Golden Age Originally known only by his alias, the Penguin first appeared in
Gotham City as a skilled thief, sneaking a pair of priceless paintings (valued at $250,000 in 1941 dollars) out of an art museum by hiding the rolled-up canvases in the handle of his umbrella. The Penguin later used the stolen paintings as proof of his underworld acumen to a local mob boss, who allowed him to join his crime family. With the Penguin's planning, the mob pulled off a string of ingenious heists. The "be-monocled bird" and the mobster eventually fell out, leading Penguin to kill him with his umbrella gun. The Penguin became the leader of the mob and attempted to neutralize Batman by framing him for the theft of a statue which Penguin, himself, had stolen. As part of the plot, Penguin actually already owned the statue and was framing Batman and
Robin to commit insurance fraud. The Penguin's plans were eventually prevented, but the bandit himself escaped. Penguin soon became less violent and began to obsess over birds and umbrellas. After breaking out of prison, Penguin heard that Batman didn't consider him a threatening villain. To prove Batman wrong, Penguin built himself some gimmick guns and fishing poles. Batman was able to defeat him with an umbrella. Penguin is paroled from prison and asked to release his birds as a sign of good will. Penguin proceeds to open up an umbrella company and fools Batman into endorsing his products, which contained special magnets. Following the robbery, Penguin flees to Oasis Beach Island in the Caribbean Sea, where he attempts another umbrella-themed theft before being apprehended by Batman and Robin.
Silver Age Born
Oswald Chesterfield Cobblepot, the Penguin was bullied as a child for his short, penguin-like appearance. Several stories relate that he was forced, as a child, to always carry an umbrella by his overprotective mother due to his father dying of pneumonia from refusing to take one while going out in the rain. His parents owned a bird shop, where Cobblepot spent most of his time with the birds, seeing them as his only friends, and lavishing them with attention. His love of birds would eventually lead him to study
ornithology in college – only to find out that he knew more about birds than most of his professors did. In some versions, Cobblepot turns to crime after his mother dies and the bird shop, along with all of her birds, is repossessed to pay her debts. While in prison, Penguin and Joker heard the news that Batman is retiring. This turned out to be a ruse. As Batman was shaking off the effects of
Scarecrow's fear pills, Penguin escapes from prison and ends up apprehended by Batman and Robin.
Doctor Destiny manipulates Penguin,
Doctor Light,
Lex Luthor,
Tattooed Man, Cutlass Charlie,
Captain Boomerang,
Floronic Man, and
I.Q. into switching appearances with the Justice League, with Penguin swapping with Batman. The Justice League manage to thwart this plot and apprehend the villains. The Penguin made his last Silver Age appearance during the last appearance of the
Earth-One Batman. After he and a multitude of Batman's enemies are broken out of
Arkham Asylum and
Gotham State Penitentiary by
Ra's al Ghul, the Penguin carries out Ra's' plans to kidnap Batman's friends and allies. Penguin, Joker, Mad Hatter, Cavalier,
Deadshot, and
Killer Moth attack Gotham City Police Headquarters, but are infuriated when Joker sabotages their attempt at holding
Commissioner James Gordon for ransom. A standoff ensues, with Joker on one side and Penguin and Mad Hatter on the other. The Joker quickly subdues both with laughing gas.
Post-Crisis Following the rebooting the history of the
DC Universe, the Penguin was relegated to sporadic appearances, until writer
Alan Grant (who had earlier penned the Penguin origin story "The Killing Peck" in
Secret Origins Special #1) and artist
Norm Breyfogle brought him back, deadlier than ever. In this continuity, Oswald Cobblepot is an outcast in his high-society family and their rejection drives him to become a criminal. In keeping with his aristocratic origins, the Penguin pursues his criminal career while wearing
formal attire such as a
top hat,
monocle, and
tuxedo, especially of the "white-tie-and-tails" design. He is one of the relatively few villains in Batman's rogues gallery who is sane and in full control of his actions, although still ruthless and capable of extreme violence. During their run, the Penguin forms a brief partnership with hypnotist Mortimer Kadaver, who helps him fake his own death as a ploy to strike an unsuspecting Gotham, only for Kadaver to include a post-hypnotic suggestion that will leave Penguin back in his comatose state and only able to be awoken by a command that Kadaver alone knows. The Penguin later kills Kadaver, after plugging his own ears with
toilet paper so that the hypnotist no longer has power over him. After Batman foils this particular endeavor, the Penguin embarks on one of his grandest schemes ever in the three-part story "The Penguin Affair". Finding
Harold Allnut being tormented by two gang members, the Penguin takes in Allnut, showing him kindness in exchange for services. Harold builds a gadget that allows the Penguin to control flocks of birds from miles away, which the Penguin utilizes to destroy radio communications in Gotham and crash a passenger plane. This endeavor, too, is foiled by Batman, who hires Allnut as his mechanic. The Penguin resurfaces during
Jean-Paul Valley's tenure as Batman and is one of the few people to deduce that Valley is not the original Batman. To confirm his theory, he kidnaps
Sarah Essen, places her in a death trap set to go off at midnight, and turns himself in, utilizing the opportunity to mock her husband Commissioner Gordon as midnight approaches. An increasingly infuriated Gordon is nearly driven to throw him off the police headquarters roof before Valley rescues Sarah moments before midnight. As Valley leaves, he says, "There's nothing the Penguin can throw at me that I haven't encountered before." The Penguin reluctantly agrees with this sentiment, accepting that he has become passé. Subsequently, the Penguin turns his attentions to a new
modus operandi, operating behind the front of a legitimate restaurant and casino called the
Iceberg Lounge. In the storyline "
No Man's Land", Gotham City is devastated by an earthquake. Penguin stays behind when the U.S. government blockades the city. He becomes one of the major players in the lawless city, using his connections to profit by trading the money that nobody else in Gotham could use for goods through his contacts outside the city. One of these connections is discovered to be Lex Luthor and his company
LexCorp. Penguin's information helps Luthor to gain control of Gotham's property records, but Luthor dismisses him when the Penguin attempts to blackmail Luthor. The Penguin was swept up in the events of
Infinite Crisis. In Infinite Crisis, Penguin is briefly seen as part of the Battle of Metropolis, a large-scale battle started by
Alexander Luthor Jr.'s
Secret Society of Super Villains, which he is a member of. The Penguin, along with several other villains, is bowled over at the surprise appearance of
Bart Allen.
