux, a high-ranking CIA official who travels with Patrick Wayne to England. Throughout her appearances, she has assumed the identities of Mary Pennyworth (portrayed by Dorothy Atkinson) and Martha Wayne (portrayed by Emma Paetz).[92]

Animation

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  • The Matt Hagen incarnation of Clayface appears in The New Adventures of Batman, voiced by Lou Scheimer.
  • Two incarnations of Clayface appear in The Batman.
    • Series original character Ethan Bennett (voiced by Steve Harris)[93] is a GCPD detective partnered with Ellen Yin and was Bruce Wayne's best friend until being mutated by the Joker's mutagenic Joker Putty. Bennett battles Batman several times, gradually gaining control over his powers, before eventually choosing to reform and turn himself in. After learning Basil Karlo became his own version of Clayface, Bennett joins forces with Batman and Robin to defeat him, with Bennett restraining Karlo so Batman can administer an antidote to them. Re-imprisoned in Arkham, a cured Bennett plans on finishing his sentence and focusing on reforming himself. In a potential future depicted in the episode "Artifacts", Bennett is reinstated into the GCPD and becomes its Chief of Police.
    • Basil Karlo (voiced by Wallace Langham in "Clayfaces" and Lex Lang in "The Batman/Superman Story")[93] is an untalented actor who breaks into Wayne Enterprises and drinks a refined Joker Putty sample. After being rejected once more, Karlo snaps and uses his new powers to attack the people who rejected him, realizing that becoming a supervillain will increase his popularity.
  • A portrait of the Preston Payne incarnation of Clayface appears in the Batman: The Brave and the Bold episode "Joker: The Vile and the Villainous!".[94]
  • The Matt Hagen incarnation of Clayface appears in Young Justice, voiced by Nolan North.[93] In the fourth season, Young Justice: Phantoms, Superman and Black Lightning consider him, among others, for reserve membership in the Justice League.
  • The Matt Hagen incarnation of Clayface appears in Teen Titans Go!, voiced by Fred Tatasciore.
  • The Basil Karlo incarnation of Clayface appears in Harley Quinn, voiced by Alan Tudyk,[95] while Jonah Platt provides his singing voice.[93] This version is stated to be a classically trained yet terrible actor who gained his abilities from a "terrible pottery accident" and is considered one of Gotham City's lesser villains. Additionally, his body parts can develop sentience if separated from him. Introduced in the episode "So, You Need a Crew?", Clayface works as a bartender until he is recruited into Harley Quinn's crew. As of the fourth season, he left the crew to become a Las Vegas performer.
    • Basil Karlo / Clayface appears in the Kite Man: Hell Yeah! episode "Sexiest Villain Alive, Hell Yeah!", voiced again by Tudyk.
  • The Basil Karlo incarnation of Clayface appears in Suicide Squad Isekai, voiced by Jun Fukuyama in Japanese and Brandon Hearnsberger in English.[96][97] This version is a member of the eponymous Suicide Squad whose human form resembles Michael Jackson.
  • The Basil Karlo incarnation of Clayface appears in the Batman: Caped Crusader episode "...And Be a Villain", voiced by Dan Donohue.[98][99][93] This version was typecast as villains due to his unique appearance, leading him to use an experimental serum to alter his face.[100] After being rejected by fellow actor Yvonne Francis, he adopts a disfigured appearance and murders his co-stars along with the serum's creator until he is defeated by Batman.
  • An unidentified Clayface appears in the Batwheels episode "Clay Date", voiced by Chad Kroeger.[101]
  • Clayface will appear in Bat-Fam.[102]
DC Animated Universe
[edit]

The Matt Hagen incarnation of Clayface, with elements of Basil Karlo, appears in series set in the DC Animated Universe (DCAU), voiced by Ron Perlman.[93]

  • First appearing in the Batman: The Animated Series episode "Feat of Clay", this version is an actor who was previously disfigured in an accident. Corrupt businessman Roland Daggett gives him Renuyu, a beauty cream that restores his face and enables him to change it to that of another person's, but its effects prove temporary and addictive. Daggett hires Hagen to aid him in his criminal activities in exchange for more Renuyu, but Hagen eventually refuses to cooperate, leading to Daggett's men force-feeding him a large quantity of Renuyu that transforms him into Clayface. Following a failed attempt on Daggett's life and being defeated by Batman, Hagen goes into hiding. In the episode "Mudslide", Hagen steals an isotope from Wayne Biomedical Labs to stabilize himself when his body begins to deteriorate before seeing Stella Bates, a former medical adviser on one of his films who fell in love with him. Hagen is nearly restored, but Batman finds them and aborts the treatment. In the ensuing fight, Clayface falls off a cliff and into the ocean, where he dissolves and is presumed dead.
  • Hagen returns in The New Batman Adventures. Following a minor appearance in the pilot episode "Holiday Knights", the episode "Growing Pains" reveals that after falling into the ocean, his remains drifted near a pipe leaking chemicals into the ocean, restoring some of his strength. While recovering, he sent a portion of himself disguised as a little girl named Annie (voiced by Francesca Marie Smith)[103] away to see if it was safe for him to resurface, but she develops her own personality and encounters Robin, who falls in love with her. Hagen eventually poses as Annie's abusive father while committing robberies to make a living before recovering and cornering Robin and Annie, with the latter allowing herself to be reabsorbed to save him. An enraged Robin nearly kills Hagen, but Batman intervenes and Hagen is subsequently arrested and imprisoned in Arkham Asylum.
  • Hagen appears in the Justice League two-part episode "Secret Society". Sometime prior to the series, Morgan Edge captured Hagen until Gorilla Grodd's Secret Society free him and add him into their ranks. Having grown less aggressive and psychopathic, he is initially reluctant to join them until Grodd promises to help Hagen restore his human form while maintaining his shapeshifting powers. However, he and the Society are defeated by the Justice League.

