List of DC Comics characters: W

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W[]

Amanda Waller[]

Warlock's Daughter[]

Warlord[]

Warp[]

Waverider[]

Van Wayne[]

First appearanceBatman #148 (June 1962)
Created byBill Finger and Sheldon Moldoff
Further reading

Vanderveer "Van" Wayne is the spoiled and rich cousin of Bruce Wayne. During his visit to his cousin, Van found the Robin costume in Alfred's laundry which Bruce claimed were his and Dick Grayson's masquerade costumes. He got himself into some trouble when he hired a con artist named Jumpy Regan to impersonate Batman, while he posed as Robin. He did all this with the intention of impressing Dick, but Van was not aware that they were, in fact, the real Dynamic Duo. Van had to be rescued from Regan by Batman and Robin and even helped to apprehend Regan. In the aftermath of the situation, he learned a lesson in humility.[1]

Van Wayne in other media[]

Van Wayne appears in Powerless, portrayed by Alan Tudyk.[2] The cousin of Bruce Wayne and the son of Vanderveer Wayne Sr., this version of the character is in charge of Wayne Security, a subsidiary of Wayne Enterprises in Charm City. A self-proclaimed "rich, over-educated, globetrotting wastrel", Van is a power-mad disastrous dictator of a boss, hating his job and seeking to move to Gotham City from Charm City for a better position at the company.

In the series finale of Arrow titled "Fadeout," Roy Harper and Thea Queen were leaping over the rooftop of Van Wayne Industries while looking for a kidnapped William Clayton.

Weapons Master[]

Weasel[]

Weasel is the name of two DC Comics supervillains. Weasel first appeared in The Fury of Firestorm #35 (August 1985), and was created for DC Comics by Gerry Conway and Rafael Kayanan.[3]

John Monroe[]

Weasel
Publication information
PublisherDC Comics
First appearanceThe Fury of Firestorm #36 (June 1985)
Created byGerry Conway (writer)
Rafael Kayanan (artist)
In-story information
Alter egoJohn Monroe
Team affiliationsSuicide Squad
AbilitiesGreat agility
Hand-to-hand combat

John Monroe was a lonely student at Stanford University in the late 1960s. His contemporaries rarely noticed him. If they did, they referred to him in derogatory terms, using words like "Weasel" to describe him. This made him bitter, driving him to become a murderer decades later.

The grown John Monroe became a teacher at Vandemeer University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. A number of his fellow students from Stanford University held prominent positions. To rationalize killing three of them, he considered them threats to getting tenure at Vandemeer. Taking on the costumed identity of Weasel, displaying great agility, expertise at hand-to-hand combat, and a costume with sharp claws, he stalked the campus grounds and brutally murdered Arnold Lintel, Linda Walters, and a night guard named Chuck Gherkin. When Martin Stein (one half of Firestorm) shows up for a job opening as a physics professor, Monroe made two attempts on Martin Stein's life. In the second attempt, he would have killed Martin had he not provoked the transformation of Stein into Firestorm. After a fight, Firestorm unmasked Weasel and sent him to jail.[4]

Weasel was later recruited into the Suicide Squad for their ill-fated mission to rescue Hawk. During the mission, he tried to kill the Thinker by cutting Thinker's throat with his claws. Rick Flag Jr. took the Thinker's helmet to regain control over the mission. When he saw the Weasel, the Thinker's helmet told Flag to kill him. Weasel's death was not mourned.[5]

During the Blackest Night storyline, Weasel's dead body was seen to be among those entombed in the Hall of Justice. When the Black Power Rings flew in, Weasel's body was among the dead bodies that were reanimated by the Black Power Rings and inducted into the Black Lantern Corps.[6]

In September 2011, The New 52 rebooted DC's continuity. In this new timeline, a slightly revised Jack Monroe Weasel is re-established in the Forever Evil storyline, depicted in a more animalistic state. He was lurking in Central Park when Steve Trevor and Killer Frost were looking for Cheetah (who was in possession of Wonder Woman's lasso). Weasel ambushed Steve Trevor and Killer Frost where he was frozen by a reluctant Killer Frost. Killer Frost told Steve Trevor that Weasel is considered a joke compared to villains Black Bison and Multiplex. Before Steve Trevor and Killer Frost press on, Killer Frost apologizes to Weasel.[7]

Future Weasel[]

In Batman #666 (July 2007), a special issue set 15 years in the future, a different Weasel is shown as an enemy of Damian Wayne, who has become Batman following the death of Dick Grayson.[8] This future Weasel has canine-like teeth.

