Sal Maroni

Sal Maroni
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
First appearance Detective Comics #66 (August 1942)
Created by Bob Kane
Bill Finger
In-story information
Alter ego Salvatore Vincent Maroni
Team affiliations Mafia
Notable aliases The Boss, The Italian, Morelli, Anton Karoselle

Salvatore Vincent "Sal" Maroni is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics, commonly in association with Batman. The character is portrayed as an enemy of Batman and among the most infamous gangsters in Gotham City. Maroni is most famous for disfiguring Harvey Dent, setting the stage for the young district attorney's transformation into the supervillain Two-Face.

Biography

Pre-Crisis/Earth-Two

Maroni's first Pre-Crisis appearance was in Detective Comics #66 (August 1942) as Boss Moroni, a mobster on trial for the murder of a man named "Bookie" Benson. Harvey Dent (here named "Harvey Kent") is the prosecutor at the trial. He calls Batman as his first witness. During Batman's testimony, Moroni calls Batman a liar, leading Dent to show his proof: Moroni's lucky two-headed silver dollar found at the scene with Moroni's fingerprints on it. Enraged, Moroni throws a vial of acid at Dent, horribly disfiguring his face in the way that visibly depicts his eventual identity as the insane gangster Two-Face, who eventually shoots Moroni dead and then surrenders and goes to prison.

Bronze Age/Earth-One

During Bronze Age recountings of Two-Face's origin, Maroni's role was unchanged, but his name was changed to Morelli. Harvey Kent's surname was altered to Dent, which has become that character's permanent name.

In this version, Batman is present at the trial and tries to prevent the mobster from throwing the acid, but Dent is still disfigured.

Prior to COIE, Maroni appeared in DC Superstars #14 and Batman #328 to #329. He survives an assassination attempt by Two-Face in the first story, but his legs are left paralyzed. In the latter story arc, he undergoes plastic surgery and changes his name to Anton Karoselle to avoid attention. He kills Two-Face's former wife Gilda's new husband, Dave Stevens, as retribution against the former DA. By the story's end, Two-Face murders him.

Post-Crisis

In the graphic novel Batman and the Monster Men, Maroni lends money to Norman Madison (father of Bruce Wayne's girlfriend Julie Madison) to cover his debts, and to Professor Hugo Strange for his genetic experiments. After Maroni sends his henchmen to put pressure on Strange, the mad scientist responds by sending one of his creatures to massacre one of his gambling establishments and stealing the money they would need to pay Maroni off. When Maroni realizes Strange might be responsible of the attacks, he sends enforcers to further pressure and intimidate him. Strange decides to get rid of Maroni once and for all, and sends one of his creations to kill him. Maroni is saved by Batman, who as a favor to Julie Madison, forces him to call off her father's debt.

In the sequel, Batman and the Mad Monk, Norman tries to pay off his debt to Maroni, unaware of Batman's intervention on his behalf; Maroni refuses it, terrified that Batman would visit him again. Norman instead gives the money to Carmine Falcone, which humiliates Maroni. Later, near the end of the story, Norman tries to kill Maroni, whose thugs gun him down.

Maroni is featured prominently in Jeph Loeb's maxi-series Batman: The Long Halloween, which retells Two-Face's origin. In this version, Salvatore Maroni is the scion of the Maroni crime family, headed by his father Luigi "Big Lou" Maroni. He is the most powerful mobster in Gotham next to Carmine Falcone, and both believe that the serial killer Holiday (so named for assassinating mobsters on holidays) is working for the other. Their business relationship becomes strained as a result. When his father is killed by Holiday, Maroni makes a deal with Dent to reveal all of Falcone's criminal activities, in exchange for leniency.

However, Falcone's daughter Sofia Maroni's secret lover visits Maroni in jail, where she convinces him that Dent, not Falcone, is responsible for the killings and his father's death. Dent's assistant Vernon Field provides him prior to court with "stomach medicine" for a supposed ulcer. During the trial, Maroni throws acid into Dent's face, disfiguring him. Maroni gets into a scuffle with a bailiff who shoots him twice in the chest. He survives, however.

