• In 1908,
The Tell-Tale Heart was adapted into Catalan as a theatrical monologue titled
Cor delator by A. Albert i Torrellas; it premiered at the Teatre Romea in Barcelona on 22 May 1908 and was performed by Ramon Tor. • The earliest acknowledged adaptation of "The Tell-Tale Heart" was in a 1927 20-minute American silent film of that title co-directed and co-produced by
Leon Shamroy and Charles Klein, and starring
Otto Matieson as "The Insane", William Herford as "The Old Man" with Charles Darvas and Hans Fuerberg as "Detectives". It was faithful to the original tale, • The earliest known "talkie" adaptation was a
1934 version filmed at the
Blattner Studios, Elstree, by Clifton-Hurst Productions, directed by
Brian Desmond Hurst and starring Norman Dryden. This version was 55 minutes in length. • A
1941 live-action adaptation starred
Joseph Schildkraut and was the directorial debut of
Jules Dassin. This version differs greatly from the original tale, depicting the murderer as driven mad after suffering years of abuse by the hateful older man. • On August 23, 1946
Orson Welles hosted and introduced a radio broadcast on
The Mercury Summer Theatre of the Air show on
CBS. • A 1947 Polish film,
Zdradzieckie serce ("Treacherous Heart") by
Jerzy Zarzycki, was never released. • A
1953 animated short film produced by
UPA and narrated by
James Mason is included among the
list of films preserved in the United States National Film Registry. • Also in 1953, an
EC Comics adaptation of "The Tell-Tale Heart" entitled "Sleep No More", written by
William Gaines and
Al Feldstein and illustrated by
George Evans (cartoonist) appeared in
Shock SuspenStories. • In 1956, an adaptation of "The Tell-Tale Heart" was written by
William Templeton for the
NBC Matinee Theater and aired on November 6, 1956. • A
1960 film adaptation adds a love triangle to the story. • An
Australian ballet was based on the story, and was recorded for television in the early 1960s. • In 1968,
ITV broadcast a television adaptation as part of the horror anthology series
Mystery and Imagination.
No recordings of the production are known to exist. • In 1970,
Vincent Price included a solo recitation of the story in the anthology film
An Evening of Edgar Allan Poe. • A 1971 film adaptation directed by
Steve Carver, and starring
Sam Jaffe as the old man. •
CBS Radio Mystery Theater performed an adaptation of the story in 1975; the cast included
Fred Gwynne. • In the 1970s,
Stephen King wrote "
The Old Dude's Ticker", a short story variously described by King as "
satire", "affectionate
homage", "
pastiche", and "a crazed
revisionist telling" of "The Tell-Tale Heart". • A musical adaptation performed by
The Alan Parsons Project was released on their 1976 debut album
Tales of Mystery and Imagination, and was later covered by
Slough Feg for their 2010 album,
The Animal Spirits. • The Canadian radio program
Nightfall presented an adaptation on August 1, 1980. • Another 1980 adaptation in the anthology movie
Obras Maestras del Terror (
Masterworks of Terror) directed by
Narciso Ibáñez Menta, based on an
homonymous TV series. It adds a backstory to the protagonist, who pretends to be the old man's nephew while living with him before killing him, and to the old man, who is a selfish and greedy
clockmaker. •
Steven Berkoff adapted the story in 1991, and was broadcast on British television. This adaptation was originally presented on British TV as part of the acclaimed series "Without Walls". • The song "Ol' Evil Eye" off of the 1995 album
Riddle Box by the
Insane Clown Posse adapts a version of the story, as well as sampling audio from a reading of the original story. • The
Radio Tales series produced
The Tell-Tale Heart for
National Public Radio in 1998. The story was performed by
Winifred Phillips along with music composed by her. • The 1999 episode of
SpongeBob SquarePants entitled "Squeaky Boots" loosely adapts the short story. In the episode, SpongeBob's new boots that squeak with each step stand in for the old man's beating heart. Mr. Krabs hides the boots under the floorboards of the Krusty Krab. • The film
Nightmares from the Mind of Poe (2006) adapts "The Tell-Tale Heart" along with "
The Cask of Amontillado", "
The Premature Burial" and "
The Raven". • In 2008, filmmaker
Robert Eggers adapted the story as a short. This production was notable for using a lifelike, human-sized puppet to portray the old man. Eggers was largely unknown when he made the short, but it garnered attention when he released it online in 2022, after he had achieved some renown as a director of features. • The 2009 thriller film
Tell-Tale, produced by
Ridley Scott and
Tony Scott, credits Poe's "The Tell-Tale Heart" as the basis for the story of a man being haunted by his donor's memories, after a heart transplant. • V. H. Belvadi's 2012 short film,
Telltale, credits Poe's "The Tell-tale Heart" as its inspiration and uses some dialog from the original work. • ''Poe's Tell-Tale Heart: The Game'', is a 2013 mobile game adaptation in which players enact the protagonist's actions to recreate Poe's story on Google Play and Apple iOS. • The 2015 animated anthology
Extraordinary Tales includes "The Tell-Tale Heart", narrated by
Bela Lugosi. • The 2015
Lifetime movie The Murder Pact, starring
Alexa Vega, is based on Poe's work and incorporates allusions to it, such as the "vulture eye" from "The Tell-Tale Heart". • In April 2016, a
film adaption directed by John Le Tier was released, entitled
The Tell-Tale Heart. It starred
Peter Bogdanovich,
Rose McGowan, and
Patrick Flueger in the lead role. It featured a full narration of Poe's story with added elements imagining the narrator as a former tortured soldier with PTSD. •
Redrum (2018), an Indian Hindi-language film, adapts the story. • In December 2018,
Anthony Neilson's stage adaptation was presented at London's
National Theatre. • In 2019, a feature film adaptation was released, adapted by and starring
Steven Berkoff as the narrator (here named Edmund), known as ''Steven Berkoff's Tell Tale Heart''. The cast also includes
Hugh Skinner,
Henry Goodman and
Dudley Sutton as the old man. • In September 2022, DijitMedia released an adaptation entitled ''Edgar Allan Poe's Tell-Tale Heart''. It featured the protagonist as a female house-servant to the old man, as was common in the United States during the 19th century. Elements from "
The Black Cat" were included to highlight the similarities between the actions of the protagonists. • In October 2023, "Tell-Tale Heart" was loosely adapted for the fifth episode of the Netflix series
The Fall of the House of Usher. ==References==