Film

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  • The unidentified Flashpoint incarnation of Clayface appears in Justice League: The Flashpoint Paradox. Similarly to his comics counterpart, he is a member of Deathstroke's pirates who fights Aquaman's army until he is killed by Ocean Master.[93]
  • The Basil Karlo incarnation of Clayface appears in the Batman Unlimited series of films, voiced by Dave B. Mitchell.[93]
  • The Basil Karlo incarnation of Clayface appears in The Lego Batman Movie, voiced by Kate Micucci.[93]
  • The Basil Karlo incarnation of Clayface appears in Scooby-Doo! & Batman: The Brave and the Bold, voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson.[93] Sometime prior to the film, Clayface had picked up a corrosive strain of bacteria that makes it harder for him to hold his shape and is offered a cure by the Riddler. In return, Clayface creates a clay decoy to impersonate the Riddler while he was disguised as the Question and takes the form of the Crimson Cloak, the supposed ghost of scientist Leo Scarlett who wants revenge on Batman for failing to save him. As the Crimson Cloak, Clayface steals isotopes to recreate Professor Milo's teleportation device, which both Scarlett and the Riddler worked on, while also framing Batman and Mystery Inc. for the crimes to keep them distracted. Ultimately, Mystery Inc. deduce Crimson Cloak's identity and defeat Clayface.
  • The Basil Karlo incarnation of Clayface appears in Batman: Hush.[93] While operating as Hush, the Riddler brainwashes Clayface and has him impersonate his original identity. After Batman exposes him, Clayface attacks him, but is defeated by Batman and Commissioner Gordon.
  • An unidentified Clayface makes a non-speaking cameo appearance in Injustice.[93]

DC Universe

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Video games

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Lego Batman

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The Basil Karlo incarnation of Clayface appears in the Lego Batman series.

Other games

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Clayface as he appears in The Adventures of Batman & Robin
  • The Matt Hagen incarnation of Clayface appears in The Adventures of Batman & Robin, voiced again by Ron Perlman.[citation needed] In the Sega CD version, he serves as the final boss, takes on Rupert Thorne's likeness, and hires other villains to distract Batman and Robin from his operations. Once the Dynamic Duo discover Clayface, they fight and defeat him, after which Clayface falls into a river and dissolves. The game's cutscenes were later revealed to have come from the "Lost Episode" of Batman: The Animated Series, though it is not considered canonical to the DC Animated Universe. In the SNES version, Clayface appears in the final level and joins several supervillains in an attempt to defeat Batman.
  • The Matt Hagen incarnation of Clayface appears as a boss in Batman: Rise of Sin Tzu, voiced again by Ron Perlman.[93]
  • The Basil Karlo incarnation of Clayface appears in DC Universe Online, voiced by Benjamin Jansen.[93]
  • The Basil Karlo incarnation of Clayface appears in the Batman: Arkham franchise, voiced by Rick D. Wasserman.
    • In Batman: Arkham Asylum, he is imprisoned in the eponymous asylum within a reinforced glass cell and takes on various likenesses in an unsuccessful attempt at tricking Batman into freeing him.
    • Clayface appears as the final boss of Batman: Arkham City. In between games, he escaped Arkham Asylum by posing as asylum director Quincy Sharp and went on the run from Hugo Strange. Karlo was later found by the Joker, who hired the former to pose as him. Throughout the story mode, Karlo uses the Joker's likeness to distract Batman from the Joker's attempts to acquire a cure for the Titan formula, which was slowly killing the latter, before Karlo eventually reveals himself to fight Batman. Their fight takes them to a Lazarus chamber, where Batman pushes Clayface into a Lazarus Pit to prevent the Joker from using it to gain immortality and retrieves the cure.
  • The Basil Karlo, Matt Hagen, Preston Payne, and Sondra Fuller incarnations of Clayface appear as character summons in Scribblenauts Unmasked: A DC Comics Adventure.[110]
  • The Basil Karlo incarnation of Clayface appears as a boss in Gotham Knights, voiced by Brian Keane.[111][93]
  • The Matt Hagen incarnation of Clayface appears in Justice League: Cosmic Chaos, voiced again by Nolan North.[93]

Miscellaneous

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  • The DC Animated Universe incarnation of Matt Hagen / Clayface appears in The Batman Adventures.
  • The Batman (1966) incarnation of False-Face appears in Batman '66 #23, in which his real name is revealed to be Basil Karlo and he obtains a shapeshifting formula that transforms him into Clayface.[112]
  • The Matt Hagen incarnation of Clayface appears in All-New Batman: The Brave and the Bold.
  • The Young Justice incarnation of Matt Hagen / Clayface appears in the series' self-titled tie-in comic book series.[113] In issue #12, it is revealed that this version was a member of the League of Shadows who romanced Talia al Ghul to gain access to a Lazarus Pit and heal his cancer. After learning of this, Talia takes revenge on him by locking him in it for months, which mutates him into Clayface. He attacks Talia, but is subdued by Ra's al Ghul and Sensei. Ra's then has Sensei take Clayface to Gotham to attack Batman, leading into his appearance in the animated series episode "Downtime".
    • The Young Justice incarnation of Matt Hagen / Clayface appears in the tie-in audio play "The Prize", which is set between the third and fourth seasons. By this time, he has reformed, changed his name to "Harlan Matthews", and become an employee at Will Harper's company, Bowhunter Security. While guarding a WayneTech shipment, Clayface is kidnapped by Task Force X, who attempt to bring him to Amanda Waller. Clayface is rescued by the Team and offered a spot in the Justice League by Aquaman, which he turns down in favor of continuing to work for Harper.
  • The Basil Karlo incarnation of Clayface appears in the Injustice: Gods Among Us prequel comic.
  • An original, female incarnation of Clayface named Mrs. Clayface appears in DC Super Hero Girls, voiced by Kevin Michael Richardson. She is married to an unidentified Clayface.
  • The Batman: Arkham incarnation of Basil Karlo / Clayface appear in the Batman: Arkham Knight prequel comic. Following the events of Arkham City, Karlo was taken in by the GCPD, though he is unable to retake his original form due to his body being exposed to Lazarus particles. Additionally, samples of Karlo are used by several parties for their own ends, such as Simon Stagg for "Project: Meta" and Hush to hide his cosmetic surgery scars.
  • An original incarnation of Clayface appears in the first issue of the Arrowverse comic miniseries Earth-Prime. A teenager named Tanner Freyr was pushed into mud containing a sample of Basil Karlo / Clayface by bullies, which transformed him into a new Clayface. Freyr takes revenge on his bullies until Batwoman defeats him using Mr. Freeze's liquid nitrogen. After being incarcerated in Arkham Asylum under heavy guard, Freyr is contacted by Magog, who breaks him out in exchange for an opportunity to take revenge on Batwoman.[114]
  • An unidentified Clayface makes a cameo appearance in DC Super Friends #15.
  • The Basil Karlo incarnation of Clayface appears in Batman: Resurrection.[115] This version, also known by his real name Karlo Babić, is a struggling actor who becomes deformed after being exposed to remnants of the Joker's Smylex chemicals.

