| Villain | First appearance | Description |
| Angle Man | Wonder Woman #70 | Originally a clever schemer who "knew all the angles" known as Angelo Bend, the updated Angle Man possesses an object known as an Angler which can alter objects and locations according to the holder's wishes, sometimes defying gravity or through teleportation. The Angle Man was created as a recurring foil for Wonder Woman during the 1950s and 1960s. |
| Ares | Wonder Woman #1 | Ares, referred to by the Roman name Mars for most of the pre-Crisis period, is the God of War and son of the Greek god Zeus. In post-Crisis continuity, Ares had plotted to start World War III, which led to Diana becoming Wonder Woman. In The New 52, Ares is mostly referred to as War and, in a major departure from the character's longstanding history as one of Wonder Woman's archenemies, is re-imagined as a benign supporting character. Post-DC Rebirth Ares returns to a more antagonistic role but is still less malevolent than his Golden Age incarnation. |
| Blue Snowman | Sensation Comics #59 | Byrna Brilyant is a small town teacher and scientist who uses her late father's invention of "blue snow" for self-gain. Byrna disguised herself and unleashed the petrifying power of the blue snow upon the farming community of Fair Weather Valley, demanding each farmer's "life savings" in return for the chemical antidote that will free the crops, livestock, and people from the snow's effects. She was discovered in her mountain sanctuary by Wonder Woman, who forces her to defrost the valley. She later joined the first Villainy Inc. as they attempted to take over Paradise Island. The variety of gadgets at her disposal include a "telescopic snow ray" that can create petrifying blizzards, a "defroster ray" for reverse effects, a hat that produces blue snow, and a smoking pipe that projects icicles. She also controls an army of robots attuned to her brainwaves. |
| Cheetah | Wonder Woman #6 | The original Cheetah, Priscilla Rich, was a beautiful debutante and philanthropist who developed an odd sort of split personality when she felt overshadowed by Wonder Woman. |
| Cheetah | Wonder Woman #274 | A second Pre-Crisis Cheetah, Deborah Domaine, the niece of the original, was an ecologist; she was kidnapped, brainwashed into a feral eco-terrorist, and trained in unarmed combat by Kobra. Post-Crisis, Deborah never became the Cheetah. |
| Cheetah | Wonder Woman #7 ; #8 | The current Cheetah, Barbara Ann Minerva, is a former archeologist and treasure-hunter who sold her soul to the plant-god Urtzkartaga for power and immortality, not realizing she would be bound in eternal servitude to him. She, aside from Circe and Ares, is arguably Wonder Woman's deadliest archenemy. Post-DC Rebirth Barbara Ann was a close friend and mentor to Wonder Woman before being tricked into becoming the Cheetah by the Children of Ares. |
| Cheetah | Wonder Woman #171 | Minerva briefly lost her power to Argentine businessman Sebastian Ballesteros, who became Circe's consort and funded the transformation of Vanessa Kapatelis into the Silver Swan. He lost the Cheetah power in a deadly battle with Minerva and later was found slain by Minerva after having abducted Kapatelis and again transforming her into the Silver Swan. |
| Circe | Wonder Woman #37 | Circe is based on the Greek mythological character of the same name. A witch and sorceress of vast power, specializing in illusion and transformation spells, Circe became one of Wonder Woman's most formidable foes in the Post-Crisis DC continuity, and even triggered a War of the Gods and later made herself the Goddess of Magic. |
| Deimos | Wonder Woman #183 | Deimos is the God of Dread and the son of Ares and Aphrodite. He planned to ignite a war between the United States and the Soviet Union, though his plans were thwarted by Wonder Woman. After the events of DC Rebirth, Deimos and his brother Phobos took the appearance of handsome twins and plotted to find Themyscira so that they could free their father Ares. Their actions led to the formation of Godwatch. |
| Devastation | Wonder Woman #143 | The Titan known as Cronus created Devastation much the same way Wonder Woman was created: by having life breathed into a clay female figure. With his Titan children each blessing her with dark gifts, she is Cronus' champion who he hopes will defeat Olympus' champion: Wonder Woman. With almost the same powers, this demigoddess is almost an exact copy of Wonder Woman, save for the dark twist behind her powers. |
