The Old Witch
Few figures in comics history cackle with quite the same gleeful malevolence as The Old Witch, the cackling hostess who first crept onto the page in Tales from the Crypt #22 back in 1951, conjured by the legendary Al Feldstein at the height of EC Comics' Golden Age reign of delicious terror. She presided over some of the most beloved horror anthologies ever published — Haunt of Fear, Vault of Horror, and Tales from the Crypt itself — keeping wicked company alongside her fellow hosts The Vault-Keeper and The Crypt-Keeper, that unholy trio of macabre masters of ceremonies who defined an era. The fact that she's shared pages with icons as unlikely as Superman and Clark Kent speaks to the wild, wonderfully unpredictable world she inhabits. Spanning an astonishing 73 years in print, The Old Witch is a Golden Age original whose enduring presence is a testament to just how irresistible a perfectly rendered, wickedly knowing narrator can be — a true cornerstone of horror comics history.
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