The Simpsons has mocked or referenced literature over its many seasons, usually by a guide Lisa was learning, or with visitor seemances (e.g., Michael Chabon & Jonathan Franzen, Maya Angelou and Amy Tan). And it has referenced Edgar Allan Poe in each title (“The Tell-Tale Head” from the primary season) and in moveing (in “Lisa’s Rival” from 1994, the title character builds a diorama based mostly on the identical Poe story.)
However on the primary ever “Treehome of Horror” from 1990—the Simpsons’ recurring Halloween episode—they adapted Poe’s “The Raven” extra religionfully than any little bit of lit present in any other episode. The poem, learn by James Earl Jones, stays intact, kind of, however with Dan Castellaneta’s Homer Simpson professionalviding the unnamed narrator’s voice. Marge makes an seemance because the lengthy departed Lenore, with hair so tall it wants an additional canvas to contain it in portrait. Magazinegie and Lisa are the censer-swinging seraphim, and Bart is the annoying raven that drives Homer insane.
Castellaneta does an incredible job delivering Poe’s verse with conviction and humor, whereas maintaining the character true to each Homer and Poe. It’s a balancing act onerouser than it sounds.
Suffice it to say that this foray into Poe was ok for several trainers’ guides (including this one from The New York Times) to suggest utilizing the video in school. (We’d love to listen to about this in the event you have been a trainer or student who experienced this.) And it’s the primary and solely time that Poe acquired co-writing credit on a Simpsons episode.
Notice: An earlier version of this put up appeared on our web site in 2016.
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Ted Mills is a freelance author on the humanities.