✦ Books & Comics

Roger Rabbit Comics #1 — Two First-Issue Copies (Disney Comics, 1990)

Two copies of Roger Rabbit Comics issue number one from 1990, published by Disney Comics, featuring Roger Rabbit and Jessica Rabbit on the cover

From Silver Screen to Splash Page: The Birth of Roger Rabbit Comics

When Who Framed Roger Rabbit thundered into theaters in the summer of 1988, it did something no studio had dared in decades — it fused the freewheeling chaos of classic animation with the gritty shadows of live-action noir, and audiences absolutely lost their minds. The film was a phenomenon: a technical marvel, a cultural touchstone, and an instant love letter to the golden age of Hollywood cartoons. By the time the credits rolled on Roger's manic, rubbery antics and Jessica's slow-burn magnetism, it was clear that Toontown had a permanent address in the popular imagination.

Two years later, in 1990, Disney Comics made the inevitable and irresistible move: they launched a dedicated Roger Rabbit comic book series, and that debut issue — Roger Rabbit Comics #1 — is exactly what we have here, in two very good copies sourced from a single Disney estate collection.

Roger, Jessica, and the World of Toontown on the Printed Page

Disney Comics was a relatively young publishing imprint in 1990, having launched in earnest the year before with a wave of titles designed to capitalize on Disney's late-1980s renaissance. The Roger Rabbit title fit perfectly into that expansion. Where the film had been constrained — even lovingly — by the demands of a live-action/animation hybrid production, the comic book format set Roger free. No expensive compositing required. No careful choreography of cartoon hands interacting with physical props. Just ink, color, and pure Toon logic.

Roger Rabbit as a character was born from Gary K. Wolf's 1981 novel Who Censored Roger Rabbit?, but the bouncing, stammering, perpetually exasperated rabbit the world fell in love with was largely the creation of the film's creative team — and the comics inherited that personality wholesale. Roger's defining quality is his earnest, overwhelming love for Jessica, his almost supernaturally patient wife, and his equally overwhelming inability to stay out of trouble. Jessica, elegant and self-possessed where Roger is frantic, became one of the most recognizable characters in Disney history almost overnight — a rare case of a supporting character achieving genuine icon status on the strength of a single appearance.

Both characters appear prominently in this first issue, making it a natural anchor piece for collectors who track either Roger's solo history or Jessica's dedicated fanbase.

Why a First Issue Still Matters

In the world of comics collecting, the first issue carries a weight that transcends its page count. It is the origin point — the moment a character's printed universe begins. For a Disney property riding the momentum of one of the most successful films of the late 1980s, that first issue also captures a very specific cultural energy: the excitement of an audience that had just discovered something wonderful and wanted more of it in any form they could get.

Disney Comics #1 titles from 1990 exist in an interesting collector's zone. They are old enough to carry genuine vintage appeal — over three decades have passed since this book hit spinner racks — but not so old that they were printed in the fragile, acidic paper stock of the Golden Age. A copy described as very good condition with minimal cover wear and clean interior pages, free of tears or major defects, represents exactly the kind of reading-grade-to-display-grade copy that makes a collection feel alive rather than archived.

The fact that this lot contains two copies of the same first issue is particularly interesting from a collector's perspective. Two-copy lots allow for creative display options — one to frame or exhibit, one to bag and board for long-term preservation — and they speak to the kind of careful, enthusiastic accumulation that characterized the best Disney estates of that era.

From a Disney Estate Collection

These two copies arrived as part of a larger Disney estate collection, the kind assembled over years by someone who genuinely loved what they were gathering. Estate pieces carry a quiet history with them — a sense of deliberate care, of an object chosen and kept. Finding a first issue in pairs, both in solid condition after more than thirty years, suggests they were stored thoughtfully, not just tucked in a box and forgotten.

For a Roger Rabbit enthusiast, a Disney Comics completist, or anyone who felt the specific joy of watching that film for the first time, these copies are a direct line back to that moment — the summer of Toontown, the era when Disney proved it could be surprising again, and the beginning of a comic book run that let Roger be as gloriously unhinged on the printed page as he was on the screen.

Two first issues. Very good condition. Clean pages. A little piece of 1990 Disney magic, ready for the next collection that deserves it.

Thinking of selling? Get a free, no-obligation offer.

One direct offer on your entire Disney collection — no commission, no auction wait. We handle the shipping.

← Browse the full estate collection

Shop available pieces on eBay →

✦ Free, No-Obligation Offer

Tell us about your collection

Send a few details — add photos when we follow up — and we'll get right back to you with one direct offer.

  • The whole collection — not just the trophy pieces
  • One offer, no commission, no auction wait
  • Anywhere in the world — shipping handled for you

Prefer to talk? Call (803) 226-3351

Free and no-obligation. By submitting you agree to be contacted about your Disney collection.