Beth Kane

Alice appears in the Arrowverse TV series Batwoman as part of the main cast, portrayed by Rachel Skarsten.

A terrorist group (later revealed to be the organization known as the "Many Arms of Death")[13] kidnapped the family, and Col. Kane led a rescue mission to save them.

[13] Beth's fragile psyche led the Many Arms of Death to send her to the United States, where she was raised by the Religion of Crime.

The thirteen covens that make up the Religion of Crime elect Alice to lead the group, giving her the title "High Madame".

[15][9] Alice kidnaps Col. Kane,[9][19] who immediately recognizes his now-grown daughter,[16] and uses him to gain access to a military base near Gotham City.

[20] According to Department of Extranormal Operations (DEO) Agent Cameron Chase, the Religion of Crime (ROC) was in the process of founding a cult based on Batwoman.

All the cult members died defending the sarcophagus, which was brought back to DEO headquarters by Agent Chase.

Batwoman agrees to uncover Batman's secret identity if the DEO will turn Beth over to her, destroy all its files on the Kane family, stop targeting Bette Kane, stop putting pressure on Maggie Sawyer, and agree to no longer see Batwoman as one of their agents.

[21] Col. Kane sets up the "Murder of Crows", the elite group of ex-military and intelligence operatives who trained Kate, to provide backup support for Batwoman.

2) #36, Beth is depicted flying back to Gotham City,[25] where she takes up residence in the mothballed family manor house on the Kane estate.

[26] She has returned to renew her relationship with Kate, having had a major breakthrough in her psychiatric treatment some weeks earlier (although she still speaks in quotations from Carroll at times).

Beth says she wants to atone for the evil she did, and she shows familiarity with the steam-powered gun grappling hook Batwoman uses as well as incredible strength as she swings on filament lines above Gotham's city streets.

Afterward, Beth helps Kate deal with Natalia's emotional and sexual betrayal and successfully encourages her to reconcile with Maggie Sawyer.

Red Alice accompanies Batwoman, Etrigan the Demon, Clayface, and Ragman aboard a Space Shuttle[28] into orbit to stop Morgaine.

The helmet of Alice's spacesuit cracks in battle, and Ragman saves her life by absorbing her soul into his costume.

The other evil souls trapped in Ragman's costume try to hold Beth back, but she resists them and screams that she wants to atone for all the wrong she has done.

Depressed at the loss of her lover (who chose to keep her lesbianism a secret and remain in the Army) and her military career, Kate begins drinking heavily and taking drugs while traveling around the world and spending large sums of money.

While sailing near the island of Coryana, she falls overboard and receives a severe head injury after striking a coral reef.

Coryana is a "pirate nation", providing tax havens, untraceable bank accounts, freedom of movement for arms dealers, and more, none of which worries Kate.

To protect Kate, Safiyah scapegoats a troublesome man on the island, accusing him of releasing the plague, and has him killed.

Safiyah reveals that Knife has betrayed them both, kidnapping Beth[12] and using drugs to force her Alice personality to reemerge.

[33] Alice has subsequently taken over the Many Arms of Death, and plans to destroy Gotham City[12] by unleashing thousands of deadly disease-carrying bats.

[13] Batwoman manages to further mitigate the damage of the attack with the help of her mission partner Julia Pennyworth, who synthesizes an aerosolized vaccine and disperses it over Gotham from the duo's secondary airship.

She receives outpatient therapy from a woman with a top hat (the comic implies this is the magical superheroine Zatanna).

[35] In the story "Disinformation Campaign", part of the "Fear State" crossover storyline, Beth is still dealing with controlling her Alice persona.

Red Alice fends off Batwoman's attacks using technology given to her by Bruce Wayne, and then reluctantly and tearfully kills her sister by driving a wooden stake through her heart.

She is depicted as having chalk-white skin, short and wavy blonde hair, red nails and lips, and using heavy black mascara and eye-liner.

[29] Red Alice exhibits familiarity with a number of gadgets and weapons used by Batwoman, as well as the physical strength and dexterity needed to use them.

Alice in her first appearance in Detective Comics #854 (August 2009).
Rachel Skarsten as Beth Kane/Alice in Batwoman .