Weasel in other media[]

An unnamed incarnation of the Weasel appears in the live-action DC Extended Universe film The Suicide Squad (2021), portrayed by Sean Gunn.[9][10] He is recruited into titular team to destroy a Corto Maltese prison called Jötunheim, but seemingly drowns while being airdropped onto the island's coast. In a mid-credits scene however, he is revealed to have survived and flees into the local jungle.

Weather Witch[]

The Weather Witch is a character in DC Comics.

The Weather Witch was a former prostitute from Gotham City, transformed by the Penguin into a member of the New Rogues during the Gotham Underground storyline.[11]

During the Final Crisis storyline, Libra sent her and the rest of the New Rogues after the Rogues when they withdrew from the Secret Society of Super Villains. She was not very skilled with her Weather Wand and the Weather Wizard easily killed her with a lightning bolt.[12]

Weather Witch in other media[]

The Weather Witch appears in live-action media set in the Arrowverse, portrayed by Reina Hardesty:

  • She first appears in season five of The Flash television series. The estranged daughter of Mark Mardon / Weather Wizard, this version was a meteorologist who was fired after her weather experiments became too dangerous. A part of her van was struck with a fragment of the Thinker's Enlightenment satellite, which she converted into a staff that enabled her to control the weather like her father and became the Weather Witch. After her plot to kill her father was foiled by the Flash, she attempts to wreak havoc on Central City, but the Flash stops her using the Weather Wizard's wand and sees her imprisoned alongside her father. In the episode "The Flash & The Furious", the Weather Witch is put on trial, but expresses remorse for what she did and was prepared to serve time. However, the Silver Ghost frees her from the Central City Police Department's custody and persuades her to go on a crime spree with her by returning her staff. While XS persuades Jackam to stop, the latter escapes with the Silver Ghost. As of the episode "Gone Rogue", Jackam abandoned the Silver Ghost in Bolivia and joins up with XS, Brie Larvan and Rag Doll to rob McCulloch Technologies before they are defeated by the Flash and arrested by the authorities.
  • The Weather Witch appeared in the Arrowverse crossover "Crisis on Infinite Earths". After the multiverse was restored and Earth-Prime was created, Jackam attacks National City and is confronted by Supergirl before the former is defeated by the Flash.

Weather Wizard[]

Web[]

Weeper[]

Weird[]

Paul Westfield[]

Whip[]

White Canary[]

During the Birds of Prey relaunch tie-in with the 2010 Brightest Day storyline, it is revealed that one of the female children born to Huang was spared after lightning appeared on the day of her birth and killed her midwife, making Huang believe that something powerful wanted her to live.[13] She was trained by her brothers in the same techniques, and after their defeat at the hands of the Black Canary, she hunted them down and killed them for dishonoring their father's name. Now calling herself the White Canary, she traveled to Gotham and set out to blackmail the Black Canary by revealing her secret identity and threatening to kill one teammate for each hour that passed, enlisting the help of Oswald Cobblepot, Savant and Creote.[14][15][16] Upon being defeated by the Black Canary, she denied being responsible for the death of a kidnapper in Iceland to frame the Black Canary, claiming that it was in fact Lady Shiva, and offers the Black Canary help in killing Shiva if she is set free.

Later, the White Canary takes the Black Canary to Bangkok and reveals that she is holding the Black Canary's adopted daughter Sin as a hostage, and will kill her if the Black Canary does not battle Lady Shiva in a duel to the death. The Black Canary agrees despite her broken wrist, but at the last minute Helena Bertinelli challenges Shiva in her place, buying the Black Canary enough time to find Sin and get her to safety, and Lady Shiva agrees to put their duel off until a later time. The White Canary reluctantly concedes, but promises that the Black Canary has not seen the last of her.[17]

Alternate versions of White Canary[]

  • The White Canary appears in the Ame-Comi Girls comic book series. This version is a superheroine instead of a supervillain and possesses the sonic scream known as the "Canary Cry". Like her previous appearances though, she is still of Asian descent and retains her anonymity.
  • A different version of the White Canary appears in The New 52's Black Canary title. Debuting in issue #4 as an unnamed character in a white costume, she saves Ditto from Amanda Waller and returns her to Dinah in secret. She later reappears stealing a vial of blood from Dinah. Later, the still-unnamed woman helps the Black Canary defeat a monster and save her band and then appears to Dinah's house, revealing her identity. She is revealed as Dinah's maternal aunt, Rena, who wants to protect her niece from a threat related to her missing mother's past. At the end of the series' run, Rena is revealed as a fake, with the villainous shapeshifter Izak Orato masquerading as the Black Canary's "aunt" to trick her. Unlike previous incarnations, the character is depicted as Caucasian and blonde.