See also

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Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Clayface is a shape-shifting in DC Comics, primarily an adversary of Batman, characterized by a malleable, clay-like body that grants abilities such as transformation, duplication, and enhanced strength, making the character a virtually indestructible monster who threatens . The Clayface mantle has been assumed by multiple individuals across DC's publication history, with the original incarnation, Basil Karlo, debuting as a fading actor turned killer in Detective Comics #40 (June 1940), created by writer and artist . The character's evolution spans over eight decades, beginning in the with Karlo, a theatrical performer who donned a grotesque clay mask inspired by a to commit murders, before later acquiring genuine metamorphic powers through experimental means. Subsequent versions emerged in the Silver Age and beyond, including treasure hunter Matt Hagen, who gained his abilities from a radioactive pool; scientist Preston Payne, afflicted with a deadly touch after a failed cure for a ; and Sondra Fuller (Lady Clayface), a test subject who could mimic other metahumans' powers. These incarnations, totaling at least 11 across , , and other media, often explore themes of identity, monstrosity, and lost humanity, with Clayface occasionally allying with Batman against greater threats or seeking redemption from their cursed forms. As one of Gotham's most recognized rogues, Clayface's exploits have been featured in numerous Batman storylines, from classic tales in Detective Comics to modern arcs like Batman: One Bad Day - Clayface (2023), where the character pursues stardom in a destructive rampage across Los Angeles. The villain's adaptability allows for versatile threats, including infiltration, combat prowess, and psychological terror, solidifying Clayface's status as a enduring symbol of mutable evil in the DC Universe.

Publication history

Creation and conception

The character of Clayface was first introduced through Basil Karlo, a fading actor turned criminal mastermind, in the story "The Murders of Clayface!" published in #40 in June 1940. Created by writer and artist , with inks by , Karlo's debut marked one of the early additions to Batman's during the of comics. In the original narrative, Karlo, enraged by the announcement of a remake of his signature horror film The Terror—in which he had portrayed the monstrous villain Clayface—adopts the persona himself to sabotage the production. He employs a , clay-like for , enlisting henchmen to carry out a series of murders targeting the new cast and crew, blending elements of revenge thriller with theatrical horror. The character's name, Basil Karlo, was inspired by renowned horror actors and , reflecting the era's fascination with cinematic monsters and pulp fiction crime dramas. Unlike later versions, the initial Clayface possessed no metahuman abilities, relying instead on makeup artistry, criminal cunning, and psychological terror to evade capture and execute his scheme. Portrayed as a non-superpowered driven by ego and madness, Karlo embodied the theatrical villain common in early Batman tales, emphasizing and dramatic flair over physical prowess. Clayface's debut was well-received as an innovative foe, one of the early additions to Batman's alongside the Joker. This grounded conception laid the foundation for the character's , though subsequent iterations would expand into shape-shifting elements.

Evolution and major iterations

The Clayface concept originated as a non-powered, mask-wearing criminal in the but underwent significant during the Silver Age, transforming into a recurring shape-shifting through the introduction of new iterations with tragic backstories and enhanced abilities. This shift began with the revival of the character in #298 (December 1961), where treasure hunter Matt Hagen became the first malleable, protoplasmic Clayface after exposure to a radioactive pool, marking a departure from the original gimmick toward a more versatile, monstrous foe capable of impersonation and reformation. The further expanded the mythos by emphasizing psychological depth and interconnected origins, introducing Preston Payne as the third Clayface in Detective Comics #477–478 (1978), a afflicted with who derived his shape-shifting from Hagen's blood sample, resulting in a brittle, painful existence that added tragic . This era continued with Sondra Fuller, aka Lady Clay, debuting in Outsiders #21 (July 1987), a Kobra operative enhanced with experimental clay-based powers that allowed facial morphing and later full-body shifting, while forging romantic ties to Payne that humanized the lineage. Post-Crisis on Infinite Earths, the franchise consolidated around Basil Karlo's return in Detective Comics #604 (March 1989), the start of the "Mud Pack" storyline, where the original non-powered actor orchestrated a scheme to absorb the essences of Hagen, Payne, and Fuller, granting him composite shape-shifting abilities and reestablishing him as the definitive, ultimate Clayface. Subsequent reboots refined Karlo's role as a central antagonist. In The New 52, he reemerged in Detective Comics vol. 2 #14–15 (April–May 2012), leading a villainous "mud pack" alliance with enhanced, mystical clay-derived powers that emphasized his theatrical menace. The DC Rebirth initiative further integrated him into Batman's world in Detective Comics #934 (June 2016), portraying Karlo as a reluctant anti-hero under Batwoman's oversight while heading a reformed mud pack of clay-based criminals. Recent developments have highlighted Karlo's prominence in major events, including his manipulative role in the Batman: Fear State crossover (2021–2022), where he exploited Gotham's chaos to expand his influence. In 2025, the Absolute Universe introduced a reimagined Clayface in Absolute Batman #10 (July 2025), blending horror elements with Karlo's classic actor persona. Meanwhile, Lady Clay has recently featured in alliances, including associating with as of late 2025, underscoring her enduring ties to the broader Clayface legacy.

