Ottawa

Voice behind Batman swoops into Ottawa for Comiccon

You might not recognize him by his looks, but the voice is unmistakable. Kevin Conroy, 63, has been voicing the animated Batman character for more than a quarter century. Now fans will get to meet the man behind the Caped Crusader at Ottawa Comiccon.

Kevin Conroy has voiced iconic character since early '90s

Kevin Conroy in the booth lending his voice to the caped crusader. (Gary Miereanu)

You might not recognize him by his looks, but the voice is unmistakable.

Kevin Conroy, 63, has been voicing the animated Batman character for more than a quarter century. Now fans will get to meet the man behind the Caped Crusader at Ottawa Comiccon.

When he first auditioned for the role, Conroy admits he didn't know much about Bruce Wayne or his superhero alter-ego, having only been exposed to Adam West's campy portrayal of the role in the mid-1960s Batman TV series.

"For me it was really, truly, a cold audition, just improvising in the room, putting myself in the mind of this guy," Conroy told Alan Neal on CBC Radio's All In A Day.

Kevin Conroy has been voicing the animated Batman character since the early 1990s. (Warner Brothers)

Tragic backstory

Finding out about Bruce Wayne's tragic backstory — he saw his parents murdered in front of him as a child — changed how Conroy felt about the character and helped him delve into Wayne's psyche.

I realized over time that Batman is not the performance, Bruce Wayne is the performance.- Kevin Conroy

"It just put me in a very, very dark and sombre kind of place," he said.

That helped him develop the voice legions of fans would come to know so well.

"I keep going back to that moment of his childhood. That was the inspiration. That was the source of his grief, and that's the inspiration for me."

Kevin Conroy recording Batman: The Animated Series in 1992 with voice director Andrea Romano. (Submitted)

The ultimate authority

After playing Batman for so many years, Conroy could be considered the ultimate authority on Wayne's persona.

"I realized over time that Batman is not the performance, Bruce Wayne is the performance. Batman is who he really genuinely is, and the performance is being charming, suave Bruce Wayne."

Wayne is a dark man with issues, Conroy believes, and he draws on his own life experiences to tap into the character's emotions.

His own relationship with his parents was complicated. Conroy grew up with an alcoholic father and was on his own by the time he was 17.

One of the scenes he remembers drawing upon is when Wayne visits his parents' grave, asking them to release him from his vow to avenge their deaths by fighting crime in Batman: Mask of the Phantasm.

In Batman: Mask of the Phantasm, Bruce Wayne visits his parents' grave, asking them to release him from his vow to avenge their deaths by fighting crime. (Warner Brothers)

"It brought up everything that I was feeling about my father. Asking him why he couldn't love me, why he was such a victim of alcohol, why he couldn't give," said Conroy, who ended up caring for his father later in life.

Conroy appears at Ottawa Comiccon Saturday and Sunday.