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Lillian Muller; Actress. Model Playboy
Bunny Legend And More
Website
Lillian
Muller official website


Lillian
Muller and Maurice
Rinaldi

Hugh
Hefner Lillian
Muller Maurice
Rinaldi
Lillian
Müller (born 19 August 1951 in Grimstad, Norway[1])
is a Norwegian supermodel and an actress in motion
pictures and television. A 5 times "Page Three
Girl" with her first appearance in January 1974,
Müller achieved her major breakthrough after
being spotted by Suze Randall, who photographed her
Playboy cover and pictures in her Playmate pictorial
(centerfold photographed by Dwight Hooker). Müller
appeared in the magazine as Playmate of the Month
in August 1975, and was subsequently named Playmate
of the Year in 1976.
Müller appeared in Van Halen's "Hot for
Teacher" video as the chemistry teacher. She
also portrayed Rod Stewart's love interest in his
1978 video "Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?"
She is sometimes credited as Inga Anderssen, Lillian
Mueller, Yulis Revel, Yuliis Ruval, or Yullis Ruval.
Filmography
Rosemaries
Tochter (Daughter) (1976) .... Annemarie Nitribitt
Casanova & Co. (1977) .... Beata
The Night They Took Miss Beautiful (1977) (TV) ....
Lillie Schaefer
Hometown USA (1979) (as Yuliis Ruval) .... Mrs. Rodney
C. Duckworth
Once Upon a Spy (1980) (TV) (as Yuliis Ruval)
Miracle on Ice (1981) (TV) .... Stewardess
Death Ray 2000 (1981) (TV) (as Yuliis Ruval) ....
Ilse Lander
The Devil and Max Devlin (1981) .... Veronica (Devil
Council)
King of the Mountain (1981) .... Jamie Winter
Best Defense (1984) (as Yuliis Ruval) .... French
Singer
Stewardess School (1986) (as Yuliis Ruval) .... Beautiful
Blonde
[edit]Notable TV guest appearances
All
as Yuliis Ruval:
Howard Stern
Først & sist
Remington Steele
Magnum, P.I.
Charlie's Angels
Fantasy Island
Starsky and Hutch (Credit:
Wikipedia)
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Playboy
Playboy
is an American men's magazine, founded in Chicago,
Illinois by Hugh Hefner and his associates, which
has grown into Playboy Enterprises, Inc., reaching
into every form of media. Playboy is one of the world's
best known brands. In addition to the flagship magazine
in the United States, special nation-specific versions
of Playboy are published worldwide.
The
magazine is published monthly and features photographs
of nude women, along with various articles on fashion,
sports, consumer goods, and public figures. It also
has short fiction by top literary writers, such as
Arthur C. Clarke, Ian Fleming, Vladimir Nabokov, and
Margaret Atwood. The magazine has been known to express
liberal opinions on most major political issues. Playboy's
use of "tasteful" nude photos is classified
as "softcore" in contrast to the more "hardcore"
pornographic magazines that started to appear in the
1970s in response to the success of Playboy's more
explicit rival, Penthouse.
History
Playboy's
original title was to be Stag Party, but an unrelated
outdoor magazine, Stag, contacted Hefner and informed
him that they would legally protect their trademark
if he were to launch his magazine with that name.
Hefner and co-founder and executive vice president
Eldon Sellers met to discuss the problem and to seek
a new name. Sellers' mother suggested the name "The
gentlemen's club", but it was Alexx Mills, who
had worked for the short-lived Playboy Automobile
Company, in Chicago, who suggested the name "Playboy".
The
first issue, published in December 1953, was undated,
as Hefner was unsure whether or not there would be
a second issue. He produced it in his Hyde Park kitchen.
The first centerfold was Marilyn Monroe, although
the picture used originally was taken for a calendar,
rather than for Playboy. The first issue was an immediate
sensation; it sold out in weeks. Known circulation
was 53,991. The cover price was 50¢. Copies of
the first issue in mint to near mint condition sold
for over $5,000 in 2002.