When he is moved out of his cell, Maroni is finally killed by Holiday. The killer is revealed to be Alberto Falcone who acted out against the family to make a name for himself.

Other versions

Elseworlds

Sal Maroni appears in the Elseworlds story, "Citizen Wayne" which was published in 1994. Set in the 1930s, the story depicts Maroni as an Al Capone-like crime lord who is involved in bootlegging, and who lures his enemies into a trap when they are led to believe that they can get him for tax evasion (Capone was eventually jailed for tax fraud). In this version Maroni scars Harvey Dent's entire face with acid. This leads Dent to assume the Batman mantle and break up Maroni's operations before finally killing him. Bruce Wayne is a newspaper publisher and fierce critic of Batman who, following Maroni's death, goes after the Caped Crusader; he feels that Batman has overstepped the mark. The pair are killed during the fight and, much like Citizen Kane, their story is told in flashback as a young Assistant District Attorney interviews their friends and acquaintances, including Maroni's henchmen.

In other media

Television

Salvatore Maroni appears in the Fox series Gotham, portrayed by David Zayas. He is portrayed as a boisterous, violent Mafioso currently in a power struggle with rival Mafia Don Carmine Falcone.[1] He first appears in "The Balloonman" where he is the owner of a restaurant that serves as a front for his crime family. Maroni takes an interest in one of his employees, Oswald Cobblepot, promoting him to manager, and using him as a source of information on Falcone's operations; he is unaware that Cobblepot is secretly an informant for Falcone. When Jack Buchinsky targets Maroni for abandoning him years ago during a heist, he and his associates seek refuge in the GCPD. There, he begins to suspect Cobblepot's duplicity when he deliriously stammers about meeting Falcone.[2] When Falcone's associate Fish Mooney goes into exile from Gotham City, she contacts Maroni and informs him of Cobblepot's deception, resulting in Maroni interrogating Cobblepot into confession, and eventually attempting to execute him in a junkyard car compactor.[3] When Cobblepot manages to escape and gains Falcone's protection, Maroni and Falcone make a deal in which Falcone will torture and kill a judge Maroni dislikes in return for Cobblepot's life. Maroni appears at the newly christened "Oswald's" to tell his former manager that he is safe for now, but that he will perish as soon as Falcone dies.[4] Maroni also tries to ruin Cobblepot's business by cutting off his liquor supplies. Cobblepot sends a hitman to one of Maroni's old establishments and instructs the hitman to tell Maroni that Falcone sent him. Cobblepot sabotages his own hit, however, in order to ignite a turf war between Maroni and Falcone.[5] In the season finale, "All Happy Families are Alike," Mooney takes Falcone, Cobblepot, James Gordon and Harvey Bullock prisoner, intending to kill them all in exchange for all her old territories back. While Mooney wants an equal partnership, however, Maroni insists on her being his second-in-command. When Maroni belittles Mooney with sexist nicknames, she turns on him and shoots him in the head.[6]

Film

Video games

See also

References

  1. Andreeva, Nellie (2014-07-31). "David Zayas To Play Mobster Sal Maroni In ‘Gotham’". Deadline. Retrieved 2014-07-31.
  2. "Rogues' Gallery". Gotham (TV series). Season 1. Episode 11. January 5, 2015. Fox.
  3. "The Fearsome Dr. Crane". Gotham (TV series). Season 1. Episode 14. February 2, 2015. Fox.
  4. "The Scarecrow". Gotham (TV series). Season 1. Episode 15. February 9, 2015. Fox.
  5. "The Anvil or the Hammer". Gotham (TV series). Season 1. Episode 21. April 27, 2015. Fox.
  6. "All Happy Families Are Alike". Gotham (TV series). Season 1. Episode 22. April 28, 2015. Fox.
  7. Kane, Michael (2007-05-14). "HEROIC SAVE - New York Post". Nypost.com. Retrieved 2010-12-30.
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