White Canary in other media[]

  • In the Arrowverse, Sara Lance adopts the alias of the White Canary after being brought back from the dead with a Lazarus Pit and joined the Legends.
  • Sara Lance's White Canary appears in the mobile edition of Injustice 2, as an alternate skin for the Black Canary.

White Dragon[]

White Dragon is the name of four different characters appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

White Dragon I[]

The first White Dragon is a gang leader who is an enemy of Whip on Earth-Two.[18]

Wu Cheng[]

Wu Cheng is a combat pilot who works as a member of the Blackhawk Squadron under the alias of White Dragon.[19]

William Heller[]

William Heller is a Neo-Nazi and white supremacist who formed the Aryan Empire. While posing as a vigilante, William handed any Asian, black, and/or Latino criminals to the police while sending the white criminals to the Aryan Empire headquarters. White Dragon's actions attracted the attention of the Suicide Squad. Deadshot infiltrated the Aryan Empire as a man named William Hell. Using Chronos' time machine, the Suicide Squad rigged the shooting contest between William Heller and Deadshot so that Deadshot would win while also tarnishing Heller.[20]

Heller later wore a suit of armor and took on the alias of White Dragon where he joined the Fourth Reich in their goal to wipe out the original members of the Justice Society of America. he was defeated by Hawkman.[21]

White Dragon later sided with General in his plan to overthrow Amanda Waller and kill the rest of the Suicide Squad. He was killed by Plastique.[22]

Daniel Ducannon[]

Daniel Ducannon is a white supremacist who used the White Dragon name when posing as a vigilante after getting his pyrokinesis from the Meta-Bomb incident. While targeting people of color, White Dragon ran afoul of Hawkman and Hawkwoman. They defeated White Dragon with help from Carter Hall and Shiera Sanders Hall.[23]

During the "Underworld Unleashed" storyline, White Dragon was among the escaped Belle Reve inmates that hear the offer of Neron.[24]

During the "Joker: Last Laugh" storyline, White Dragon is among the inmates of Slabside Penitentiary that was Jokerized by Joker. He and Warjack were defeated by Militia.[25]

White Dragon later appeared as a member of the Fourth Reich where he now rides an actual white dragon.[21] White Dragon and his fellow Nazi villains attacked the Justice Society of America's headquarters and was defeated by them.[26]

Auggie Smith[]

An original version of the character appears in the DC Extended Universe television series Peacemaker. This version is August "Auggie" Smith (portrayed by Robert Patrick), who takes inspiration from the William Heller and Daniel Ducannon incarnations of White Dragon, a former vigilante, white supremist, and the father of Christopher "Chris" Smith / Peacemaker. Five months after Chris' mission with Task Force X at Corto Maltese, Chris visits his father to retrieve his pet and best friend Eagly and acquires a new outfit. After Chris killed an alien being coined "Butterflies" and held a couple hostage, Chris' team member changes Chris' fingerprint's in the police system to point to Auggie, and bribes the couple that Smith took hostage into identifying Auggie as the man who took them hostage. The police then arrest Auggie and is sent to prison, where he is hailed as "White Dragon" by the prisoners. Chris eventually finds out about the fingerprint switch and visits his father in prison, who threatens Chris that he would expose him as the true suspect. Adebayo convinces that Chris is better off without Auggie, leading Adrian to get himself arrested in the same prison as Auggie and plans to kill him. However, he fails to do so and is bailed out by . Later, Auggie informs the guards he has evidence regarding his case.

