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Playboy
founder Hugh Hefner dead, aged 91 - 28th September
2017


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Hugh
Hefner basks in the kisses of his playmates in Cannes,
in 1999. Photo: AP
by
Matt Schudel
As
much as anyone, Hugh Hefner turned the world on to
sex. As the visionary editor who created Playboy magazine
out of sheer will and his own fevered dreams, he introduced
nudity and sexuality to the cultural mainstream of
America and the world.
For
decades, the ageless Mr Hefner embodied the "Playboy
lifestyle" as the pajama-clad sybarite who worked
from his bed, threw lavish parties and inhabited the
Playboy Mansion with an ever-changing bevy of well-toned
young beauties.
He
died September 27 at the age of 91. His death was
confirmed by Playboy in a tweet.
American
Icon and Playboy Founder, Hugh M. Hefner passed away
today. He was 91. #RIPHef pic.twitter.com/tCLa2iNXa4
Playboy (@Playboy) September 28, 2017
From the first issue of Playboy in 1953, which featured
a photograph of a nude Marilyn Monroe lounging on
a red sheet, Mr Hefner sought to overturn what he
considered the puritanical moral code of Middle America.
His magazine was shocking at the time, but it quickly
found a large and receptive audience and was a principal
force behind the sexual revolution of the 1960s.
Mr
Hefner brought nudity out from under the counter,
but he was more than the emperor of a land with no
clothes. From the beginning, he had literary aspirations
for Playboy, hiring top writers to give his magazine
cultural credibility. It became a running joke that
the cognoscenti read Playboy "for the articles"
and demurely averted their eyes from the pages depicting
bare-breasted women.
Few
publications have so thoroughly reflected the tastes
and ambitions of their creators as Mr Hefner's Playboy.
"I'm
living a grown-up version of a boy's dream, turning
life into a celebration," he told Time magazine
in 1967. "It's all over too quickly. Life should
be more than a vale of tears."
The
magazine's formula of glossy nudes, serious writing
and cartoons, coupled with how-to advice on stereos,
sex, cars and clothes, changed little through the
years and was meant to appeal to urban, upwardly mobile
heterosexual men. But Playboy also had a surprisingly
high readership among members of the clergy
who received a 25 per cent subscription discount
and women.
"Hefner
was, first and foremost, a brilliant businessman,"
David Allyn, author of Make Love, Not War: The Sexual
Revolution, an Unfettered History, told The Washington
Post in an interview. "He created Playboy at
a time when America was entering a period of profound
economic and social optimism. His brand of sexual
liberalism fit perfectly with postwar aspirations."
"Hef,"
as he was widely known, was in charge of editorial
operations from the beginning and was known to work
on the magazine for 40 hours without a break, driven
by the deadline buzz of amphetamines, Pepsi-Cola and
his ever-present pipe.
He
hired a large staff of editors and artists who brought
literary sophistication and visual dash to the pages
of Playboy, but there was never any doubt that the
guiding vision behind Playboy was Mr Hefner's, and
his alone. For many years, the magazine was produced
in his home town of Chicago.
Before
he turned 50, Mr Hefner was, as Esquire magazine once
decreed, "the most famous magazine editor in
the history of the world."
He
commissioned articles by some of the world's most
celebrated writers Saul Bellow, Norman Mailer,
James Baldwin and Joyce Carol Oates, to name a few.
Among the works that first appeared in Playboy were
excerpts from Alex Haley's Roots, Larry L. King's
The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, Cameron Crowe's
Fast Times at Ridgemont High, John Irving's The World
According to Garp and Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein's
All the President's Men.
The
magazine's in-depth interviews with leading figures
from politics, sports and entertainment including
Muhammad Ali, Fidel Castro and Steve Jobs often
made news. One of the magazines's most newsworthy
revelations came in 1976, when presidential nominee
Jimmy Carter admitted in a Playboy interview, "I've
looked on a lot of women with lust. I've committed
adultery in my heart many times."
Each
month, Mr Hefner wrote an editorial in which he sought
to define the "Playboy Philosophy." In his
view, sexual freedom was part of a larger spirit of
liberty, including free speech, relaxed drug laws
and civil rights, including gay marriage.
Mr
Hefner's umbrella organisation of Playboy Enterprises
grew to include television shows, jazz festivals,
book publishing and an international chain of Playboy
clubs, where cocktail waitresses, known as bunnies,
wore revealing satin outfits with fluffy white tails.
In
1961, when independently owned Playboy clubs in Miami
and New Orleans refused to admit African American
members, Mr Hefner bought back the franchises and
issued a sternly worded memorandum: "We are outspoken
foes of segregation [and] we are actively involved
in the fight to see the end of all racial inequalities
in our time," he wrote.
