In the main DC continuity, Bruce Wayne/Batman and Selina Kyle/Catwoman never had a child. However, in one of DC's alternate timelines of the 60s ("Earth 2"), the character of Huntress (Helena Wayne) is Batman and Catwoman's daughter.
Basically, Batman got Batgirl pregnant while she was still involved with Dick Grayson. And rather that let Barbara tell Dick, Bruce got in there first.
As for her latest Rebirth incarnation, the comic's artist, Jonboy Meyers confirmed she was between 18 and 19 years old (here).
She was several years older than Dick Grayson. In fact, she was at least six years older: she was a Congresswoman (minimum age 25) when he was still a teenager. In Batgirl: Year One (February to October 2003), Batgirl also seemed to be older than Robin.
Injustice: Gods Among Us Year 2
Harley reveals to Black Canary that she has a four-year-old daughter named Lucy who is being raised by her sister. After discovering she was pregnant, Harley left the Joker for almost a year to have their baby, instead of abortion.In 2011's Suicide Squad comic series, Harley Quinn got a new, expanded origin story in which The Joker tosses the psychiatrist, struggling against him, into a vat of acid, which dyed her skin white and also made her insane.
Although Joker has no confirmed children in the mainstream DC universe, there is a possibility that he might have one, since in Joker: Last Laugh, where he thinks he's going to die, he decides that he wants a kid to continue his work (later it turns out that he's not actually going to die, and he puts off the idea).
Harley kicks off the movie telling us what we already know: She and Mistah J are no more. They conveniently broke up off-screen after the events of 2016's "Suicide Squad" movie. Harley shows others in Gotham she's serious about her breakup with Joker by blowing up Ace Chemicals.
Harley's bomb is disarmed by Dr. Van Criss, leaving Flag unable to execute her and allowing her to climb aboard the helicopter. Waller's men subsequently shoot down the helicopter, and Harley falls out while the Joker is presumed dead, after which Harley rejoins the squad.
A female version of the Joker appeared as part of DC's Tangent Comics line in her own one-shots (Tangent Comics: The Joker #1 in 1997 and Tangent Comics: The Joker's Wild! #1 in 1998). This Joker bore little resemblance to the traditional interpretation of the character and instead was modeled on Duela Dent.
| Duela Dent |
|---|
| Notable aliases | The Joker's Daughter, Catgirl the Catwoman's Daughter, Scarecrone the Scarecrow's Daughter, the Riddler's Daughter, the Penguin's Daughter, the Harlequin, the Card Queen, the Joker, the Riddler |
| Abilities | Detective, acrobat, utilizes various clown-based gadgets |
In 2018, it was announced that Leto would star in his own standalone film, which would have been billed as a "Suicide Squad" spin-off. Jared Leto and Margot Robbie played the Joker and Harley Quinn, respectively, in "Suicide Squad." Warner Bros.
Production on the first season ended early due to the COVID-19 pandemic, leaving the first season with only 20 episodes. In January 2020, The CW renewed the series for a second season, which is set to premiere in January 2021. In May 2020, it was announced that Rose had exited the series.
Back to the wig thing: In the comics, Kate has red hair but keeps it shaved close to her head in her civilian guise; the red wig is an adornment. (That said, in the comics, it's supposed to be so convincing that even Batman doesn't know it's not her real hair, but maybe they're going for something different on TV.)
Ruby Rose Reportedly Quit Batwoman Because It Was Too Much Work. In an unprecedented move for network television for all shows beside Lethal Weapon, it was announced earlier this week that Ruby Rose, the star of the CW's newest Arrowverse series Batwoman, was leaving after one season.
Batwoman is an American superhero television series developed by Caroline Dries. In January 2020, The CW renewed the series for a second season. Production was delayed due to the 2019–20 coronavirus pandemic so the remaining episodes were not finished.
Batgirl became popular when ABC introduced Batman to TV in 1966. In this series, Batgirl was introduced as Barbara Gordon, the niece of Police Commissioner Gordon. Her father Roger became an alcoholic, and her uncle, James Gordon, gained custody of her when she was thirteen.
Barbara's mother Thelma died in a car accident when she was a young girl. Her father Roger became an alcoholic, and her uncle, James Gordon, gained custody of her when she was thirteen.
Batwoman (TV series) Batwoman is an American superhero television series developed by Caroline Dries. It is based on the DC Comics character Batwoman and shares continuity with the other television series in the Arrowverse. In January 2020, The CW renewed the series for a second season.
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Batwoman, the latest entry in The CW's Arrowverse slate of TV shows based on DC Comics, is set in a version of Gotham City where Batman has been missing for three years.Batgirl has fought more crime and done more to aid Batman as Batgirl than she has as Oracle. Batgirl has saved Batman's life on numerous occasions. Oracle has not. Barbara in this incarnation is not a bad character, but she is not better because she no longer hunts the night in cape and cowl."
One of his torture tactics is to hurt Gordon's daughter Barbara. The Joker shoots her, paralyzing her and ending her career as Batgirl, before stripping her down and taking pictures of her to show to her father.
Oracle did." Writer and Oracle fan Jill Pantozzi uses a wheelchair due to muscular dystrophy. She says she identified with the character's struggles, but also her self-sufficiency.
In the new, revised continuity, the events of The Killing Joke took place three years before the current storyline, and while it is established she was paraplegic during that time, Barbara Gordon is written as having regained her mobility after undergoing experimental surgery at a South African clinic.
In 1966, Barbara Gordon, the daughter of Gotham's police commissioner, began fighting crime in DC Comics' "Batgirl." Then, in the 1988 graphic novel The Killing Joke, she was shot by The Joker, paralyzing her from the waist down.