White Rabbit[]

White Rabbit is the name of three different characters appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

Angora Lapin[]

Angora Lapin is a mysterious arms dealer that operates in Metropolis that operated as White Rabbit. She and her henchmen C&H, Dutch, and Mucus stole high-tech weaponry made by John Henry Irons called "Toastmasters" so that they can sell them to the gangs of Metropolis. When John Henry Irons first became "Man of Steel", his first job was to get the Toastmasters off the streets and defeat White Rabbit.[27]

White Rabbit II[]

The second White Rabbit is an unnamed swordsman and mercenary who is a member of the Pentacle which antagonises the Shadowpact.[28]

Jaina Hudson[]

In 2011, "The New 52" rebooted the DC universe. Jaina Hudson was the child of a Bollywood actress and a diplomat named Tom Hudson. After spending time in private schools, Jaina attended a fundraiser where she met Bruce Wayne. When first seen as White Rabbit, she was among the Arkham Asylum inmates that escaped where she teased Batman and the Gotham City Police Department. When Batman caught up to White Rabbit near the scene of dead clowns, Joker draped a cloth over her. Batman fought Joker until it was discovered that Joker was actually Clayface in disguise. When Clayface fell on Batman, White Rabbit tried to inject a steroid into Batman only to be thwarted by Flash.[29]

During the "Forever Evil" storyline, White Rabbit is among the villains that join the Crime Syndicate of America's incarnation of the Secret Society of Super Villains.[30] She was present at Arkham Asylum when Bane arrived.[31] When Bane caused a breakout at Arkham Asylum, White Rabbit went to Bar 8 and participated in many battles throughout Gotham City.[32]

In 2016, DC Comics implemented another relaunch of its books called "DC Rebirth", which restored its continuity to a form much as it was prior to "The New 52". White Rabbit appeared as a member of the Wonderland Gang.[33]

White Witch[]

Perry White[]

Wild Dog[]

Wildebeest[]

Wildfire[]

Wildstar[]

Rose Wilson[]

Windfall[]

Creators: Mike W. Barr and Jim Aparo. First appearance: Batman and the Outsiders #9 (April 1984). Powers: Aerokinesis and flight.

Windfall was a young metahuman who gained her powers after her mother let her company perform prenatal DNA experiments on her and her sister Becky, causing Becky to eventually kill their mother in revenge later in life.

Wendy Jones was originally a member of the supervillain group called the Masters of Disaster alongside her sister. She even fought the Outsiders on more than one occasion. During an attack against the Outsiders, she rescued one of their members. The team leader, Windfall's sister New Wave, was against Windfall helping Halo. This event caused Windfall to quit the team and join the Outsiders for a while. She later left adventuring with the Outsiders behind and continued with college.

During school, Wendy was invited to a fraternity party and date-raped by members of the fraternity after they spiked her drink with rohypnol. After taking turns with Wendy, the fraternity members took pictures and posted them on the Internet, while the local district attorney, the father of one of the fraternity members who ruined her, refused to make a case for Wendy due to her past as a supervillainess. As a result of the scandal, the college Wendy attended expelled her to avoid scrutiny, causing Wendy to return to the college and kill the fraternity members who ruined her by removing the air from their fraternity house and suffocating all the residents to death. Wendy was later incarcerated in Belle Reve for her murders before eventually being recruited by Amanda Waller for the Suicide Squad.

During a mission to the Middle East, the General betrayed the team and led a mutiny against them as well. After trying to make an air wall to protect the group from the attacks from Chemo, Windfall could not maintain the wall and was reduced to a skeleton.

Windfall in other media[]

  • Windfall and the Masters of Disaster appear in the DC Nation Shorts: Thunder and Lightning episode "Lightning Under the Weather".
  • Wendy Jones appears in Young Justice: Outsiders (voiced by Zehra Fazal). She is one of the meta-teen trafficking victims residing at the Meta-Human Youth Center in Taos, New Mexico.

Woozy Winks[]

Wintergreen[]

Wink[]

Creators: Tom Taylor and Bruno Redondo. First appearance: Suicide Squad Volume 6 #1 (February 2020). Powers: Teleportation.

Wink is a young metahuman terrorist in the DC Universe, who was a member of the Suicide Squad and The Revolutionaries. She is dating The Aerie.