The
famous logo, depicting the stylized profile of a rabbit
wearing a tuxedo bow tie, was designed by art designer
Art Paul for the magazine's second issue and has appeared
on every issue since. A running joke in the magazine
involves hiding the logo somewhere in the cover art
or photograph. Hefner said that he chose the rabbit
as a mascot for its "humorous sexual connotation,"
and because the image was "frisky and playful."
An
urban legend started about Hefner and the Playmate
of the Month because of markings on the front covers
of the magazine. From 1955 to 1979 (except for a six
month gap in 1976), the "P" in Playboy had
a number of stars printed in or around the letter.
The legend stated that this was either a rating that
Hefner gave to the Playmate according to how attractive
she was, the number of times that Hefner had slept
with her, or how good she was in bed. The stars, which
ranged in number between zero and twelve, actually
indicated the domestic or international advertising
region for that particular printing.
Since
reaching its peak in the 1970s, Playboy has seen a
decline in circulation and cultural relevance because
of increased competition in the field it founded —
first from Penthouse, Oui, and Gallery in the 1970s;
later from pornographic videos; and more recently
from lad mags such as Maxim, FHM, and Stuff. In response,
Playboy has attempted to re-assert its hold on the
18–35 male demographic it once controlled through
slight changes to its content and focusing on issues
and personalities more appropriate to its audience
— such as hip-hop artists being featured in
the "Playboy Interview".
The
magazine celebrated its fiftieth anniversary with
the January 2004 issue. Celebrations were held at
Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New York, and Moscow during
the year to commemorate this event.
Circulation
The
best-selling Playboy edition was the November 1972
edition, which sold 7,161,561 copies. One-quarter
of all American college men were buying the magazine
every month. On the cover was model Pam Rawlings,
photographed by Rowland Scherman.
Perhaps
coincidentally, a cropped image of the issue's centerfold
(which featured Lena Soderberg) became a de facto
standard image for testing image processing algorithms.
It is known simply as the "Lenna" (also
"Lena") image in that field.
Today,
Playboy is still the largest selling men's magazine,
selling about three million copies a month in the
U.S.
Bans
on the sale of Playboy
In
many parts of Asia, including India, mainland China,
Myanmar, Malaysia, Thailand, Singapore, and Brunei,
the sale and distribution of Playboy is banned. In
addition, its sale and distribution is banned in almost
all Muslim countries in Asia and Africa, such as Iran,
Saudi Arabia and Pakistan. However, it is sold in
Hong Kong. In Japan, where the genitals of models
cannot be shown, a separate edition of Playboy is
published under license by Shueisha.
An
Indonesian edition of Playboy launched in April 2006,
but the controversy started before the first issue
was published. Even the publisher said that the content
of the Indonesian edition will be different from the
original edition but the government was trying hard
to ban it by using anti-pornography rules, since the
Indonesian government cannot ban any medium. A local
Muslim organization, the Islamic Defenders Front (IDF),
also opposed to Playboy being published on the grounds
that it is pornography. On April 12 a group of about
150 IDF members clashed with police and stoned the
editorial offices of the magazine. Despite this controversy,
the edition quickly sold out. On 6 April 2007 the
chief judge of the case dismissed the charges because
they had been incorrectly filed.
In
1986, the American convenience store chain 7-Eleven
removed the magazine from its stores. The store returned
Playboy to its shelves in late 2003. 7-Eleven stores
had also been selling Penthouse and other, more extreme,
magazines before the ban.
In
bookstores throughout the world, it is common for
Playboy, as well as other adult publications, to be
put on a higher shelf than other magazines, thus keeping
them out of the reach of most children. They are also
often wrapped in opaque plastic bags so as to not
reveal the cover.
Playboy
was not sold in the state of Queensland, Australia
during 2004 and 2005 but has returned as of 2006.
Furthermore, due to declining sales, the last edition
of the Australian edition of Playboy published was
the January 2000 issue.