| Doctor Cyber | Wonder Woman #179 | A female criminal mastermind and head of an international crime syndicate, Doctor Cyber was Wonder Woman's nemesis during a period when she had given up her Amazon powers and become a white-costumed karate expert. During an early battle, Cyber's face was horribly burned. Vowing revenge for her ruined beauty, she became obsessed with having Wonder Woman's face removed and surgically grafted on her own. She also teamed up with Batman foe Doctor Moon in this period. Post-DC Rebirth, Doctor Cyber is an AI clone of Veronica Cale's deceased assistant, Adrianna Anderson, and became a member of the organization Godwatch. |
| Doctor Poison | Sensation Comics #2 | Princess Maru became Doctor Poison who, disguising her gender via a bulky hooded costume and mask, was the leader of a Nazi spy ring whose ultimate goal was to wreak havoc by contaminating the Army's water with "reverso", a drug that caused people to do the opposite of what they are told. |
| Wonder Woman #151 | In recent years, an unnamed granddaughter of the original Doctor Poison appears in league with Devastation, Villainy Inc., and the Secret Society of Super Villains. Having used herself as a subject for biochemical experiments, she has developed the ability to secrete various toxins and chemicals. | - |
| Doctor Psycho | Wonder Woman #5 | Ridiculed as a child for his small stature and strange appearance, Doctor Psycho grew up to be highly sexist and misogynistic. Formerly a brilliant student, he went mad and turned to crime after being framed for a crime by a rival who stole the only girl he ever loved. A little person with occultic abilities, he originally was intended to be an archetypical mad scientist and medium, but that image was dropped Post-Crisis. He is one of Wonder Woman's deadliest foes. |
| Duke of Deception | Wonder Woman #2 | A servant of the evil god Mars from his base on the planet Mars, he embodied deceit, confusion and treachery, using his godlike powers of illusion, shapeshifting and influencing minds to further the cause of war. One of Wonder Woman's most persistent foes, he plagued her throughout the Golden, Silver and Bronze Ages. Little is known about the true history of the Duke of Deception. He appears to be a minor god who existed for thousands of years, drafted by Mars to battle Wonder Woman. He uses his powers to spread falsehoods to provoke humanity into conflict and war, and played a major role in the Golden Age origin of another notable Wonder Woman villain, Doctor Psycho. Post-Rebirth, the Duke of Deception has been reimagined as Dolus, a Roman personification of Deception. |
| Eris | Wonder Woman #183 | The Goddess of Discord and one of the Children of Ares in the Pre-Flashpoint continuity, where she was known as Eris. She used the Golden Apples of Discord to cause chaos in the United Nations. She was eventually slain by the Son of Vulcan, though she was revived at one point by her brother Phobos and possessed the body of Poison Ivy. In The New 52, Eris was called Strife and was Diana's half-sister through Zeus; she is portrayed as sarcastic and a heavy drinker. |
| Giganta | Wonder Woman #9 | Giganta was originally a gorilla who was super-evolved into a woman by Professor Zool. Her modern day version is Doctor Doris Zuel, a medical doctor suffering from a fatal disease who hoped to transfer her life essence into Wonder Woman. When Wonder Girl foiled her attempt, her essence was placed into a gorilla. She then transferred her essence into Olga, a circus strongwoman. Post-Crisis, she has the power to grow to gigantic size. |
| Maxwell Lord | Justice League #1 | An evil businessman with mind control powers. Initially only a Justice League villain, Lord manipulated Superman to attack Batman and Wonder Woman during Infinite Crisis; she found that the only way to stop him was to kill him and snapped his neck, causing her to become wanted for a time. He later returned as a personal adversary to Wonder Woman, during Blackest Night, when came back to life as a Black Lantern with the sole goal of seeking revenge on her. |
| Medusa | Superman's Girl Friend, Lois Lane #52 | Based on the legendary Gorgon from Greek mythology, Medusa is known for her ability to turn anyone who looks into her eyes to stone. She was killed by Wonder Woman, but resurrected by her sisters, Euryale and Stheno, only to be killed once again by the Amazon. In The New 52, Medusa once again returned and battled Wonder Woman and Batwoman. Post-Rebirth, Medusa was purified by Nubia and invited to live peacefully on Themyscira. |
