Matt Hagen

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An unscrupulous skin diver whose amazing powers are the result of his inadvertent discovery of a secret pool that “shimmers like a trapped rainbow” and is filled with “a strange liquid protoplasm” whose “freakish properties defy analysis” (Detective Comics No. 304, Jun 1962: “The Return of Clay- Face!”). After Hagen commits his first spectacular robbery—and engineers an astounding getaway by assuming, in rapid succession, the forms of a giant python, a buzz saw, and a huge eagle, an amazed newspaper editor bestows on him the name [[Clayface]] (Detective Comics No. 298, Dec 1961: “The Challenge of Clay-Face”). (See [[Clayface]])
 
An unscrupulous skin diver whose amazing powers are the result of his inadvertent discovery of a secret pool that “shimmers like a trapped rainbow” and is filled with “a strange liquid protoplasm” whose “freakish properties defy analysis” (Detective Comics No. 304, Jun 1962: “The Return of Clay- Face!”). After Hagen commits his first spectacular robbery—and engineers an astounding getaway by assuming, in rapid succession, the forms of a giant python, a buzz saw, and a huge eagle, an amazed newspaper editor bestows on him the name [[Clayface]] (Detective Comics No. 298, Dec 1961: “The Challenge of Clay-Face”). (See [[Clayface]])
  
[[Category:Entries]]
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[[Category:Entries|Hagen, Matt]]
[[Category:People]]
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[[Category:People|Hagen, Matt]]
[[Category:Villains]]
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[[Category:Villains|Hagen, Matt]]
[[Category:Batman]]
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[[Category:Batman|Hagen, Matt]]
[[Category:Silver Age (1956-1970)]]
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[[Category:Silver Age (1956-1970)|Hagen, Matt]]

Revision as of 20:45, 23 December 2007

An unscrupulous skin diver whose amazing powers are the result of his inadvertent discovery of a secret pool that “shimmers like a trapped rainbow” and is filled with “a strange liquid protoplasm” whose “freakish properties defy analysis” (Detective Comics No. 304, Jun 1962: “The Return of Clay- Face!”). After Hagen commits his first spectacular robbery—and engineers an astounding getaway by assuming, in rapid succession, the forms of a giant python, a buzz saw, and a huge eagle, an amazed newspaper editor bestows on him the name Clayface (Detective Comics No. 298, Dec 1961: “The Challenge of Clay-Face”). (See Clayface)

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