Fictional characters

Basil Karlo

Basil Karlo, the original incarnation of Clayface, debuted as a fading driven to madness by the announcement of a remake of his classic Dread Castle. In his origin, Karlo, a fading B-list performer, donned a grotesque mask known as the Clayface to impersonate and murder the cast and crew of the film Dread Castle, recreating the killings from his most famous role in a bid to reclaim his spotlight. Absent from Silver Age stories, Karlo returned in the Post-Crisis era during the 1989 "Mud Pack" storyline, where the imprisoned actor orchestrated an alliance of all known Clayfaces to destroy Batman. Manipulating the group, Karlo injected himself with blood samples from the other Clayfaces—Matt Hagen, Preston Payne, and Sondra Fuller—merging their essences into his body and granting him full shape-shifting abilities, dubbing himself the "Ultimate Clayface." This transformation amplified his malleable clay-like physiology, allowing him to impersonate anyone with perfect mimicry while retaining his core egotistical drive for dramatic performance. In the 1999 "No Man's Land" crossover, Karlo seized control of Robinson Park, holding captive to exploit her ability to cultivate food for Gotham's earthquake-ravaged survivors. Posing as a protector while forcing Ivy into submission, he aimed to rule his territory as a theatrical overlord, but Batman and Ivy defeated him, encasing his form in vines and sinking him into the earth. During the 2005-2006 event, Karlo joined the , using his absorption powers to assimilate the remaining essences of other Clayfaces, further enhancing his size, strength, and regenerative capabilities in a bid for ultimate notoriety. Under continuity, Karlo's obsession with fame persisted as liberated him from during the 2012 "Death of the Family" arc, feigning a desire to wed him to harness his shape-shifting for her eco-terrorist schemes against Batman. Deceived by Ivy's pheromones, Karlo served as her enforcer until Batman exposed the ruse, leading to his recapture. In , Karlo remained confined in Arkham but briefly allied with Batman in 2020, leveraging his impersonation skills to infiltrate threats tied to Punchline and the Joker War, motivated by a twisted redemption arc that still prioritized his performative ego over true heroism. Karlo's most recent appearance came in : #8 (), where he emerged as a shape-shifting menace targeting , impersonating family members to sow chaos and audition for within the Bat-Family's early conflicts. Throughout his arcs, Karlo's personality embodies an egotistical performer's , viewing crime as a stage for grand impersonations of victims, heroes, or monsters to recapture lost acclaim, often monologuing dramatically mid-battle to heighten the spectacle.

Matt Hagen

Matt Hagen, the second incarnation of Clayface, debuted as a tragic figure whose accidental defined his criminal career. A rugged treasure hunter, Hagen stumbled upon a hidden cave containing a pool of radioactive while searching for sunken riches. Desperate to treat his injuries, he doused himself in the substance, which transformed his body into a malleable, mud-like form capable of shape-shifting into any guise for approximately 30 minutes before reverting to its base state. This origin unfolded in #298 (December 1961), written by and illustrated by . In his early Silver Age exploits, Hagen leveraged his powers for audacious crimes, impersonating celebrities to access secure vaults or morphing into grotesque monsters to sow chaos in . Batman thwarted these schemes by deploying drying agents—special powders or chemicals—that dehydrated Hagen's body, causing it to harden into a brittle, immobile mass for easy capture. Hagen's villainy extended briefly to alliances with larger threats, including a short stint with the under Mr. Mind's leadership in World's Finest Comics #264 (1980). Bronze Age tales deepened Hagen's vulnerabilities, portraying his clay form as fragile with limited durability; without regular exposure to moisture, his body would crack and weaken, forcing reliance on humid environments or sources to sustain transformations. These stories also wove in romantic subplots, depicting Hagen's fleeting entanglements with other villains that underscored his isolation and longing for normalcy amid his monstrous existence. Following DC's Post-Crisis reboot, Hagen's role evolved in the 1989 "Mud Pack" storyline spanning Detective Comics #604–607, where Basil Karlo assembled a team of Clayfaces using Hagen's desiccated remains to further his resurrection and power grab. In subsequent narratives, a revived Hagen occasionally allied with Batman against greater threats, showcasing rare moments of redemption. However, by the 1990s, Karlo ultimately killed and absorbed Hagen during a climactic betrayal, merging their essences into a more potent form. As of 2025, Hagen's presence in DC continuity remains marginal, with sporadic revivals in Rebirth-era flashbacks and nods in multiverse tales, though he featured in no major arcs between 2023 and 2025. His pioneering shape-shifting mutation briefly inspired later variants like Preston Payne.

