Art by Jose Ortiz

Edgar Allan Poe in Black & White

Art by Berni Wrightson

Edgar Allan Poe in Black & White comics is a tale of two rival publishers. Warren and Skywald, both used the public domain stories of Edgar Allan Poe, largely at the same time in the early 1970s. Warren did it first in the early days of their black & white magazines, when Archie Goodwin was editor/writer. He had Reed Crandall, Jerry Grandenetti and Tom Sutton for artists. Warren would reprint some stories but also re-did several later as well.

Skywald jumped in 1973, using the same style of Spanish artwork that made Warren so great. For 1974, in particular, two men adapted competing version of the Poe’s tales, Rich Margopoulos at Warren and Al Hewetson at Skywald. Warren finished off this rivalry with two issues dedicated entirely to Poe alone, Creepy #69 and #70.

Here are those many adaptations side-by-side.

The Tell-Tale Heart

Art by Reed Crandall

“The Tell-Tale Heart” (Creepy #3, 1965) adapted by Archie Goodwin.

Art by Ricardo Villamonte

“The Tell-Tale Heart” (Scream #8, August 1974) adapted by Al Hewetson.

The Cask of Amontillado

Art by Reed Crandall

“The Cask of Amontillado” (Creepy #6, December 1965) adapted by Archie Goodwin.

Art by Maro Nava

“The Cask of Amontillado” (Scream #5, April 1974) adapted by Al Hewetson.

Art by Martin Salvador

“The Cask of Amontillado” (Creepy #70, April 1975) adapted by Richard Margopoulos.

Hop-Frog

Art by Reed Crandall

“Hop-Frog” (Creepy #11, October 1966) adapted by Archie Goodwin.

Berenice

Art by Jerry Grandenetti

“Berenice” (Eerie #11, September 1967) adapted by Archie Goodwin.

Art by Ricardo Villamonte

“Berenice” (Scream #7, July 1974) adapted by Al Hewetson.

Art by Isidro Mones

“Berenice” (Creepy #70, April 1975) adapted by Richard Margopoulos.

The Masque of Red Death

Art by Tom Sutton

“The Masque of Red Death” (Eerie #12, November 1967) adapted by Archie Goodwin.

Art by Ricardo Villamonte

“The Masque of Red Death” (Psycho #20, August 1974) adapted by Al Hewetson.

The Fall of the House of Usher

Art by Tom Sutton

“The Fall of the House of Usher” (Eerie #20, March 1969) adapted and drawn by Tom Sutton. Truly one of Tom’s masterpieces.

Art by Maro Nava

“The Fall of the House of Usher” (Scream #3, December 1973) adapted by Al Hewetson.

Art by Martin Salvador

“The Fall of the House of Usher” (Creepy #69, February 1975) adapted by Rich Margopoulos.

The Premature Burial

Art by Xirinius

“The Premature Burial” (Nightmare #12, April 1973) adapted by Al Hewetson.

Art by Vicente Alcazar

“The Fall of the House of Usher” (Creepy #69, February 1975) adapted by Rich Margopoulos.

The Conqueror Worm and The Haunted Palace

Art by Domingo Álvarez

“The Conqueror Worm and The Haunted Palace” (Scream #5, April 1974) adapted by Al Hewetson.

The Black Cat

Art by Berni Wrightson

“The Black Cat” (Creepy #62, May 1974) adapted and drawn by Berni Wrightson

Art by Ricardo Villamonte

“The Black Cat” (Nightmare #20, August 1974) adapted by Al Hewetson.

William Wilson

Art by Alfonso Font

“William Wilson” (Nightmare #19, June 1974) adapted by Al Hewetson.

Ligeia

Art by Jesús Durán

“Ligeia” (Psycho #19, July 1974) adapted by Al Hewetson.

Metzengerstein

Art by Luis Collado

“Metzengerstein” (Scream #9, September 1974) adapted by Al Hewetson.

The Raven

Art by Manel Ferrer

“The Raven” (Psycho #13, July 1973) was adapted by Al Hewetson. Just two pages, Hewetson would expand it for Scream #11.

“The Raven” (Creepy #67, December 1974) adapted by Richard Margopoulos. The art by Richard Corben was in color, part of Warren’s special interior section. I have not included it here. There were several great Ken Kelly covers as well that I have not used because I wanted this to be about black & white.

