This page is similar in name or subject to other pages.
See also Dracula for a complete list of references to clarify differences between these closely named or closely related articles. |
Dracula | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Dracula | |
Aliases: | Vlad Tepes Vlad Dracula Justin Drake [1] |
Notability: | Antagonist |
Type: | Vampire |
Gender: | Male |
Location: | Transylvania |
Associations: | Church of the Damned |
Known relatives: | Maria Dracula [2] Domini [3] Janus Tepes [4] Lilith Drake [5] |
Status: | Formerly deceased |
Born: | 1430 |
1st appearance: | Tomb of Dracula, Volume 1 #1 |
Vlad Dracula is a fictional character featured in various horror-themed comic book titles published by Marvel Comics. The character is based on the vampire character made famous by Irish author Bram Stoker in his 1897 novel Dracula. Although the history surrounding the comic and novel versions of Dracula are completely fictional, the name and several historical elements of the character are derived from Vlad III, a Wallachian prince and warlord whose rule was so brutal and savage that it earned him the nickname Vlad the Impaler. He ruled as the voivode of Wallachia from 1456 to 1462.
Publishing history[]

Dracula from Tomb of Dracula #55.
The first comic book appearance of Dracula took place in the seventh story in the seventh issue of Suspense, published by Marvel Comics in 1951. The story was called "Dracula Lives!" and introduces a man who is convinced that Dracula is hunting him so he turns to a famous vampire writer for help only to discover that it is actually Dracula in disguise. As this story was written prior to the formation of the "Marvel Universe", it is not considered part of Dracula's definitive origin.
Dracula's first mainstream appearance was the eponymous antagonist of his own ongoing comic book series Tomb of Dracula, which began publication in 1972. The character was re-introduced to readers by writer Gerry Conway and artist Gene Colan. Colan, who would go on to become a regular penciler on the series and is considered one of the prominent comic artists in the genre. Colan based his visual design of Dracula on actor Jack Palance, who played the Count in the 1974 Dan Curtis film Bram Stoker's Dracula. [6]
Dracula appeared in all seventy issues of Tomb of Dracula as well as several tie-in annual issues published during the original series run from 1972 to 1979. He appeared in the Giant-Size Chillers one-shot special, which evolved into four follow-up issues under the title Giant-Size Dracula. During publication of the first Tomb of Dracula series, Marvel also published a black and white magazine entitled Dracula Lives!. The name is taken from the title of the story in Dracula's first appearance in Suspense #7. The magazine ran for thirteen issues from 1973 to 1975 and also produced one annual issue. A comic adaptation of Bram Stoker's Dracula novel was serialized in issues 5-8.
Dracula also made appearances in Marvel's sister horror titles The Frankenstein Monster and Werewolf by Night where he would clash against the more heroic title stars, the Frankenstein Monster and werewolf Jack Russell.
Although Dracula's title was by and large an insular series, his stories did cross over into the mainstream Marvel Universe. He was seen as a foil against Marvel's Sorcerer Supreme Doctor Strange in Doctor Strange, Volume 2 #12 and even clashed with the cosmic superhero the Silver Surfer in Tomb of Dracula #50.
Following the discontinuation of the regular series, Marvel revived the title in magazine format, which ran for six issues from 1979 to 1980. Each issue contained at least two Dracula stories, while also featuring other horror backup tales. The series also featured stories relating to Dracula's daughter, Lilith.
Dracula met his first on-panel "death" in the final issue of the first Tomb of Dracula series, but like any good comic villain, he did not remain among the deceased for very long. Dracula was soon resurrected, but without a regular title to appear in, was relegated to guest-villain status appearing in various issues one-issue stories where he fought up against Spider-Man, the Uncanny X-Men and even Thor. Dracula, as well as every other vampire in the Marvel Universe (with the exception of Hannibal King) met their demise at the hands of Doctor Strange who used an occult spell known as the Montessi Formula to eradicate all vampires off the face of the Earth in Doctor Strange, Volume 2 #61.
Dracula was absent from Marvel Comics for over a decade, but was resurrected in the early 1990s when Marvel began banding many of their horror-themed titles together under the "Midnight Sons" imprint. The various Midnight Sons titles also resurrected several supporting cast members from Tomb of Dracula including Frank Drake, Hannibal King and Blade.

Dracula from Death of Dracula #1.
Throughout the remainder of the 1990s and into the 2000s, Dracula made repeated appearances in various titles, often being killed only to be resurrected once again. Blade became a popular character during this time, owing largely to the Blade film franchise starring Wesley Snipes. Dracula even played a major role in the third film in the series, Blade: Trinity, where he was played by Dominic Purcell. This version of the character, called Drake in the movie, bore little resemblance to the Marvel Comics character however.
In comics, Dracula continued to play a foil for Blade, facing off against him in his numerous comic titles and even was the central villain behind the last major story-arc of the Captain Britain and MI-13 series.
In 2010, Dracula met his end once again at the hands of his own son in the aptly titled Death of Dracula one-shot, which served as a prologue to the "Curse of the Mutants" vampire story that ran through all of Marvel's mutant-related titles in 2010 and 2011.