Preston Payne

Preston Payne, the third incarnation of Clayface, debuted as a tragic scientist afflicted by acromegaly, a condition caused by chronic hyperpituitarism that severely distorted his physical appearance and led to social isolation. Working at S.T.A.R. Labs, Payne sought a cure for his own skin condition, obtaining a blood sample from Matt Hagen, the second Clayface, to experiment with its protoplasmic properties. His self-administration of the altered formula in Detective Comics #478 (1978) triggered a catastrophic mutation, transforming him into a constantly melting, heat-generating figure whose touch could liquefy human flesh on contact. To manage his unstable form and mitigate accidental harm, Payne relied on a specially designed containment suit, though his condition's agony and uncontrollable melting drove him toward villainy. In his early confrontations with Batman, Payne innovated "mud guns" that projected a liquefying substance, allowing him to dissolve victims from a distance and compensating for his close-range limitations. His narrative emphasized isolation and desperation, as failed attempts to reverse his mutation or achieve normalcy repeatedly failed, reinforcing his role as a sympathetic yet dangerous . Payne's powers derived briefly from Hagen's shape-shifting but manifested uniquely as acidic dissolution rather than full malleability. Payne's most significant arc unfolded in the 1989 storyline Detective Comics #604–607, where he escaped Arkham Asylum and joined the Mud Pack, a short-lived alliance orchestrated by Basil Karlo that included Sondra Fuller (Lady Clay) and elements of Hagen's essence. During the conflict, Payne formed a romantic bond with Fuller, leading to their marriage and the birth of their son, Cassius "Clay" Payne, after the group's defeat by Batman. This family tie underscored Payne's tragic legacy, blending scientific hubris with personal loss, as his condition persisted despite the union. Following the events of (2005–2006), where Karlo absorbed the essences of other Clayfaces to evolve into a more powerful form, Payne was effectively subsumed, marking a period of narrative dormancy. In the New 52 continuity, Payne reemerged in minor roles, such as during breakouts, where his attempts at reintegration into society collapsed into renewed criminal activity, often tied to his deteriorating containment needs. A brief appearance in Nightwing (2016) Annual 2021 depicted him visually aligned with classic Clayface aesthetics while retaining his melting physiology. From 2023 to 2025, Payne has not featured in major storylines but is referenced as part of the Payne family legacy in arcs involving Lady Clay, such as her role in Batman/Catwoman: Gotham War (2023), highlighting the enduring impact of his mutational experiments on subsequent generations.

Lady Clay (Sondra Fuller)

Sondra Fuller, better known as Lady Clay, debuted as the fourth incarnation of the shape-shifting villain Clayface in The Outsiders #21 (July 1987), created by writer Mike W. Barr and artist Jim Aparo. A criminal operative for the terrorist organization Kobra, Fuller volunteered for an experimental procedure that transformed her into a malleable, clay-like being capable of elastic shape-shifting and secreting pheromones to influence emotions and behaviors. This enhancement, which she sought to escape her self-perceived unattractive appearance, allowed her to mimic the forms and even superhuman abilities of others, such as adopting the kinetic energy powers of the Outsiders member Looker during her initial confrontation with the team. As a member of Strike Force Kobra, she engaged in espionage and sabotage, using her disguises to infiltrate targets, though her debut mission against the Outsiders ended in defeat. Fuller's villainous career escalated during the "Mud Pack" storyline in #604–607 (1989), where she allied with the original Clayface, Basil Karlo, and , Preston Payne, to orchestrate a psychological assault on Batman. Posing as to manipulate Payne from and contributing to the group's chaotic rampage across Gotham, she developed a romantic bond with Payne, leading to their marriage after Karlo's betrayal and absorption of the other Clayfaces temporarily dissolved the team. The couple retreated into isolation, eventually giving birth to their son, Cassius "Clay" Payne, while Fuller occasionally resurfaced for mercenary work, including a brief association with the patriotic team Force of July in espionage operations. Post-Crisis narratives portrayed her as more redeemable than her peers; after reforming from Karlo's absorption, she demonstrated loyalty to her family and, in select encounters, provided aid to Batman against greater threats, reflecting her between a desire for normalcy and her inescapable ties to villainy. In the New 52 continuity, Fuller reemerged in Batgirl (vol. 5) #8 (2016) with refined abilities, her clay composition enhanced by residual essence from prior Clayface interactions, amplifying her mimicry to include more precise power replication and durability. During DC Rebirth and subsequent eras, she continued as an anti-villain, leveraging her espionage skills in disguises for covert operations while grappling with her monstrous form's isolation. By 2023, she formed tentative alliances with Catwoman in Gotham underworld schemes, using her shape-shifting for infiltration against mutual foes. Her most recent role came in Harley Quinn #47 (March 2025), where she appeared as a reluctant partner in a chaotic Clayface family reunion orchestrated by Harley Quinn, highlighting her ongoing struggle between familial bonds and criminal impulses.

Cassius "Clay" Payne

Cassius "Clay" Payne is the son of Preston Payne, the third Clayface, and Sondra Fuller, known as Lady Clay, inheriting a clay-like that manifests as a fully malleable body from birth. His origin unfolds in the " of Clay" storyline, where his parents, seeking to escape their criminal pasts, attempt to start a new life in seclusion, only for their natures to complicate the pregnancy and delivery. Payne first appears as an infant in Batman: Shadow of the Bat #27 (May 1994), exhibiting uncontrolled shape-shifting that endangers those around him, forcing his parents to confront , then acting as Batman, in a desperate bid for freedom. Due to his inherited physiology, Payne experiences rapid aging, maturing far quicker than a normal child and amplifying his powers beyond those of his parents. The Payne family's efforts at normalcy ultimately collapse under the weight of their conditions and external threats, leading to tragic separations and further entanglements in Gotham's underworld. In Batman #550 (January 1998), a now-adolescent Payne is captured and held in a laboratory for experimentation, highlighting the vulnerability of his unstable form. Basil Karlo, the original Clayface, infiltrates the facility and takes Payne, intending to exploit his unique blood to develop a cure for his own deteriorating body, but this act underscores Payne's innocence amid the villainy of his "uncles" in the Clayface lineage. Batman intervenes, rescuing Payne and returning him to his parents, who continue their fractured existence, with the young Clayface symbolizing the inescapable curse of the family's legacy. These stories portray Payne not as a deliberate but as a poignant figure caught in cycles of tragedy, his childlike demeanor contrasting the monstrous capabilities he wields. Payne's abilities center on instinctive and shape-shifting, allowing him to alter his form, size, and features with greater fluidity than his predecessors, though his youth renders these powers highly unstable and often involuntary. He possesses a combined version of his parents' traits—his father's corrosive touch and structural integrity alongside his mother's precise impersonation—enabling him to replicate appearances and voices seamlessly, but each transformation causes excruciating pain due to his immature control. Fragments of his body can detach and form independent "Claythings," semi-autonomous entities that retain fragments of his personality and can infect others, creating derivative Clayface-like beings, though this adds to his instability and isolation. In the post-Rebirth era, Payne has taken on minor roles in Arkham-centric narratives, reinforcing his tragic heritage as a product of the Clayface bloodline without ascending to major villainy. He appears briefly in Harley Quinn #47 (March 2025), attending a clandestine gathering of Clayfaces known as the Fraternity of Mud, where his presence highlights the familial bonds and ongoing vulnerabilities within the group before Harley Quinn disrupts the assembly. As of late 2025, Payne has no prominent arcs from 2023 onward, leaving room for future explorations of his potential growth or redemption amid the enduring Payne family saga.

