Television Animation • Toyman appears in
The New Adventures of Superman. This version is the unnamed son of Winslow Schott. • The Jack Nimball incarnation of Toyman appears in
Challenge of the Superfriends, voiced by
Frank Welker. This version is a member of
Lex Luthor's
Legion of Doom. • Toyman was meant to appear in the
Super Friends: The Legendary Super Powers Show episode "The Case of the Dreadful Dolls", but was declared off-limits and replaced by series original villain the Dollmaker (not to be confused with the
Batman villain of the same name). In a nod to Toyman, the Dollmaker's lair is located in Schott's Toymaking Factory. • An original incarnation of Toyman resembling Jack Nimball appears in a self-titled episode of
The Plastic Man Comedy/Adventure Show, voiced by
Alan Oppenheimer. • The Winslow Schott incarnation of Toyman appears in series set in the
DC Animated Universe (DCAU), voiced primarily by
Bud Cort, and by
Corey Burton in
Justice League. This version, also known as Winslow Schott Jr., is the son of Winslow Schott Sr., who dreamed of building a toy factory but lacked capital. Crime boss
Bruno Mannheim offered to bankroll him to secretly use the factory as a front for a
numbers racket. When the police discovered the scheme, the gangsters left Schott Sr. to take the fall. As a result, he was falsely imprisoned for 10 years and died in prison before he could be paroled. Meanwhile, Schott Jr. spent several years in abusive and neglectful
foster homes, which left him a deranged adult. This version of Toyman notably wears a mask based on the head of a puppet doll, and his real face is never revealed. • Schott Jr. first appears in
Superman: The Animated Series. Throughout the episodes "Fun and Games" and "Obsession", he creates an android named Darci Mason and seeks revenge against Mannheim for wronging his father as well as Superman for foiling his schemes before he and Darci are seemingly killed in the latter episode. • Schott Jr. resurfaces in the
Static Shock episode "Toys in the Hood". Having survived the events of "Obsession", he and Darci turn up in Dakota to capture
Static's friend
Daisy Watkins and use her as a model for Darci's new
nanite-constructed body. After Superman and Static join forces to confront Schott Jr. and rescue Daisy, Darci betrays him and tries to escape, only to be killed by a failsafe device he created to destroy her if she ever did so. Subsequently, Schott Jr. is taken to jail. • Schott Jr. appears in the
Justice League episode "Hereafter" as a member of the
Superman Revenge Squad. During their fight with the
Justice League, he uses an experimental machine resembling a giant toy robot to seemingly kill Superman, but unknowingly transports him to a post-apocalyptic future. • Schott Jr. appears in
Justice League Unlimited as a member of
Gorilla Grodd's
Secret Society. Prior to and during the episodes "Alive!" and "Destroyer", Lex Luthor takes command of the Society, but Grodd mounts a mutiny. In the ensuing battle, Schott Jr. sides with the former before
Darkseid attacks and kills most of the Society. Luthor, Schott Jr., and the survivors subsequently return to Earth and work with the Justice League to foil Darkseid's invasion. • The Jack Nimball incarnation of Toyman makes a cameo appearance in
The Batman episode "Lost Heroes", voiced by
Richard Green. • The Winslow Schott incarnation of Toyman appears in
Harley Quinn, voiced by
Tom Hollander. This version is a member of the Legion of Doom. • Toyman appears in
Kite Man: Hell Yeah!, voiced by
Andy Daly. • A teenage Winslow Schott appears in
DC Super Hero Girls, voiced by
Charlie Schlatter. • The Jack Nimball incarnation of Toyman appears in
Batwheels, voiced by
James Arnold Taylor. • Winslow Schott appears in the
My Adventures with Superman episode "Two Lanes Diverged", voiced by Michael Yurchak. A second Toyman,
Harold Kripstly, was portrayed by
Grant Shaud in the series' fourth season. • The Winslow Schott incarnation of Toyman appears in
Smallville, portrayed by
Chris Gauthier. This version originally worked for
S.T.A.R. Labs before he was hired by
Oliver Queen to work for
Queen Industries, subsequently fired for putting explosives in his toys, and found work with a recuperating
