The Star Malaysia

Batman’s No. 1 fan

US Senator Patrick Leahy makes cameo appearance­s in Batman movies.

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Batman doesn’t have any superpower­s. He has to use his brain and his courage. That’s what always appealed to me. Patrick Leahy

This Batman mega fan calls himself “a bit of a geek,” but everyone else calls him senator – as in US Senator Patrick Leahy, a veteran Democratic lawmaker.

The 77-year-old Leahy is such a fan of the Caped Crusader that he has made cameo appearance­s in five Batman movies, including Batman Forever (1995), Christophe­r Nolan’s Dark Knight (2008), and most recently in Batman vs Superman (2016).

At one early film shoot, he even got to meet the late Batman co-creator Bob Kane and like any self-respecting fan, he asked him to sign some of his comic books.

“Batman doesn’t have any superpower­s. He has to use his brain and his courage. That’s what always appealed to me,” Leahy said.

In an interview in his office on Capitol Hill, Leahy explained how he discovered Batman’s adventures at the age of five at a library in Montpelier, in his native state of Vermont, which he represents in the Senate. His hero was created in 1939, just one year before the future senator was born.

And thus a fan came to be. Batman has been by Leahy’s side during his long political career, which began with his successful 1974 Senate run, in which he won in a three-way race.

One of his opponents? Bernie Sanders, the future senator and presidenti­al hopeful. Leahy was just 34 at the time.

Today, even if he has slowed a bit by age, he is forever young at heart – a Batman logo adorns his agenda, visible on his desk.

Leahy says his passion for the hero of Gotham City has made him the target of some “good natured teasing” from fellow senators over the years. Leahy is actually a serious comic book fan and collector.

His favourite author is Frank Miller, best known as the author of The Dark Knight Returns,” a mid1980s series portraying a gritty, middle-aged Batman in a violent future, and the comic book series Sin City (1991-1992) and 300 (1998).

In 1992, managers at DC Comics, which publishes the Batman books, asked Leahy to write the foreword to a special collection of the first four Batman comic books.

The senator displays a quasi-encycloped­ic knowledge of his hero’s adventures: he remembered that, contrary to popular belief, Batman used firearms to kill his enemies in the early days.

“I told them the date and gave them within a page or two where it was and where the frame was,” Leahy said.

“They said, ‘Yeah, right.’ They were not going to argue and wanted to humour a senator. But they found out that I was right.”

Four years later, while in the midst of a congressio­nal debate on banning landmines, Leahy reached out to DC Comics for support.

He asked if they could come up with an issue on the horrors of using landmines.

The result? Batman: Death of Innocents (1996), a comic book in which Batman faces the real-world threat of children being killed by the devices in war zones.

Leahy ended up writing the preface to Death of Innocents. Later, his proposal on banning the export of landmines was approved by the US Senate.

Leahy’s most notable screen appearance was in The Dark Knight.

In one memorable scene, he comes face to face with The Joker, as portrayed by the late Heath Ledger.

Ledger threatens the shaken Leahy with a knife at his face, and then violently throws him towards a henchman. The scene, shot more than a dozen times by the meticulous Nolan, was especially gruelling for Leahy, who was knocked around several times.

Australian-born Ledger had no idea who he was throwing around and it was actor Michael Caine, who was also in the movie, who told Ledger after the film wrapped.

“I’m not sure someone can come to the US and throw a US senator around,” Leahy remembered Caine as saying jokingly to Ledger.

“I didn’t know that!” Ledger replied. “I’m here on a visa. Am I going to get into any trouble?”

If Leahy could be anyone in the comic book world, he said that he’d be Batman’s billionair­e alter ego.

“I’m not in good enough shape to be Batman,” the senator said.

“I’ll just be Bruce Wayne.” — AFP

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 ?? — AFP ?? Man of many talents: Leahy looking through the ‘Dark Night’, a compilatio­n of the first Batman comics published in 1940 for which he wrote the introducti­on, at his office on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC.
— AFP Man of many talents: Leahy looking through the ‘Dark Night’, a compilatio­n of the first Batman comics published in 1940 for which he wrote the introducti­on, at his office on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC.
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