Minor and additional incarnations

Peter Malley, a employed by the (DEO), became the sixth incarnation of Clayface, known as Clay-Thing, after accidentally fusing with a skin sample from Cassius Payne while conducting research on the boy's unique . This transformation, which occurred in 1998, granted Malley enhanced abilities similar to prior Clayfaces, along with the power to melt using his gaze, turning him into a mud-like monster that required intervention from Batman and DEO agent Cameron Chase. Clay-Thing's brief existence ended in destruction during a confrontation, with his remains preserved for further study at DEO headquarters. Todd Russell represents the seventh Clayface, an army veteran subjected to experimental mutations during military service that endowed him with advanced shapeshifting capabilities, leading to his emergence as a reluctant in Gotham's . Debuting in 2002, Russell's powers allowed him to impersonate others effectively, but his instability drew the attention of , resulting in multiple clashes where his transformations proved both an asset and a liability in criminal activities, including ties to a series of murders. Notably, prior to Russell's own transformation, the alias "Todd Russell" was used by Karlo during the "" crisis in 1999, where the original Clayface impersonated a real estate developer to manipulate events in war-torn Gotham, though this was not a genuine new incarnation. Johnny Williams, the eighth Clayface, was a firefighter who underwent a tragic following an explosion at a , altering his body into a malleable, clay-like form with standard traits. Introduced in 2005, Williams's condition rendered him vulnerable to manipulation by villains such as Hush and , who exploited his abilities for schemes involving deception and destruction in the city, marking his role as a short-lived pawn in larger criminal plots rather than an independent threat. His appearances remained limited, emphasizing the involuntary nature of his powers and the psychological toll of his transformation.

Powers and abilities

Core powers across versions

Across all versions of the character, Clayface possesses a highly malleable, clay-like body composed of protoplasmic or mud-based matter, enabling extensive shape-shifting that includes reforming the entire form, elongating limbs or appendages, and impersonating humans, animals, or inanimate objects with precise detail. This foundational ability stems from chemical or radioactive alterations that transform the bearer's physiology into a semi-liquid state, allowing fluid manipulation of mass and structure for combat, infiltration, or evasion. The malleable composition provides inherent durability, rendering Clayface resistant to conventional physical trauma such as bullets, blunt force, or explosions, as the body can absorb impacts without permanent harm. Furthermore, this trait facilitates rapid regeneration, permitting recovery from dispersal or dismemberment—such as being scattered by water currents or mudslides—by reassembling dispersed parts into a cohesive whole. Despite these advantages, the clay-like physiology introduces key limitations, including vulnerability to extreme heat, which can bake and harden the form into a brittle state prone to shattering, or intense cold, which freezes it into an immobile solid. Drying agents or dehydrating environments exacerbate this by stripping moisture, causing the body to crack and lose fluidity, thereby hindering shape-shifting and regeneration. A consistent requirement across incarnations is the need for sufficient to sustain the body's plasticity; without it, Clayface's form becomes rigid and ineffective, often necessitating or wet substances to restore functionality. Additionally, the perpetual flux of identities imposed by shape-shifting fosters psychological vulnerabilities, such as profound identity crises and mental fragmentation, tying the power's use to ongoing existential torment.

Version-specific abilities and weaknesses

Basil Karlo, the original Clayface, initially possessed no superhuman abilities beyond his skill in using a clay-based , but later iterations granted him the power to absorb the essences of other Clayfaces, enabling enhanced mimicry of appearances, voices, and even superpowers while allowing significant size increases for combat dominance. This absorption capability, derived from integrating the biological structures of predecessors like Matt Hagen and Preston Payne, amplifies his regenerative into a more versatile threat, though it risks destabilizing his fragmented psyche if disrupted by mental or psychic interference that exploits his underlying ego-driven instability. Matt Hagen, the second Clayface, features time-limited transformations in his early depictions, where shapeshifting and power replication lasted approximately 48 hours before reverting, necessitating periodic re-exposure to the protoplasmic pool that granted his abilities. This temporal constraint made him vulnerable during reversion periods, and dessicants or drying agents could accelerate dehydration of his clay-like form, hardening it into a brittle state and immobilizing him, as seen in encounters where environmental manipulation countered his malleability. Preston Payne, as the third Clayface, possesses a unique corrosive touch that transmits a viral infection causing targets to melt into clay-like substance through intense biochemical heat generation, allowing him to liquefy on contact. However, this power backfires on himself, leading to uncontrollable self-liquefaction and feverish agony without his specialized exosuit for containment, which regulates his form but introduces reliance on its power supply as a critical vulnerability. Sondra Fuller, known as Lady Clay, exhibits advanced elasticity in her permanent shapeshifting, enabling her to extend limbs into whips or blunt weapons for agile combat maneuvers beyond standard . Her powers stem directly from unstable experimental exposure. Cassius "Clay" Payne, inheriting combined traits from his parents, demonstrates rapid instinctive that activates subconsciously in response to stimuli, allowing seamless but unpredictable shifts into observed forms or abilities. This lack of control often results in accidental reveals during high-stress situations, where involuntary changes expose his identity or disrupt stealth, compounded by his youthful inexperience limiting precise manipulation of his bio-fission and density-altering powers.