Art by Peter Cappiello as Denis Ford

“The Raven” (Scream #11, March 1975) adapted by Al Hewetson.

Ms. Found in a Bottle

Art by Alfonso Font

“Ms. Found in a Bottle” (Scream #6, June 1974) adapted by Richard Margopoulos.

Art by Leo Summers

“Ms. Found in a Bottle” (Creepy #69, February 1975) adapted by Richard Margopoulos.

The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar

Art by Jose Maria Cardona

“The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar”(Psycho #21, October 1974) adapted by Richard Margopoulos.

Art by Isidro Mones

“The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar” (Creepy #69, February 1975) adapted by Richard Margopoulos.

The Pit and the Pendulum

Art by Ricardo Villamonte

“The Pit and the Pendulum” (Scream #2, October 1973) adapted by Al Hewetson. Hewetson did not like the happy ending of Poe’s tale so he has the protagonist fall down the pit.

Art by Jose Ortiz

“The Pit and the Pendulum” (Creepy #69, February 1975) adapted by Richard Margopoulos. Margopoulos doesn’t like that ending either and has the dude devoured by rats. What’s a Poe character to do?

The Oval Portrait

Art by Richard Corben

“The Oval Portrait” (Creepy #69, February 1975) adapted by Richard Margopoulos.

The Oblong Box

Art by Maro Nava

“The Oblong Box” (Scream #4, February 1974) adapted by Al Hewetson.

Art by Isidro Mones

“The Oblong Box” (Vampirella #49, March 1975) adapted by Richard Margopoulos.

Man of the Crowd

Art by Ferran Sostres

“The Man of the Crowd” (Psycho #23, January 1975) adapted by Al Hewetson. This tale is one of the worse to adapt since nothing really happens. Still, I’m glad Poe wrote it because it inspired Conan Doyle’s Moriarty.

Art by Luis Bermejo

“Man of the Crowd” (Creepy #70, April 1975) adapted by Richard Margopoulos.

The Murders in the Rue Morgue

Art by César López

“The Murders in the Rue Morgue” (Scream #10, October 1974) adapted by Al Hewetson.

Art by Jose Ortiz

“The Murders in the Rue Morgue” (Creepy #70, April 1975) adapted by Richard Margopoulos.

A Descent Into the Maelstrom

Art by César López as Vera

“A Descent Into the Maelstrom” (Psycho #18, May 1974) adapted by Al Hewetson.

Art by Adolfo Abellan

“A Descent into the Maelstrom” (Creepy #70, April 1975) adapted by Richard Margopoulos.

Shadow

Art by Richard Corben

“Shadow” (Creepy #70, April 1975) adapted by Richard Margopoulos.

The Imp of the Perverse

Art by Vicente Alcázar

“The Imp of the Perverse” (Creepy #76, January 1976) adapted by Doug Moench.

Annabel Lee

Art by Jose Matucenio

“Annabel Lee” (1994 #27, October 1982) adapted by Richard Margopoulos. Poe wrote some early Science Fiction, so I think he’d approve.

Conclusion

Art by Harry Clarke
Art by Berni Wrightson

By January 1975, Skywald was gone and Warren continued to use Poe’s famous works up to 1982 (with a futuristic version of “Annabel Lee”), when they, too, became extinct. In the final counting we can see the popular tales, like “The Fall of the House of Usher”, “The Cask of Amontillado” and “Berenice” got three versions while both Warren and Skywald did the only adaptations of the more obscure stuff like “Metzengerstein” or “The Oval Portrait”.

Edgar Allan Poe in Black & White is a fantastically Gothic display of the best of the Spanish school of comic illustrators (along with some great underground artists like Corben) and the widest explosion of pure Poesqueness since Harry Clarke’s Tales of Mystery and Imagination (1919). We won’t see another one until 1983 when Berni Wrightson illustrated Frankenstein.

 

Occult Noir and Mythos meet!
The classic Mythos collection!

1 Comment Posted

  1. Outstanding post. TY!! Steve (a lifelong Poe and comics [especially Wrightson] fan.
    PS- Bernie almost adopted The Pit and the Pendulum. I used to own a fully-penciled (but not inked) original page. He decided to adapt The Black Cat instead.

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