At
the Playboy Mansion first in Chicago and later
in Los Angeles Mr Hefner held glittering parties
that attracted Hollywood celebrities and scores of
women who eagerly shed their clothes. Outside the
front door, a sign read, "Si non oscillas, noli
tintinnare" a Latin phrase loosely translated
as "If you don't swing, don't ring."
Once-forbidden
sexual imagery and ideas popularized in the pages
of Playboy became commonplace in film, television
and other media, as the culture at large came to reflect
the values Mr Hefner espoused.
"We
will never recapture the importance of Playboy in
the '60s and '70s," he told The Washington Post
in 2003, "because we changed the world. We live
in a Playboy world now, for good or ill."
Although
he took offence at anyone who called him a pornographer,
noting that Playboy seldom, if ever, depicted overt
sexual acts, Mr Hefner relished denunciations from
religious groups and self-appointed protectors of
morality.
Still,
he was caught off guard by the outrage of feminists
who found his magazine's depictions of women degrading.
Feminist writer Gloria Steinem briefly worked at a
Playboy Club in New York City to gather background
for an undercover article she wrote in 1963.
In
a 1970 appearance on the Dick Cavett Show, author
Susan Brownmiller confronted Mr Hefner, saying, "When
Hugh Hefner comes out here with a cottontail attached
to his rear end, then we'll have equality."
Mr
Hefner remained silent.
"Quite
frankly," he said on the NPR interview program
Fresh Air in 1999, "the women's movement from
my point of view was part of the larger sexual revolution
that Playboy had played such a large part in."
Over
time, some women came to view Playboy with greater
acceptance, if not respect. Feminist scholar Camille
Paglia approvingly pronounced Mr Hefner "one
of the principal architects of the modern sexual revolution"
in a 1999 documentary.
When
Sex and the City, a television series about four sexually
adventurous women in New York, premiered in 1998,
the lead character played by Sarah Jessica Parker
wore a necklace depicting the Playboy bunny.
'Rigid
... fundamentalist' childhood
Hugh Marston Hefner was born April 9, 1926, in Chicago.
His father was an accountant, his mother a teacher,
and he grew up in what he called a conservative household
of "rigid Protestant fundamentalist ethics."
"There
was no drinking, no smoking, no swearing, no going
to movies on Sunday," he recalled in a 1962 interview
with the Saturday Evening Post. "Worst of all
was their attitude toward sex, which they considered
a horrid thing never to be mentioned."
After
serving in the Army during World War II, Mr Hefner
graduated in 1949 from the University of Illinois,
where he majored in psychology.
While
working in the personnel office of a box manufacturer
and as an advertising copywriter for a department
store, he tried without success to become a cartoonist.
He later worked in promotions for Esquire magazine
and held other publishing jobs while developing the
idea for Playboy.
With
$US600 of his own savings and investments from friends
and family including his parents Mr
Hefner wrote most of the first issue of the magazine
himself. He purchased the rights to the nude photograph
of Monroe, originally shot in 1949 for a calendar.
("I had nothing on but the radio," Monroe
once quipped.)
Mr.
Hefner had planned to call his magazine Stag Party,
but when the publishers of another men's magazine
named Stag threatened to sue, a colleague came up
with an inspired afterthought: Playboy.
The
magazine hit the newsstands in December 1953 and quickly
sold out its press run of more than 50,000 copies.
For
Playboy's second issue, an art director drew a cartoon-like
bunny's head with a bow tie. It became the enduring
symbol of Playboy, often disguised within the cover
photo on the magazine. Beginning in 1955, another
of the magazine's defining features was its centrefold,
highlighting the "Playmate of the Month"
in a glossy colour photograph.
Nude
pictorials of actresses and other celebrities often
appeared in Playboy, but the centrefold Playmates
were chosen for what Mr Hefner called a "girl-next-door"
quality. Some of them, such as Anna Nicole Smith,
became famous as sex symbols, but even she was unknown
when she first appeared in Playboy in 1992.
The
nude pictures grabbed public attention, but the substance
and variety of the magazine's other features
interviews, cartoons, serious journalism and fiction
set Playboy part from other skin magazines.
Mr Hefner rejected tawdry advertising in order to
cultivate a more sophisticated, worldly image.
"Playboy
straddles the line between pornography and anti-pornography,"
Allyn, the historian and author, wrote in an e-mail
to The Post. "Conventional pornography .?.?.
tends to relish in, and celebrate, vulgarity, whereas
Playboy treats the vulgarity of conventional pornography
with disdain."