Other Clayface variants

Historical and one-off characters

John Carlinger represents an early one-off impersonation of the Clayface persona, debuting in #496 (November 1980). A renowned and director, Carlinger murdered the original Basil Karlo and assumed his Clayface identity to perpetrate a series of killings targeting fellow actors during a convention aboard a yacht. Unlike later shape-shifting incarnations, Carlinger relied on , costumes, and his acting prowess to disguise himself as the monstrous Clayface, using the ruse to cover his crimes and eliminate rivals in the industry. Batman exposed the deception by noting discrepancies in the impersonator's movements and knowledge of Karlo's past, leading to Carlinger's confession and arrest after the discovery of Karlo's body. The Clayface of is an obscure international variant, first appearing in Batman Incorporated #6 (June 2011). This mud-based saboteur, depicted as a warrior with clay-like malleability, engaged in acts of and disruption aligned with shadowy criminal networks. Defeated by Batman and the Japan-based operative Jiro Osamu (the local Batman), the character embodies a localized threat drawing on traditional fused with the core Clayface motif of mutable, earthen physiology.

Clones and derivative versions

In the continuity, arms dealer Jeffrey Bode engineered short-lived biological clones of Clayface as experimental weapons, deploying them as disposable, amorphous minions in combat scenarios. These replicas, derived from samples of Karlo's protoplasmic tissue, exhibited rapid degradation and instability, often collapsing into inert sludge after minimal activity. A particularly volatile derivative emerged when a semi-autonomous fragment of Clayface's body detached and encountered Joker venom, mutating into Clownface—a grinning, anarchic hybrid blending the original's with the Joker's hallucinogenic toxicity. This circus-themed abomination, lacking independent intellect and driven solely by destructive impulses, rampaged through Gotham as an extension of the Joker's chaos. The "Mud Pack" storyline introduced temporary composite forms among the Clayfaces, culminating in the 1989 creation of "Ultimate Clayface" when Basil Karlo injected himself with blood samples from Preston Payne and Sondra Fuller as part of the alliance with the remains of Matt Hagen. This enhanced form amplified abilities such as malleability, acid secretion, and size manipulation into a near-unstoppable powerhouse, though Karlo's psyche dominated the entity.

Alternate versions

Multiverse and Elseworlds stories

In various tales and narratives, Clayface has been reimagined to fit alternate realities, often emphasizing his malleable form in unique historical or dystopian contexts. One notable appearance occurs in Convergence: Shazam! #2 (2015), where a steampunk-inspired version of Matt Hagen's Clayface emerges from the universe as a Victorian-era minion serving the Wizard during a battle against the and Batman; this incarnation features a brass-and-leather augmented design, adapting his to a gaslit, industrial aesthetic while aiding in an attempt to harness the Rock of Eternity. Clayface also plays a role in the expansive of Dark Nights: Death Metal (2020), the sequel event to Dark Nights: Metal (2017–2018), where Basil Karlo joins a reluctant of villains under the influence of and The Darkest Knight; as part of a team including Solomon Grundy and , he contributes his morphing abilities to combat the Avatar of the Green in a desperate bid to restore the , highlighting a twisted, coerced loyalty amid the chaos of converging realities. More recently, in DC's line launched in , Basil Karlo is reenvisioned as a corporate horror entity—a grotesque, bio-engineered abomination born from unethical experiments by a megacorporation in a reimagined Gotham, serving as one of the initial major antagonists alongside figures like Doctor Death and ; this version amplifies his monstrous traits into a symbol of industrial exploitation, clashing with an origin-less Bruce Wayne in Absolute Batman.

Crossovers and team-up narratives

One of the most notable team-up narratives involving multiple Clayface incarnations occurred in the "Mud Pack" storyline, where Basil Karlo (the original Clayface) assembled a fraternity of Clayface villains—including Matt Hagen (second Clayface), Preston Payne (third Clayface), and Sondra Fuller (Lady Clay)—to challenge Batman in . This alliance, driven by Karlo's desire to consolidate power among the shape-shifters, culminated in a series of confrontations detailed across #604–607 (1989–1990), where the group exploited their collective malleability to outmaneuver before ultimately being defeated and dispersed. The event highlighted the thematic unity of the Clayface legacy, emphasizing themes of identity and monstrous transformation in shared villainy. Lady Clay (Sondra Fuller) engaged in early crossovers as a member of Strike Force Kobra, battling the Outsiders in a bid to eliminate Batman's allies, as seen in Outsiders #21 (1987), where her shape-shifting abilities were deployed against , Halo, and the team. This encounter established her as a versatile antagonist in broader DC team dynamics, with Kobra leveraging her powers for infiltration and combat before she later defected to form independent alliances. Fuller continued to appear in team-up contexts, including brief skirmishes where her malleable form posed infiltration threats during multiversal incursions. In more recent events, Lady Clay featured in team-ups with in Harley Quinn #47 (2025), where she collaborated in a chaotic Gotham escapade blending humor and action, showcasing her shape-shifting in support of Quinn's anti-establishment antics against minor threats. Clayface variants have also joined villainous collectives, such as Basil Karlo's recruitment into the during its Rebirth era in Suicide Squad vol. 4 (2016), where he served under on high-risk missions, his body modification exploited for espionage and brute force despite the risks of his explosive implant. This integration into X highlighted tensions between control and chaos, with Karlo's participation in operations like infiltrating leading to uneasy partnerships with and El Diablo. Additionally, in tie-in narratives to the video game, Karlo allied with corporate interests at Stagg Industries before clashing with Batman, as depicted in the prequel comics (2015), where his remnants influenced further experiments in shape-shifting tech. These alliances often portrayed Clayface as a reluctant participant, bound by necessity or coercion in larger villainous schemes.