| Paula von Gunther | Sensation Comics #4 | Wonder Woman's first recurring nemesis, Paula von Gunther is a German baroness, ruthless Nazi spymaster, evil scientist, and femme fatale. Blackmailed into serving the Nazis because they held her daughter prisoner, she changed sides after Wonder Woman rescued her daughter, Gerta, and joined the Amazons as their chief scientist. Pre-Crisis, Paula von Gunther had standard Amazon powers, such as superhuman strength capable of breaking chains, leaping great heights and speed and stamina enough to deflect bullets and other projectiles from her Amazon bracelets. She was also a skilled hand-to-hand combatant. Post-Crisis, von Gunther was empowered when possessed by the Dark Angel, who had vast powers, and was able to perform a variety of feats including mind control, altering her size, teleportation and altering the time stream. Post-DC Rebirth, Paula von Gunther was a descendant to the Valkyries who was taken from Neo-Nazi parents by Wonder Woman when she was a child. Upon discovering her heritage, she adopted the name the Warmaster and formed the Four Horsewomen from Wonder Woman's other enemies to kill the Amazons, but she was defeated and reformed by Wonder Woman. |
| Phobos | Wonder Woman #183 | The God of Fear and the son of Ares and Aphrodite. Phobos’ jealous desire to win the approval of his father led him to create the nightmarish demon Decay, one of the first overt threats the Post-Crisis Wonder Woman faced after leaving her home on the island of Themyscira. He would go on to make multiple appearances as a foil for Wonder Woman, such as in 1988's Wonder Woman #23-24, in which he teamed with the Gorgon Euryale and the colossal Ixion the Assassin. He would resurface later as a key figure in DC Comics' 1992 company-wide crossover event The War of the Gods, this time allying himself with Eris and the sorceress Circe in a treacherous plot to kill Ares. After the events of DC Rebirth, Phobos and his brother Deimos appear as handsome twins. |
| Queen Clea | Wonder Woman #8 | Cruel ruler of the Atlantean city of Venturia, where women were large, strong and powerful and men were stunted, weak and servile, Queen Clea often forced her subjects to battle in gladiatorial combat. Wanting to take over all of Atlantis, she eventually stole the trident of Poseidon to make herself supremely powerful. She was stopped by Wonder Woman and later joined Villainy Inc. in an attempt at revenge. As an Atlantean, Queen Clea can breathe both above and under water. Clea can also physically withstand the great amounts of undersea depth pressures. Because of this, her body is resistant to most physical injury and provides a form of super strength. When in possession of the mystical trident belonging to Poseidon, Clea's strength levels increase and she has limited control over water. The trident also has the ability to fire force blasts. Due to a spell by the witch Circe, Clea now also has the ability of flight. |
| Silver Swan | Wonder Woman #288 | Pre-Crisis, Helen Alexandros was a homely ballerina passed up for roles until she struck a bargain with her ancestor, the war-god Mars: power and beauty in exchange for killing Wonder Woman. She had great strength, the ability to fly, and a powerful sonic scream. |
| Silver Swan | Wonder Woman #15 | Post-Crisis, Valerie Beaudry was deformed by her parents' exposure to radiation, but had nascent abilities to control sound. Industrialist Henry Armbruster seduced and even married her to convince her to submit to experiments that enhanced her sonic powers and transformed her into a beautiful woman. However, she remained insecure and emotionally dominated by Armbruster, who used her as a weapon against Wonder Woman. |
| Silver Swan | Wonder Woman #171 | A third Silver Swan, Vanessa Kapatelis, was actually a longtime friend of Wonder Woman, kidnapped by Circe, Doctor Psycho and others, brainwashed into hating her former idol, and turned into a murderous cyborg. Post-DC Rebirth, Kapatelis is once again transformed into the Silver Swan after her mother, Julia's, death, although she is later reformed by Wonder Woman. |
| Veronica Cale | Wonder Woman #196 | Scientific genius and part owner of Cale-Anderson Pharmaceuticals, Veronica Cale has made it her goal to destroy Wonder Woman. Her reasoning is that Wonder Woman was handed many privileges in life, whereas Veronica had to work hard for everything she has accomplished. Along the way, she has worked with other enemies of Wonder Woman, such as Doctor Psycho and Circe. Post -DC Rebirth Cale only becomes an enemy of Wonder Woman after the Children of Ares force her to by holding her daughter hostage. |
| Villain | First appearance | Description |
