1. Headline
  1. Headline
Image: Action Comics #1
Action Comics #1 1938
Action Comics No. 1, featuring the first appearance of Superman, originally cost 10 cents in 1938. One of the about 100 copies known to still exist drew $317,200 in an Internet auction.
TODAY staff and wire
updated 3/14/2009 1:39:28 PM ET 2009-03-14T17:39:28

A rare copy of the first comic book featuring Superman has sold for $317,200 in an Internet auction.

The winning bid for the 1938 edition of Action Comics No. 1 was submitted Friday evening by John Dolmayan, the drummer for the rock band System of a Down.

In addition to being a musician, Dolmayan is also a dealer of rare comic books. The auctioneers say he was acquiring the Superman comic on behalf of a client.

The price was one of the highest ever paid for a comic.

  1. Stories from
    1. Pedro Hernandez Charged with the Murder of Etan Patz
    2. Kaela Humphries Changes Her Athlete's Diet - and Loses 40 Lbs.
    3. Natalie Portman Takes Son Aleph on a Playground Playdate
    4. Memorial Day: Summer Drink Recipes Are Sizzling
    5. The Bachelorette's Joe Gendreau: 'We Just Didn't Click'

The auction site ComicConnect says the man who had owned the comic book purchased it in a secondhand store in the early 1950s when he was 9 years old. He paid 35 cents for it and held onto it for the following 58 years.

When the auction was first announced last month, comic book expert Stephen Fishler predicted that bidding for the comic book would be sure to go up, up and away. He said that copies of Action Comics No. 1 in "fine" condition were worth about $126,000, but that this copy could sell for several times that.

The character of Superman, a superhuman champion of justice who came to Earth after surviving the destruction of the planet Krypton, was originally created by writer Jerry Siegel and artist Joe Shuster in 1932. In 1938 they sold the character to Detective Comics, Inc.

After appearing in Action Comics No. 1, Superman quickly caught the public’s fancy, paving the way for Batman and myriad other super-heroes in colorful costumes. Over the years the Man of Steel become the star of newspaper comic strips, radio drama, television and big-budget motion pictures.

Detective Comics, Inc. is today known as DC Comics, which continues to publish the character’s adventures. DC’s Superman titles still include Action Comics, which has published nearly 900 issues since 1938.

About 100 copies of the No. 1 edition are known to exist. It originally cost 10 cents.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Discuss:

Discussion comments

,

Most active discussions

  1. votes comments
  2. votes comments
  3. votes comments
  4. votes comments

More on TODAY.com

None
  1. Still in gear: Injuries don’t stop veterans on 100-day bike trek

    They knew their cross-country ride to raise awareness about veteran suicides would be hard. What they didn’t realize was how much their journey would rejuvenate them — even though it involved so much injury.

    5/25/2012 6:21:37 PM +00:00 2012-05-25T18:21:37
  2. Military women and suicide: Home safe but not sound

    Increased rates of suicide among females in the military — once out of harm's way — point to how deep and inescapable their emotional wounds can be.

    5/25/2012 6:23:41 PM +00:00 2012-05-25T18:23:41
  3. walltowallbicycleride.com
Yum
  1. The great Cuban sandwich debate

    5/25/2012 8:39:51 PM +00:00 2012-05-25T20:39:51
None
  1. 50 shades of snot: The real reason stay-at-home moms are depressed

    A recent Gallup poll found that stay-home moms are more depressed than working moms. What, taking care of kids all day is hard? 

    5/25/2012 2:35:36 PM +00:00 2012-05-25T14:35:36
None
  1. Picasa

    Holy eyeballs! Pup holds record for largest eyes

    5/25/2012 8:05:59 PM +00:00 2012-05-25T20:05:59
None
  1. Frank Gunn / AP

    Did quitting 'Oprah' kill Oprah's reign?

    5/25/2012 4:22:27 PM +00:00 2012-05-25T16:22:27