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Christina Rees

Christina Rees

Director of Public Relations and Communications

CRees@HA.com
Steve Lansdale

Steve Lansdale

Senior Public Relations and Communications Specialist

SteveL@HA.com
Rhonda Reinhart

Rhonda Reinhart

Intelligent Collector Editor and Communications Specialist

RhondaR@HA.com
Jesse Hughey

Jesse Hughey

Public Relations Specialist

JesseH@ha.com

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Press Release - January 31, 2003

$600,000+ Original G.I. Joe(tm) Action Figure To Be Sold By Heritage Comics Auctions

Online auction ends July 17th 10:00 p.m. CST
Floor auction ends July 18th 7:00 p.m. PST

(Dallas, TX) - The first prototype G.I. Joe(tm) action figure, hand-carved in 1963 by the designer of the famous toy, Don Levine of Providence, R. I., is expected to sell for $600,000 or more when it is offered for sale in July by Heritage Comics Auctions, Dallas, Texas (www.HeritageComics.com). The sale also includes dozens of other original G.I. Joe memorabilia and artwork from Levine's personal collection.

"The handmade, hand-painted figure is the first mockup of the G.I. Joe action figure, and it is a unique piece of American cultural history," said John E. Petty, Director of Auctions for Heritage Comics. "The sale also will have the original G.I. Joe Navy figure and the first G.I. Joe scuba suit that Mr. Levine created from a piece of inner tube tire."

Those two items are expected to sell for $25,000 each.

The original handmade action figures, along with dozens of pieces of artwork and other early G.I. Joe memorabilia items, were picked up today in Providence, Rhode Island by armored car security guards, and will be transported to Dallas to be photographed and cataloged for this summer's auction.

Levine was Vice President of Research and Development at Hassenfeld Brothers, Inc. (later renamed Hasbro Toys) in 1963 when he created G.I. Joe and the first of the action figure's many accessories. He based on the toy's concept on the success of the Barbie(tm) doll and its many accessories that are sold separately.

"It was the old razor-and-the-razor-blade concept," Levine explained. "Sell them the action figure - "the razor" - and then sell them an awful lot of razor blades - the toy's accessories - along the way."

"G.I. Joe was an instant success, and it became 'THE' toy for a generation of boys worldwide," said Greg Rohan, President of Heritage. "The opportunity to now sell these original mockups and art work has rekindled all kinds of fond childhood memories for me."

Among the many other early G.I. Joe items to be included in the sale, July 17 - 20 in San Diego in conjunction with the Comic-Con International convention, are:

The first handmade G.I. Joe figure with articulated limbs (estimated at $75,000); original boxes of "Ace Fighter Pilot," "Rocky Marine" and "Skip Navy" ($25,000 each); and original hand drawn boxes for "Action Soldier," "Action Sailor" and "Action Marine" ($35,000 each).

Last year, Heritage Comics Actions set comic book world records when it sold the reference collection of Spider-Man co-creator, Stan Lee, and the $1.68 million vintage comic books collection or Academy Award-winning actor Nicolas Cage.

For additional information, contact Heritage Comics Auctions (www.HeritageComics.com), 100 Highland Park Village, 2nd Floor, Dallas, TX 75205. Phone: (800) 872-6467.

To read a article on toy collecting by John Snyder and Jaime Bramble, please click here.