Wizard[]

Wolf Spider[]

Wolf Spider is the name of a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

Evan Blake is a rich playboy and old friend of Kate Kane that operates as the art thief Wolf Spider. Wolf Spider ran afoul of Batwoman when he tried stole paintings by a Depression-era artist named Eisenstadt where one of his works was actually a map to the location of the money that Eisenstadt stole from a crooked businessman named Grantham. He was actually hired by Grantham's grandson Nathan Grantham.[34] When the map was obtained, Nathan was wounded when a statue fell on him causing Batwoman to allow Wolf Spider to get away with the money and not knowing of his identity. Despite his mission being a success, Wolf Spider disposed of the money in Slaughter Swamp as he considered it "blood money".[35]

Wolf Spider in other media[]

Wolf Spider appears in the Batwoman episode "Gore on Campus" portrayed by Lincoln Clauss. This version old friend of Kate Kane who operates as an art thief. During the heist of the portrait made by Jack Napier, Wolf Spider is accidentally struck by the Crow vehicle pursuing him. As the Crows claimed the portrait, Ryan Wilder discovered that Evan is Wolf Spider and gave him to Mary to patch up. Mary later revealed to Evan that the portrait he was trying to steal was a fake. In the episode "Armed and Dangerous", Wolf Spider was enlisted by Mary to infiltrate Luke Fox's hospital room and administer the Desert Rose serum after Luke was shot by Russell Tavaroff.

Wonder Boy[]

Wonder Girl[]

Donna Troy[]

Cassie Sandsmark[]

Wonder Twins[]

Wonder Woman[]

Wotan[]

Wrath[]

References[]

  1. ^ Batman #148. DC Comics.
  2. ^ Watters, Bill (2017-01-13). "NBC's 'Powerless' Trailer Featuring Bruce Wayne's Cousin". Bleeding Cool.com. Retrieved 2017-01-14.
  3. ^ Rovin, Jeff (1987). The Encyclopedia of Supervillains. New York: Facts on File. pp. 369–370. ISBN 0-8160-1356-X.
  4. ^ The Fury of Firestorm #38. DC Comics.
  5. ^ Doom Patrol and Suicide Squad Special #1. DC Comics.
  6. ^ Blackest Night #3. DC Comics.
  7. ^ Forever Evil: A.R.G.U.S. #5. DC Comics.
  8. ^ Batman #666. DC Comics.
  9. ^ "Nathan Fillion's Role in James Gunn's THE SUICIDE SQUAD May Have Been Revealed". GeekTyrant. Retrieved 2019-10-11.
  10. ^ Vary, Adam B (August 22, 2020). "'The Suicide Squad' First Look, Full Cast Revealed by Director James Gunn at DC FanDome". Variety.
  11. ^ Gotham Underground #3. DC Comics
  12. ^ Final Crisis: Rogues Revenge #2. Marvel Comics
  13. ^ Birds of Prey (vol. 2) #4 (October 2010), DC Comics
  14. ^ Birds of Prey (vol. 2) #1 (July 2010), DC Comics
  15. ^ Birds of Prey (vol. 2) #2 (August 2010)
  16. ^ Birds of Prey (vol. 2) #3 (September 2010), DC Comics
  17. ^ Birds of Prey (vol. 2) #6 (December 2010), DC Comics
  18. ^ Flash Comics #23. DC Comics.
  19. ^ Blackhawk #108. DC Comics.
  20. ^ Suicide Squad #4. DC Comics.
  21. ^ a b Justice Society of America Vol. 3 #4. DC Comics.
  22. ^ Suicide Squad Vol. 3 #7-8. DC Comics.
  23. ^ Hawkworld Vol. 2 #27. DC Comics.
  24. ^ Underworld Unleashed #1. Marvel Comics.
  25. ^ Joker: Last Laugh #4. DC Comics.
  26. ^ Justice Society Vol. 3 #37. DC Comics.
  27. ^ Adventures of Superman #500. DC Comics.
  28. ^ Shadowpact #1. DC Comics.
  29. ^ Batman: The Dark Knight Vol. 2 #1. DC Comics.
  30. ^ Forever Evil #1. DC Comics.
  31. ^ Forever Evil: Arkham War #1. DC Comics.
  32. ^ Batman: The Dark Knight Vol. 2 #23.3 - Clayface. DC Comics.
  33. ^ Suicide Squad Vol. 5 #26. DC Comics.
  34. ^ Batman Vol. 2 #26-30. DC Comics.
  35. ^ Batman Vol. 2 #31. DC Comics.
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