Litigation
On
the January 14, 2004, the Ninth Circuit U.S. Court
of Appeals ruled that Playboy Enterprises Inc.'s (PEI)
trademark terms "Playboy" and "Playmate"
should be protected even in Internet searches that
prompt pop-up advertisements. The suit originally
started on April 15, 1999, when Playboy sued Excite
Inc. and Netscape for trademark infringement. Attorneys
Barry Felder, Catherine McGrath and Matthew Moren
represented Playboy.
Photographers
Many
notable photographers have contributed work to Playboy,
including Richard Fegley, William Figge, Arny Freytag,
Ron Harris, David Mecey, Russ Meyer, Pompeo Posar,
Suze Randall, Herb Ritts, Stephen Wayda, Sam Wu, R
Scott Hooper, Mario Casilli, and Bunny Yeager.
Modeling
pay
This section needs additional citations for verification.
Please help improve this article by adding reliable
references. Unsourced material may be challenged and
removed. (July 2007)
Playmate of the Month Modeling Payouts
Year Amount
1959-1960 $500
1961-1965 $1,000
1966-1967 $2,500
1968-1969 $3,000
1970-1977 $5,000
1978-1983 $10,000
1984-1989 $15,000
1990-1999 $20,000
2000-2006 $25,000
Playmate of the Year Modeling Payouts Year Amount
1960-1963 $500 plus $250 bonus
1982-today $140,000, an automobile, and a motorbike.
During
the 1960s and 1970s all PMOY's received pink automobiles,
the hue of pink used was known as "Playmate Pink",
the same shade as awarded to Mary Kay's independent
sales force, a frequent source of confusion.
Photo
editing
There
is some controversy over airbrushing (or, in recent
times, image editing) that is done on the photos featured
in the magazine. Some readers say that this kind of
photo-editing takes away from authenticity and makes
photographs look unnatural.
One
example was the case of Pamela Anderson and the "disappearing
labia". In Pamela's original Playboy appearance
in the issue of February 1990, there was a rear-view
photo with her legs slightly apart and her labia minora
plainly visible. In reprints in later "Newsstand
Specials" as well as a poster-sized print, Pamela
had been "defeminized," this area having
been painted over in the color of the object in front
of which she was standing.
Similarly,
in Rena Mero's ("Sable") first Playboy shoot,
one photo of Mero lying on her back was edited to
add extra pubic hair over her genitalia. However,
in the "50th Anniversary" issue, this picture
was printed in its original, unedited state.
Rival
adult magazine Hustler and owner Larry Flynt has often
been critical of Playboy and their airbrushing. This
has often led Hustler to promote the fact that their
nude pictorials are never airbrushed and are completely
natural. This is a separate issue from whether the
models are completely natural: that is, free of silicone
breast implants.
Firsts
* First issue with two-page centerfold: February 1954
(Margaret Scott)
* First issue with Leroy Neiman's Femlin: August 1955
* First issue with a Playmate showing pubic hair:
February 1956 (Marguerite Empey)
* First issue with a three-page centerfold: March
1956 (Marian Stafford)
* First issue with a Vargas girl: March 1957
* First issue with two Playmates for Playmate of the
Month: October 1958 (Pat Sheehan and Mara Corday)
* First issue with Ian Fleming story: March 1960
* First issue with Playboy Advisor column: September
1960
* First issue with Playboy Interview: September 1962
(with Miles Davis)
* First issue with an African-American centerfold:
March 1965 (Jennifer Jackson)
* First issue with Playboy 20Q: Cheryl Tiegs in October
1978[5]
* First issue with a man on the cover: April 1964
(Peter Sellers)
* First issue to show a celebrity or non-Playmate's
pubic hair: August 1969 (dancer Paula Kelly)[6]
* First issue with centerfold showing pubic hair:
December 1969 (Gloria Root)
* First issue with identical twins in centerfold:
October 1970 - (Mary and Madeleine Collinson)
* First full frontal nude centerfold: January 1971
(Liv Lindeland).