Lex Luthor. After a string of failures that lead to him being arrested, Schott establishes Marionette Ventures, an organization dedicated to controlling Smallville's waterfront properties, to challenge
Clark Kent and the Justice League. • Several characters based on Toyman appear in
Supergirl: • Introduced in the episode "Childish Things", the Winslow Schott incarnation of Toyman (portrayed by
Henry Czerny) tried to kill his boss Chester Dunholz for his perceived theft of his projects 10 years prior to the series, but Dunholz survived while six innocents were killed. After learning what happened, his son
Winslow "Winn" Schott Jr. (portrayed by
Jeremy Jordan) never forgave him for giving in to his rage. In the present, Schott escapes from prison and forces Winn to help him make another attempt on Dunholz's life before
Supergirl defeats him. As of the episode "Schott Through the Heart", Schott has died. In the two-part episode "Back from the Future", Winn encounters a digital consciousness based on his father while attempting to stop the digital consciousness of a villainous doppelgänger of himself. After Winn reluctantly agrees to let Schott help, the latter sacrifices himself to delete the alternate Winn's consciousness. • "Schott Through the Heart" also introduces a female version of Jack Nimball named
Jacqueline Nimball / Toywoman, portrayed by
Brooke Smith. Following Schott's death, his protégé Nimball targets his ex-wife Mary and Winn, though they work with Supergirl to defeat her. • "Back from the Future" also features an alternate universe version of Winn (also portrayed by Jordan) who took on the mantle of Toyman following his father's death. After
Brainiac 5 frees him from prison on
Lex Luthor's behalf, Toyman attempts to frame Winn for terrorism in the future by uploading his mind into the
Department of Extranormal Operations (DEO)'s computers to invade the Internet. With help from a digital copy of his father's consciousness, Winn hacks the system and deletes both of the Toymen's consciousnesses. As he had joined the
Legion by this time, Winn changes his Legionnaire codename from "
Computer Lad" to "Toyman" in his father's memory and to do good in his name.
Film • An unidentified Toyman appears in the unproduced
Batman vs. Superman. This version would have been a reformed criminal that Batman interrogates and tortures to locate the
Joker. When they are attacked by one of the Joker's deadly gadgets, Batman narrowly escapes, leaving Toyman to be caught in an explosion. His fate is not revealed in the script. • The Winslow Schott incarnation of Toyman appears in
Superman: Doomsday, voiced by
John DiMaggio. • An unidentified Toyman appears as a playable character in
Lego Batman 3: Beyond Gotham, voiced by
Nolan North. • The Winslow Schott incarnation of Toyman appears as a playable character in
Lego DC Super-Villains, voiced again by
Corey Burton. • The Jack Nimball incarnation of Toyman appears in
DC Super Hero Girls: Teen Power, voiced again by Charlie Schlatter. voiced by
Christopher Sean. This version is a supporting member of the
Suicide Squad.
Miscellaneous • The
Smallville incarnation of Winslow Schott and Hiro Okamura appear in
Smallville Season 11. After foiling criminals wearing teleportation vests that were stolen in a previous LexCorp robbery, Superman and Lex Luthor reluctantly join forces to solve the mystery. They initially suspect Schott, who is incarcerated at
Stryker's Island in "hyper-solitary". Upon being interviewed by
Lois Lane about the
Prankster, Schott reveals they used to work together at Queen Industries' R&D department before he transferred to LexCorp and Prankster is a cheat who stole his idea for kryptonite bullets. Additionally, Schott modified
John Corben's kryptonite heart to give him the ability to absorb kryptonite radiation. • An unidentified Toyman and Hiro Okamura appear in the
Batman: The Brave and the Bold tie-in comics. • The Hiro Okamura incarnation of Toyman appears in the
Catwoman: Queen of Thieves podcast. • An unidentified Toyman appears in the
DC Super Friends tie-in comics. • In 2011,
Mattel released a DC Universe Classics 6" Toyman figure based on the Jack Nimball incarnation of Toyman. ==See also==