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Playboy #1, #2, and #3 - CGC 9.0

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:NA Estimated At:50,000.00 - 60,000.00 USD
Playboy #1, #2, and #3 - CGC 9.0

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Auction Date:2019 May 08 @ 18:00 (UTC-5 : EST/CDT)
Location:15th Floor WeWork, Boston, Massachusetts, 02108, United States
ALS - Autograph Letter Signed
ANS - Autograph Note Signed
AQS - Autograph Quotation Signed
AMQS - Autograph Musical Quotation Signed
DS - Document Signed
FDC - First Day Cover
Inscribed - “Personalized”
ISP - Inscribed Signed Photograph
LS - Letter Signed
SP - Signed Photograph
TLS - Typed Letter Signed
Amazing set of the first three issues of Playboy magazine from December 1953, January 1954, and February 1954, all encapsulated and graded by CGC as 9.0 (Very Fine/Near Mint), beginning with the ultra-rare 'red star' version of Playboy #1. Includes:

Playboy #1 'Red Star Copy' (HMH Publishing Co., December 1953) - CGC Universal Grade 9.0 - off-white to white pages - featuring Marilyn Monroe on the front cover and inside. This iconic magazine, which famously features a full-color nude of Miss Monroe (the one and only "Sweetheart of the Month") as the centerfold, launched Hugh Hefner's Playboy into the national spotlight as America's leading magazine for men's entertainment. This 'red star' version—one of three variants of the issue—is distinguished by the small red star on the cover, to the left of the title; the others, a newsstand edition and a 'Page 3' version with the third page numbered, are considered more common. The CGC census reveals the 'Red Star Copy' as the rarest variant: of the 319 Playboy #1s evaluated by CGC, only 22 have been the 'Red Star Copy.' Of these 22, just two have been graded as 9.0, with one higher.

Playboy #2 (HMH Publishing Co., January 1954) - CGC Universal Grade 9.0 - white pages - featuring Margie Harrison on the front cover and inside as the very first "Playmate of the Month." The CGC census records just nine examples at this grade or higher (the highest graded is 9.2, just one increment higher). Playboy #2 is widely considered to be the scarcest of any Playboy magazine—the print run was much smaller than later issues, as Hefner was unsure of how successful the magazine would be, and it appears at auction far less frequently than the first issue. High-grade examples of this issue are extremely difficult to find.

Playboy #3 (HMH Publishing Co., February 1954) - CGC Universal Grade 9.0 - white pages - featuring a Marilyn Waltz (as Margaret Scott) centerfold and a Yvonne Menard cover. The CGC census records seventeen examples at this grade or higher.

Early in 1953, 27-year-old Hugh Hefner, a former staff member at Esquire then employed by Children's Activities magazine, decided to test the waters with a 'new' kind of publication. To that point, men's magazines were typified by a pulpy potpourri of action and adventure fiction, cornball humor, tame, toothless exposés, and low-grade cheesecake pictorials. Hefner, sensing the incipient sea change in American attitudes toward sex—a sophisticated, cosmopolitan openness that lay beneath the veneer of Eisenhower-era propriety—assembled, at his kitchen table, the first issue of what would become one of the greatest success stories in the history of publishing.

The first issue of Playboy, which bore a cover price of 50¢, was anchored by a series of nude 'calendar' photos that had been modeled in the previous decade by struggling starlet Marilyn Monroe. Though the images had been around for years, Hefner's gamble paid off handsomely with more-than-respectable sales of nearly 54,000 copies. Encouraged by this auspicious launch, Hefner made continuous improvements to the magazine, eventually phasing out reprinted material in favor of original fiction (contributed, over the years, by such respected figures as Saul Bellow, Kurt Vonnegut, John Updike, and Joyce Carol Oates), and, more famously, lavishly produced nude pictorials featuring wholesome 'girls next door.' By the end of 1956, Playboy surpassed Esquire as the top-selling magazine of its type and was well on the way to inspiring legions of men to recite one of most durable howlers in the history of dubious claims: 'I get it for the articles!' Because of its uniquely iconic status, and because few of the original purchasers could have predicted the magazine's eventual status as a bona-fide institution, copies of Playboy's first issue have attained status among collectors as the most desirable and sought-after example of any periodical in any genre.