| Apollo | Wonder Woman #1 | The sun god, brother of Artemis, Apollo has long had his sights on the throne of Olympus, but only at the discovery of Zeus' absence does he make his move. Being pragmatic, he bargained for Hera's permission to take the throne if he returned the last of Zeus' lovers to her. Apollo proved the wiser of the two, as Hera only permitted Apollo the chance in the belief that Zeus would immediately return to her, while Apollo had realized through portents that he would not; he did not even exist. He remained an adversary of Wonder Woman as his goals generally moved against hers, though he lacked the rage his sister felt for having been badly beaten by the Amazon. Apollo's planning came undone eventually when he believed he could torture the First Born into relinquishing his own quest for the throne, ending with his older brother breaking free and killing him. Previous versions of Apollo appeared in the Wonder Woman series as an ally to the Amazons. |
| The First Born | Wonder Woman #12 | While still an infant, the first-born child of Zeus and Hera was condemned to death by his own father, who feared a prophecy foretelling that his eldest child would slay him and the other Greek gods and become the sole ruler of Mount Olympus. Escaping death, he grew to adulthood away from Olympus and eventually conquered the world, but was imprisoned in the center of the Earth by Zeus after failing to unseat the Olympian gods. Clawing his way through the planet's crust for seven thousand years, the First Born returned to a world where Zeus had erased all knowledge of him from human memory. When he is freed him from the Arctic ice by an 'end of the world' cult, led by his evil half-sister, Cassandra, he and his hyena-men conquer London with plans to attack Mount Olympus. He is swiftly defeated by Wonder Woman, but not before killing their half-mortal brother, the British super-soldier Lennox. |
| Cassandra | Wonder Woman #14 | A demigod child of Zeus and a mortal woman, born with the ability to control the wills of others using her voice. Cassandra was raised alone by her mother, who eventually died after Cassandra ordered her mother to commit suicide. Once she realized that she had ordered her mother into her death, Cassandra was placed into an orphanage and had refused to speak since then. Lennox eventually found the young Cassandra and took her under his wing. At one point, she had 40 people murder each other using her hypnotic voice, but had her throat ripped open by Lennox as retaliation for her heinous actions. She managed to survive her injury and had her throat replaced by a bionic device that allowed her to speak. Eventually she managed to uncover the First Born, the firstborn son of Zeus and Hera, with a team of scientists and managed to convince him to trust her as his ally. She accompanied the First Born as he battled Hades and Poseidon, eventually making their way to London where they confronted Lennox, Diana, Zola, and Hera in an attempt to capture Zeke. Losing the First Born to the combined powers of Wonder Woman, Orion, and Ares, Cassandra was left to attempt another path to Olympus by capturing one of those able to go there. First, she captured her half-brother Milan, who otherwise had spoken in her defense, before being led to Dionysus where she and the Minotaur managed to capture him and take them to Olympus in time to see the First Born kill Apollo and claim the throne. Cassandra was driven mad with starvation and cannibalism during her stay with the First Born before being set loose on his enemies as a distraction. During the battle for Themyscira, Cassandra chased Zola before being confronted by Hera, but was spared death thanks to Diana. What happened to her afterwards remains unknown. |
| Grail | Forever Evil #7 | The daughter of Darkseid and an Amazon named Myrina Black. After the events of the Darkseid War, Grail rescued the newborn Darkseid and kept him in hiding on Earth. She later began attacking various demigods such as Hercules to steal their life essences to restore her father to his full power. This put her in direct conflict with Wonder Woman. |
| Derinoe | Wonder Woman #36 | An elderly Amazon who was vehemently against the male Amazons being allowed to reside on Themyscira. As a member of the Amazons' council, she managed to rally several of her sisters to her side. In secret, she was working with the goddess Hecate and participated in a sacrificial ceremony of an infant. This ceremony led to the birth of Donna Troy. After inciting the Amazons against Wonder Woman, Derinoe was killed by a thrown dagger before she was able to attack Diana. It was later revealed she had been Hippolyta's lover. |
| Eirene | Wonder Woman #45 | The Goddess of Peace and former lover of Ares. She sought out vengeance on Wonder Woman for having slain the God of War. Allied with Aegeus, her numerous attempts to kill Wonder Woman failed. She regained her sanity when Ares and Apollo were restored to life by Zeke. |