Shortly
before Mr Hefner married Mildred "Millie"
Williams in 1949, she confessed to him that she had
had an affair with another man. The wedding went ahead,
and the Hefners had two children, but Mr Hefner later
said the revelation shattered any illusions he held
about the virtue of women.
"I
was absolutely devastated," he told the Los Angeles
Times in 1994. "I'm sure that in some way, that
experience set me up for the life that followed."
Embodying
the Playboy image
Even
before his divorce in 1959, Mr Hefner sought to embody
the Playboy image of the carefree, urbane man about
town. For a while, at least, his life was synonymous
with that of his magazine and the budding Playboy
empire.
From
1959 to 1961, he had a syndicated television show,
Playboy's Penthouse, with top jazz stars entertaining
at intimate gatherings in Mr Hefner's home. It was
one of the first television shows in which black and
white guests interacted as social equals. Another
show featuring Mr Hefner, Playboy After Dark, aired
for two seasons, beginning in 1969.
The
magazine reached the height of its popularity in the
early 1970s, with a circulation of 7 million. Mr Hefner's
personal fortune at the time was estimated at more
than $200 million, and he travelled in a black jetliner
with the bunny-head symbol painted on the tail. The
Harvard Business School studied his formula for success.
Before
long, though, the Playboy franchise began to weaken.
In 1974, Mr Hefner's longtime assistant, Bobbie Arnstein,
was convicted of conspiracy to distribute cocaine
and later committed suicide. Mr Hefner was not implicated
in any wrongdoing, but he was repeatedly investigated
by the FBI and Internal Revenue Service and was named
on President Richard M. Nixon's "enemies list."
He
also battled postal authorities and federal commissions
that sought to restrict the magazine's distribution.
Other publications, such as Penthouse and Hustler,
cut into Playboy's readership by publishing more explicit
photos, and several of Playboy's spinoff businesses
lost money.
In
1980, 20-year-old Playmate of the Year Dorothy Stratten
was killed by her estranged husband in a murder-suicide.
Mr Hefner's detractors held him indirectly responsible,
saying Stratten had been caught up in Playboy's hedonistic
milieu.
After
a stroke in 1985, Mr Hefner stopped smoking his familiar
pipe, and three years later he stepped aside as Playboy's
chief executive in favour of his daughter, Christie
Hefner, though he retained his title as editor-in-chief
of the magazine until his death. The magazine remained
headquartered in Chicago until the editorial operation
was shifted to New York in 2002 and later to Los Angeles.
Christie
Hefner resigned as chief executive in 2009 amid financial
struggles for Playboy Enterprises. Mr Hefner led an
effort to buy back the company's stock, making it
a privately held corporation by 2011.
After
his divorce from his first wife, Mr Hefner often said
he would never marry again. He had a long relationship
in the 1970s and 1980s with onetime Playmate Barbi
Benton, but they did not marry.
In
1989, when he was 63, he married 26-year-old Playmate
of the Year Kimberley Conrad. They had two sons, Marston
Hefner and Cooper Hefner. The couple separated in
1998 and divorced in 2010.
On
New Year's Eve 2012, Mr Hefner married another one-time
Playmate, Crystal Harris. He was 86 at the time; she
was 26.
In
addition to his wife and sons, Mr Hefner's survivors
include two children from his first marriage, Christie
Hefner and David Hefner.
Well
before his marriage to a woman 60 years his junior,
the aging Hef had become something of a self-caricature,
strolling the grounds of the Playboy Mansion in silk
pajamas, accompanied by a troupe of women who never
seemed to turn 30. He acknowledged sleeping with "more
than a thousand" women and often touted the efficacy
of Viagra. From 2005 to 2011, the adventures of the
young women who inhabited the Playboy Mansion were
chronicled in a cable reality show called The Girls
Next Door.
Away
from his magazine and his every-day-is-a-party approach
to life, Mr Hefner was a generous if unheralded philanthropist.
In the 1970s, he led a fundraising effort to restore
the renowned Hollywood sign on a Los Angeles hillside.
In 2010, he contributed $1 million to prevent real
estate development near the sign. He also donated
millions to efforts to preserve classic films and
endowed a chair for the study of cinema at the University
of Southern California.
Well
into his 80s, Mr Hefner continued to edit his magazine
and did his best to maintain his swagger as the unflappable,
unstoppable and unrepentant king of the Playboy way
of life.
"I
have not become jaded," he told The Washington
Post in 2003. "I wake up every day well aware
of my good fortune, loving the work I do, loving my
life, realising that life is a crapshoot and I'm on
a roll second to none.
(Washington
Post)

Hugh
Hefner in 2007. Photo: PA
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