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The 10 Best ’60s TV Villains Who Should Make The Leap To Comic Books

5. King Tut

nightly.net

King Tut is one of the more successful of the series€ original villains largely because he has the most extensive €“ and zany €“ backstory. William Omaha McElroy is a well-respected Egyptologist professor at Yale until, that is, he hits his head. Then he believes himself to be a reincarnation of Tutankhamun intent on becoming the pharaoh of Gotham. Until he hits his head again and then he returns to normal. Until the next time he hits his head€ Tut is such a popular villain from the series, there€s even been a recent, more serious, version of the character in the Batman comics who is derived from Victor Bueno€s original creation. We’d love to see the comics tackle the next villain on our list…

6. Egghead

Bat-Mania

Every Batman villain has a gimmick. And they don’t come more gimmicky than Egghead, egg-cellently brought to life by veteran horror star Vincent Price. The self-proclaimed smartest criminal in the world, Egghead is thoroughly obsessed with eggs €“ his crimes are all egg-related, he puns at an egg-stremely painful rate and he even looks like an egg. As is clear, Egghead isn’t the most well-rounded character in the Batman universe but is made a fantastic villain thanks to Price who hams it up egg-spertly. Sorry, I think I’ve stretched this yolk too far€.

7. The Riddler

bleedingcool.com

As with every incarnation of the character, this Riddler (usually played by Frank Gorshin, but also once by John €˜Gomez Addams€ Astin) is a criminal mastermind, psychologically unable to commit a crime without leaving a clue for Batman and Robin to solve €“ which they invariably always do, no matter how odd. Frank Gorshin brings the character wonderfully to life €“ Jim Carrey in Batman Forever obviously being heavily inspired by his hyperactive performance €“ and is arguably still the definitive version of the Prince of Puzzles.

The Riddler is also the very first villain of the series, appearing in the semi-serious opening episode €˜Hi Diddle Riddle€™ in which the loss of Bruce Wayne€™s parents is mentioned and someone actually dies, something that was huge no-no later in the series. You can’t say the show didn€t develop.

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