It's something I've always wondered...for, like, a week now.
At what point did Batman's faithful butler start developing the dry, British wit that we all know and love so well? And what influenced the change?
You read old Batman comics from the early 80's back, Alfred really wasn't a funny guy. He might crack an occasional joke, like everyone did, but he wasn't exactly witty. And he definitely didn't put on a stoic, unaffected air like he currently does. He was basically a less effeminate Jarvis.
I wonder if the movie Arthur had anything to do with it, because the valet character Hobson seems almost like a model for modern-day Alfie.
Arthur: "Do you know what I'm going to do? I'm going to take a bath."
Hobson: "I'll alert the media."
The earliest story I can think of that features Alfred's deadpan humor was Dark Knight Returns:
Alfred: "That refugee charity called..."
Bruce: "Write them a check."
Alfred: "And the Committe for the Prevention of Obsessive Behavior in Middle-Aged Men?"
Bruce: "Write them a check."
Alfred: "Very good, sir. Your sense of humor is keen as ever, sir."
But then, everyone was darkly humorous in that one. But was Miller the inspiration for a funny Alfred in the regular Batbooks? A later writer? Could it have been the performance of Michael Gough, or even Efrem Zimbalist Jr.?
SEAN


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