One Year Later while the Penguin is away from Gotham City,
Great White Shark and
Tally Man kill many of the villains who had worked for him, and frame the reformed Harvey Dent. The Great White Shark had planned to take over Gotham's criminal syndicate and eliminate the competition, the Penguin included. Upon his return to Gotham, the Penguin continues to claim that he has gone straight, and reopens the Iceberg, selling overpriced Penguin merchandise. He urges the Riddler to avoid crime, as their new shady but legal lifestyle is more lucrative. The Penguin was featured as a prominent figure in
Gotham Underground. He fights a gang war against
Tobias Whale,
Intergang and the
New Rogues, while supposedly running an "underground railroad" for criminals. In the end, Batman convinces the Penguin to become his informant. The Penguin later loses Batman's support after
the latter's mysterious disappearance and Intergang's exploitation of
the return of the Apokoliptian gods. The Penguin is eventually attacked by the
Secret Six, who kill many of his guards in an ambush at his mansion.
Bane informs him that he needs information on Batman's partners, as he plans on killing
Red Robin,
Batgirl,
Catwoman, and
Azrael. The Penguin soon betrays the team's location, which results in them being captured. Around this time, the villain Architect bombs and destroys the Iceberg Lounge.
The New 52 In
Death of the Family, the Penguin puts his right-hand man
Ignatius Ogilvy in charge of his operations in his temporary absence. Ogilvy, however, uses the Penguin's absence to declare him dead, taking over his gang and killing those loyal to him. Under the alias "Emperor Penguin", Ogilvy takes over the Penguin's operations. Upon the Joker's defeat, Batman unsuccessfully attempts to imprison the Penguin in Blackgate Penitentiary, only to be forced to release him later. Upon learning of Ogilvy's betrayal, the Penguin attacks his former henchman's new empire, but Batman intervenes and arrests him. The Penguin is found not guilty, however, thanks to the machinations of his ally Mr. Combustible threatening the judge's family. Meanwhile, Ogilvy releases Kirk Langstrom's
Man-Bat serum on Gotham City, turning many of the citizens into Man-Bats. Langstrom discovers a cure, returning the citizens to normal. The Penguin also played a role in Black Canary's rebooted origin. In
Birds of Prey (vol. 4) #0, Dinah sought to land a job at the Iceberg Lounge, knowing that a lead on the Basilisk organization which she was pursuing would soon spring up there. Unfortunately, the Penguin was not in the habit of taking job applications, so she decided to prove her worth by infiltrating the outfit by herself. When she arrived in the Penguin's bathroom, he was unimpressed. To prove her worth, she demonstrated her special ability: a sonic scream that could shake down the roof, if it were intense enough. Naturally, the scream alerted the Penguin's henchmen, and she made short work of them with her martial arts skills. Finally impressed, the Penguin hired her, and dubbed her Black Canary in keeping with the ornithological theme. During the "
Forever Evil" storyline, the Penguin is among the villains recruited by the
Crime Syndicate of America to join the Secret Society of Super Villains. With the heroes gone, the Penguin becomes the mayor of Gotham City and divides its territories among the inmates of
Arkham Asylum.
DC Rebirth In the
Their Dark Designs arc, the Penguin is one of four Gotham-based villains targeted by
Deathstroke,
Cheshire, Mr. Teeth,
Merlyn, and Gunsmith. After being saved by Batman, he reveals that he and the other targets (the Joker, the Ridder and Catwoman) were once contacted by a supervillain named the Designer in a recruitment into a United Underworld. Batman later learns from Catwoman that Penguin's plan was to win Gotham's mayoral campaign in a legitimate election, with his competition taken out by the hired assassins. Penguin later gathers all of Gotham's supervillains at the Iceberg Lounge in anticipation for "
The Joker War". In the
Failsafe arc, the Penguin plans a scheme to rob the Trixie club, with
Clayface taking his place. When Batman later tracks him down, he learns that Penguin is apparently dying of a fatal disease, with him apparently committing suicide to end his suffering. Penguin's actions ultimately cause the activation of the robot
Failsafe, since the act was framed in a way to make it look like Batman murdered him. However, Catwoman gradually uncovers that Penguin has faked his death to retire to Metropolis, blaming his confrontations with Batman as an addiction. He subsequently leaves his criminal empire to his children Aiden and Addison Cobblepot. ==Characterization==