In other media

Television and animation

Clayface's debut in animated television occurred in Batman: The Animated Series (1992–1995), where he was introduced as the tragic figure Matt Hagen in the two-part episode "Feat of Clay" (1992). Hagen, a once-celebrated disfigured in a car accident, gains shape-shifting abilities after being exposed to an experimental chemical called Renuyu, leading to a storyline emphasizing his desperation for fame and inner torment. Voiced by , this portrayal blends elements of multiple comic origins into a sympathetic anti-villain who impersonates others while battling his deteriorating form. The character returned in (1997–1999), continuing as Matt Hagen and retaining Perlman's gravelly voice performance. In the premiere episode "Holiday Knights" (1997), Clayface disguises himself as orphaned children to commit thefts during the holiday season, showcasing his malleable form in a lighter, anthology-style narrative. This is followed by "" (1998), where fragments of his body animate as a young boy, exploring themes of identity and survival as Batman and confront his regenerating essence. These appearances maintain the actor's tragic arc, portraying Clayface as a reluctant criminal driven by his condition rather than pure malice. In (2010–2022), Clayface appears as Matt Hagen, voiced by , in the season 1 episode "" (2010) and later arcs. Here, he operates as a hired operative for the League of Shadows, using his shape-shifting to infiltrate targets, but his mud-like physiology limits prolonged activity, adding tactical vulnerabilities to his threats against the young heroes. This version highlights his brute strength and impersonation skills in team-based conflicts, evolving into a reformed ally by later seasons under the alias Harlan Matthews. The Batman (2004–2008) features multiple iterations of Clayface, diverging from a single origin to introduce layered antagonists. The first, Basil Karlo, debuts in "The Clayface of Tragedy" (2005), voiced by ; a washed-up who ingests WayneTech chemicals to gain malleability, enabling him to assume perfect disguises for revenge against Hollywood rivals. Later, Ethan Bennett transforms into a second Clayface in season 2's "The Bat in the Belfry" (2005), voiced by Steve Harris; scarred by an acid attack orchestrated by the Joker and Penguin, he seeks vengeance with uncontrolled, grotesque shifts. These dual versions culminate in a merged entity in the finale "Lost Heroes" (2008), where Karlo absorbs Bennett, amplifying their combined powers into a city-wide menace before being subdued. More recent portrayals include (2019–present), where Clayface is reimagined as Basil Karlo, voiced by across seasons 1–5 (with season 5 premiering in 2025). This comedic take depicts him as a dim-witted, aspiring thespian who joins Harley's crew after a "pottery accident" grants his powers, often bungling missions with over-the-top performances while providing through his oblivious enthusiasm for stardom. Tudyk's versatile delivery contrasts the character's clay form with exaggerated ego, making him a recurring ensemble member in the show's irreverent adventures. Clayface receives a brief tease in (2024–present), the DC Universe's animated series, with reprising his role from in a . This integration hints at crossovers within the , portraying the character in a more monstrous, action-oriented context amid the team's dynamics, without delving into full backstory details.

Live-action and film

In the Fox television series Gotham (2014–2019), Basil Karlo, the original incarnation of Clayface, was portrayed by Brian McManamon, debuting in the season 2 finale "A Legion of Horribles" (2016) as a struggling actor subjected to experimental procedures by Hugo Strange at Arkham Asylum, initiating his partial transformation into a shape-shifting entity. McManamon reprised the role in subsequent episodes, including season 3's "How the Riddler Got His Name" and "These Delicate and Dark Obsessions" (both 2017), as well as season 4's "The Blade's Path" (2017), where Karlo's abilities evolve further but remain in an early, actor-like phase without full monstrous conversion. The HBO series The Penguin (2024), a spin-off from Matt Reeves' The Batman universe, teases Clayface in its finale through the character Eve Karlo (played by ), who demonstrates uncanny shape-shifting abilities, strongly implying a link to Basil Karlo as the emerging threat in Gotham's criminal underworld. An upcoming live-action film titled Clayface is slated for theatrical release on September 11, 2026, as part of the (DCU), starring as Matt Hagen (Clayface) in a horror-centric narrative depicting the actor's descent into monstrosity after a tragic grants him clay-like transformation powers, blending elements from Basil Karlo's backstory. Directed by James Watkins and produced by , Lynn Harris, , and , the screenplay originated from Mike Flanagan and underwent a rewrite by , emphasizing a low-budget, body-horror approach with a reported production cost of $40 million. In the animated feature The Lego Batman Movie (2017), directed by Chris McKay, Clayface—appearing as the Basil Karlo version—is voiced by Kate Micucci as part of the rogues' gallery assembled by the Joker for a breakout from Arkham Asylum.

Video games and miscellaneous

Clayface has made numerous appearances in video games, typically portrayed as a boss or playable character emphasizing his malleable, shape-shifting body for combat and puzzle-solving mechanics. In LEGO Batman 2: DC Super Heroes (2012), the character serves as a free-roam boss on Gotham's south island near Wayne Tower and becomes playable after defeat for 100,000 studs, with abilities including hand transformations for melee attacks and solving mud-based environmental puzzles. In LEGO DC Super-Villains (2018), Clayface is a playable villain in both the story mode—where he aids in a breakout from Gotham City Police Department—and open-world exploration, voiced by Fred Tatasciore and featuring shape-shifting into larger forms for enhanced attacks. The character also appears in Unmasked: A DC Comics Adventure (2013), where incarnations like Karlo, Matt Hagen, Preston Payne, and Sondra Fuller can be summoned as allies or enemies, each retaining core shape-shifting traits; additionally, a costume unlocks for the , granting size growth on attacks to boost melee damage and health. In Batman: Arkham City (2011), Karlo's Clayface acts as the final boss, impersonating the Joker through mimicry before revealing his true form in a multi-phase fight involving explosive gel counters and environmental hazards to exploit his clay composition. More recently, in Gotham Knights (2022), Clayface functions as a major story boss, requiring team-based combat against his regenerating, morphing assaults in underground lairs. Beyond video games, Clayface features in merchandise. Action figures of the character appear in DC Collectibles lines, including a 13-inch deluxe edition from the Arkham City series released in 2014 with articulated limbs for posing in monstrous forms, and ' DC series in the , such as the 7-inch Rebirth variant with 22 points of articulation and interchangeable parts. Recent merchandise tie-ins, particularly for the 2024 Creature Commandos animated series, include limited-edition figures and apparel emphasizing his grotesque, body-horror design.

References

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