Biography[]
Origins[]
1400s[]
1500s[]
1600s[]
1700s[]
1753
Dracula was in Cologne, Germany when he was captured by villagers led by Father Eisner. Eisner crucified him and staked him through the heart, but suffered a near-fatal heart attack as a result. Eisner's young ward, Marie, resurrected Dracula in the hopes that she could convince him to save the priest, but Dracula instead tore the man's heart from his chest. (TOD2: 4/2)
1800s[]
1823
Dracula returned to Germany, where he found the elderly Marie Eisner dying at the Reichenbach Clinic in Cologne. Dracula wanted revenge against Eisner for evading him back when she was a young girl in 1753. The old woman repelled Dracula a second time however by slipping a cross necklace over his head, forcing him to flee. She passed away from natural causes moments later. (TOD2: 4/2)
1900s[]
1920s[]
At some point in the early 20th century, Dracula was habitating in Harrow's Point, Maine. Having journeyed to the island hamlet on a sailing vessel, Dracula turned the captain of the ship into a vampire then began stalking Angelica Neal, the young daughter of lighthouse keeper Frank Neal. Frank fought back against Dracula with the aid of Bishop McFarland and Doctor Chowder. Dracula killed the bishop by smashing him against the glass of the lighthouse search light. His blood stains however, formed the signed of the cross and when the light was turned on, the amplified shape drove the vampire away. [7]
Modern era[]
In his ongoing plot for world domination, Dracula learned about a Satanic cult known as the Church of the Damned. The cult was led by a man named Anton Lupeski who intended on offering up one of his followers, Domini, as a human sacrifice to Satan. Dracula disguised himself as the devil and appeared before the cult, demanding to take Domini as his vampire bride. [8] Three days later, Dracula and Domini were married in a Satanic ritual officiated by the Church of the Damned. [9][10]
Shortly thereafter, Anton Lupeski performed a ritual which enabled Dracula to impregnate Domini. She gave birth to a son named Janus.
When Dracula returned to Boston in search of Domini, he was attacked by two police officers who found him feeding off a human. Dracula retaliated, but one officer sprayed him with holy water, which caused severe burns, rendering him unconscious. He was taken to Boston General Hospital where he encountered another patient named Gideon Smith. It was foretold that Gideon, known as the Forever Man, would be reincarnated from one life to the next until he met the "Dead One". Upon witnessing the horror of Dracula, Gideon slipped into a catatonic state. Dracula healed from his burns and slaughtered several hospital staff members before making his escape. [11]
Immediately upon healing himself, Dracula sought nourishment and found it in the form of Boston College professor Emily Arthurs. He came upon Emily as she was in the midst of being sexually assaulted by one of her students, and drove the student away. After drinking her blood, he turned her into a vampire with the promise that she would now have the power to exact her revenge upon the student. [12]
Dracula found his adversaries hot on his trail, having aligned themselves with Anton Lupeski. Dracula managed to shrug off the majority of their attacks, but Anton succeeded in targeting Dracula's heart. The kill-shot however proved ineffective as Dracula turned to mist and it passed through him. However, the bullet instead struck Dracula's son, Janus, killing him. [13]
Body Count[]
Notes & Trivia[]
- This version of Dracula was created by writer Gerry Conway and artist Gene Colan based on concepts originally developed by Bram Stoker.
- The Bram Stoker story of Dracula is considered part of the Marvel Comics canon. A quasi-canonical adaptation of the Stoker story was presented in Marvel Classics Comics #9. Although stories published in Marvel Classics Comics were not part of the shared mainstream continuity of the Marvel Universe, issue #9's adaptation of Dracula portrayed the vampire lord as he is traditionally seen in most of his appearances during the 1970s.
- Dracula was the featured character on Marvel Value Stamp #37, Series A.
- Tomb of Dracula, Volume 1 #19 was adapted into a Read-along book-n-record by Power Records.
See also[]
- Tomb of Dracula
- Tomb of Dracula locations
- Tomb of Dracula characters
- Tomb of Dracula comic titles
- Tomb of Dracula comic issues
- Tomb of Dracula miscellaneous
External Links[]
References[]
- ↑ Giant-Size Dracula 4
- ↑ Human wife, deceased.
- ↑ Human wife and cultist, alive.
- ↑ Son via Satanic ritual with Domini, formerly deceased.
- ↑ Daughter with Zofia.
- ↑ Greenberger, Robert. "Inside the Tome of Dracula", Marvel Spotlight: Marvel Zombies Return (2009), p. 27
- ↑ Tomb of Dracula Vol 2 4
- ↑ Tomb of Dracula 45
- ↑ Tomb of Dracula 46
- ↑ Wedding of Dracula 1
- ↑ Tomb of Dracula 57
- ↑ Tomb of Dracula 59
- ↑ Tomb of Dracula 59
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 Tomb of Dracula 29
![]() This article relates to characters featured in the Tomb of Dracula comic book franchise. |
![]() This article relates to characters featured in and pertaining to the Doctor Strange multimedia franchise. Some pages may redirect to a disambuguation page, which will provide a list of different versions of each character. |