| Karnell | Wonder Woman Annual #2 | A member of the Dark Pantheon of Gods who were brought to Wonder Woman's universe after the events of Dark Nights: Metal. Karnell calls himself the God of Love, and first encountered Wonder Woman while she was working alongside the Star Sapphires. He revealed his origin: He was a young boy who grew up in an abusive household. After his mother was killed by his father, he ran away, and was taken by King Best and made into a god. |
| Armageddon III | Wonder Woman #753 | A female warrior from an unidentified race of ogres. Her grandfather was the first Armageddon and her father was the second Armageddon where they each fought Wonder Woman. Armageddon III was recruited into Paula von Gunther's Four Horsewomen. |
| Liar Liar | Wonder Woman #759 | Emma Deropalis is the daughter of Maxwell Lord with similar telepathic abilities. |
| Janus | Wonder Woman #774 | Inspired by the classical deity of the same name, Janus is the Roman god of gateways, time, and revolution. They are metaphysically split into two warring beings: an aging, male god scheming to freeze reality in the past and a violent, green-skinned goddess attacking the present to conquer destiny, free will and the future. Ending an eternity of domination by the male half, Janus, wielding the reality-warping "God Scraper" scythe, stole the throne of Asgard, abandoned by Odin of the Norse gods - then, massacred the Olympian gods and attacked the Multiverse, ravaging parallel worlds and alternate timelines until Wonder Woman rallied surviving Norse and Greek gods to stop her. |
| Altuum the Survivor | Wonder Woman 2021 Annual #1 | The last survivor of the Enki people that lived on Themyscira before the Amazons. |
| Chaos | Wonder Woman #785 | A primordial deity who surfaced after the death of Hippolyta. |
| The Sovereign | Wonder Woman #1 | A mysterious, elderly man who orchestrated the creation of the Amazon Extradition Entity, and turned the United States against the Amazons of Themyscira. |
| Team | First appearance | Description |
| The Children of Ares | Wonder Woman #2 | The Duke of Deception, the Count of Conquest and the Earl of Greed attacked Wonder Woman collectively and separately throughout the Golden Age. The Duke of Deception became a significant recurring enemy into the Silver Age as well, and his daughter Lya also fought Wonder Woman. |
| Wonder Woman #183 | Ares battled the Amazons and a depowered Diana along with Phobos, Deimos and Eris for control of the power to conquer all dimensions of reality. This version of the Children of Ares reappeared Post-Crisis. | - |
| Villainy Inc. | Wonder Woman #28 | A revolt on Transformation Island led to the escape and team-up of some of Wonder Woman's most dangerous female foes: Eviless, the Blue Snowman, the Cheetah, Doctor Poison, Giganta, Hypnota, Queen Clea and Zara. Villainy, Inc. was the first team of supervillains published in the DC Universe. |
| Wonder Woman #179 | When all of Atlantis disappeared, Queen Clea assembled a new Villainy, Inc. to take over Skartaris. This new team consisted of Cyborgirl, Doctor Poison II, Giganta, Jinx and Trinity. | - |
| Wonder Woman #784 | An organization led by Hera. Doctor Psycho commands a branch of Villainy Inc. which consists of Doctor Poison, Professor Calculus, Sweetheart, and the enigmatic Twin Shadows. | - |
| Academy of Arch-Villains | Wonder Woman #141 | The Angle Man, Mouse Man and the Human Fireworks assembled to destroy Wonder Woman. |
| The Children of Cronus | Wonder Woman #145 | The Titans that empowered Devastation. The roster includes Oblivion, Slaughter, Arc, Disdain, Titan, and Harrier. |
| The Gorgons | Wonder Woman #201 | The serpent-haired sisters of Greek Mythology, consisting of Medusa, Euryale and Stheno. Although all three Gorgons have fought Wonder Woman on separate occasions, the trio banded together after Circe aided Euryale and Stheno in reviving their sister Medusa. |
| The Circle | Wonder Woman #14 | A circle of four Amazons chosen to be Hippolyta's special guards, Myrto, Charis, Philomela and Alkyone were imprisoned for years following their misguided plot to save the Amazon nation from a predicted "dragon" by attempting to kill the infant Diana the night after she was given life from clay. They were freed when Captain Nazi invaded Themyscira; wielding magical weapons, they tried again to kill Diana. |
| The Morrigan | Wonder Woman #605 | A triumvirate of war goddesses who have set their sights on exterminating all of the Amazons. The Morrigan consisted of Anann, Bellona and Enyo. |
| Godwatch | Wonder Woman #9 | An organization led by Veronica Cale focused on locating Themyscira. Godwatch's membership included Cale, Doctor Cyber, Doctor Poison, Circe, Phobos and Deimos. The Cheetah was formerly a member of the group until she defected with the aid of Wonder Woman. |
| Team Poison | Wonder Woman #13 | A group of female mercenaries founded by the Maru family and currently led by Colonel Marina Maru. The group consists of members Kit Cox, Juliette, Ray, Sara, Shar and Snake. Because they follow Maru's orders, they most often are employed as foot soldiers for Godwatch. |
| Dark Gods | Dark Nights: Metal #6 | A pantheon of gods from a dark, unknown universe. There are 13 total gods in the pantheon, with six of them transported to Wonder Woman's universe after the events of Dark Nights: Metal. |
| Four Horsewomen | Wonder Woman #755 | A quartet of some of Wonder Woman's deadliest enemies led by Paula von Gunther, who had taken up the Warmaster mantle. Other members included Devastation, Genocide, and a female ogre version of Armageddon. |
| Villain | Description | Live-action/Animated media | Performer |
| Cassandra Loren | Scientist from the future, who plotted to make a fortune by refining and selling an undiscovered atomic mineral, called Cabrium 90 | Wonder Woman (TV series) | Joan Van Ark |
| Abner Smith | Wealthy extortionist and terrorist who steals code books with classified information about U.S. spies | Wonder Woman (1974 film) | Ricardo Montalbán |
| Count Cagliostro | Mage who claims to be an alchemist | Wonder Woman | Dick Gautier |
| Hans Eichler | Nazi agent who brainwashes a gorilla named Gargantua | Wonder Woman | Robert Loggia |
| The Falcon | High-priced Irish mercenary who sought to steal scientific research for tectonic manipulation, but unwittingly carried bubonic plague | Wonder Woman | Robert Reed |
| Formicida | An environmentalist who develops the power to control superswarms of ants, using them to destroy skyscrapers and terrorize companies which despoil the environment | Wonder Woman | Lorene Yarnell |
| Erica Belgard | Hans Eichler's assistant who trains Gargantua to kill Wonder Woman as a means to impress the Nazi High Command and secure funding for her animal behavior research | Wonder Woman | Gretchen Corbett |
| Gault | Wealthy man whose disembodied brain develops telekinetic powers which he uses in a search for a new body | Wonder Woman | John Carradine |
| Hera | Queen of the Gods, whose jealousy of Aphrodite led her to cause earthquakes, threatening Aphrodite's temple on the planet Caltos | Super Friends | Marlene Aragon |
| Takeo Ishida | Powerful telepath with a grudge against Wonder Woman for failing to save his brother in Japan during World War II | Wonder Woman | Yuki Shimoda |
| Wotan | Nazi agent who plots to sabotage American economy with counterfeit money. | Wonder Woman | James Olson |
| Carolyn Hamilton | A former police officer who now illegally works as part of a clandestine organization known as "The Movement". When she unexpectedly encounters Steve who once rescued her, she is torn between the Movement's nefarious agenda and her feelings for him. | Wonder Woman | Jayne Kennedy |
| Silas Lockhart | A land developer who abducts a trained dolphin and uses it to sink an oil tanker which will lower beachfront property values. | Wonder Woman | Nicolas Coster |
| Mariposa | Rich, powerful madman who abducts Olympic athletes to compete for his fictional country | Wonder Woman | Henry Gibson |
| The Skrill | Alien swarm of mindstealing parasites | Wonder Woman | Various |
| Solano | Rich, powerful, and deadly terrorist who constructs robot duplicate and commands vast military resources | Wonder Woman | Fritz Weaver |
| Arthur Chapman | Notorious scientist who has the ability to cause volcanoes to erupt | Wonder Woman | Roddy McDowall |
| Bernard Havitol | A criminal who attempts to acquire the memories of the best computers in the world and views IRAC for his next addition | Wonder Woman | Ross Martin |
| Hamlin Rule | Rock star who hypnotizes his groupies into robbing the box offices of his concerts and abducts Joe Atkinson's daughter | Wonder Woman | Martin Mull |
| Evan Robley | An international jewelry thief who steals crown jewels from the Malakar embassy | Wonder Woman | David Hedison |
| Adele Kobler | A presumed deceased pop singer who turns up alive and well. She resorts to abducting him and even considers murder. | Wonder Woman | Kate Woodville |
| Raleigh Crichton | Criminal mastermind who abducts a pop star idol named Lane Kincaid and replaces him with his twin brother Michael | Wonder Woman | Albert Paulsen |
| William Mayfield | A thief who steals a super-sensitive listening device and priceless historical documents from a government research laboratory | Wonder Woman | Raymond St. Jacques |
| Syrene | Sorceress who battled Superman and Wonder Woman in her attempt to secure the Globe of Darkness | Superman (TV series) | B. J. Ward |