* First issue with a double sided centerfold (the
reverse side was a rear view). January 1974 (Nancy
Cameron)
* First issue with signed centerfold: October 1975
(Jill De Vries)
* First issue with Playmate data sheet: July 1977
(Sondra Theodore)
* First issue without staple in the centerfold: October
1985
* First national magazine with Web site: August 1994[citation
needed]
* First issue with identical triplets in the centerfold,
The Dahm Triplets: December 1998
* First issue with www.playboy.com explicit on cover:
February 1999
* First issue with a Playmate without any pubic hair:
September 2001 (Dalene Kurtis)[citation needed]
* First issue with female video game characters (most
notably Bloodrayne): October 2004
Celebrities
For a full listing, please see List of people in Playboy
1953-1959, 1960-1969, 1970-1979, 1980-1989, 1990-1999,
2000-present.
Many
celebrities (singers, actresses, models, etc.) have
posed for Playboy over the years. This list is only
a small portion of those who have posed. Some of them
are:
FILM:
* Marilyn Monroe (December 1953)
* Jayne Mansfield (February 1955)
* Mara Corday (October 1958)
* Ursula Andress (June 1965)
* Carol Lynley (March 1965)
* Kim Basinger (February 1983)
* Janet Jones (March 1987)
* Drew Barrymore (January 1995)
* Daryl Hannah (November 2003)
* Denise Richards (December 2004)
MUSIC:
* LaToya Jackson (March 1989/Nov 1991)
* Fem2fem (December 1993)
* Nancy Sinatra (May 1995)
* Samantha Fox (October 1996)
* Linda Brava (April 1998)
* Belinda Carlisle (August 2001)
* Tiffany (April 2002)
* Carnie Wilson (August 2003)
* Deborah Gibson (March 2005)
* Willa Ford (March 2006)
SPORT:
* Katarina Witt (December 1998)
* Tanja Szewczenko (April 1999 German Edition)
* Mia St. John (November 1999)
* Joanie Laurer (November 2000 and January 2002)
* Gabrielle Reece (January 2001)
* Kiana Tom (May 2002)
* Torrie Wilson (May 2003 and March 2004 (the latter
with Sable))
* Amy Acuff (September 2004)
* Christy Hemme (April 2005)
* Amanda Beard (July 2007)
TELEVISION:
* Linda Evans (July 1971)
* Shannen Doherty (March 1994 and December 2003)
* Farrah Fawcett (December 1995 and July 1997)
* Women of Baywatch (June 1998)
* Claudia Christian (October 1999)
* Shari Belafonte (September 2000)
* Brooke Burke (May 2001 and November 2004)
* Gena Lee Nolin (December 2001)
* Rachel Hunter (April 2004)
* Charisma Carpenter (June 2004)
Other
editions
The
success of Playboy magazine has led PEI to market
other versions of the magazine, the Special Editions
(formerly called News Stand Specials), such as Playboy's
College Girls and Playboy's Book of Lingerie, as well
as the Playboy video collection.
The
growth of the Internet prompted the magazine to develop
an official web presence called Playboy Online or
Playboy.com, which is the official website for Playboy
Enterprises, and an online companion to Playboy magazine.
The site has been available online since 1994. As
part of the online presence, Playboy developed a pay
web site called the Playboy Cyber Club in 1995 which
features online chats, additional pictorials &
videos of Playmates and Playboy Cyber Girls that are
not featured in the magazine, as well as archives
of past Playboy articles and interviews. Playboy Cyber
Club has opened up a new door for girls interested
in posing. It is much easier to access, because it
is online. It attracts just about as many as the magazine,
and brought a whole new line of girls. Some Playmates
start in Cyber Club and work their way to the magazine.
In September 2005, Playboy launched the online edition
of the magazine Playboy Digital.
The
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically
Handicapped (NLS) has published a Braille edition
of Playboy since 1970. The Braille version includes
all the written words in the non-Braille magazine,
but no pictorial representations. Congress cut off
funding for the Braille magazine translation in 1985,
but U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Hogan reversed
the decision on First Amendment grounds. (Credit:
Wikipedia).
WWE
Divas
Playboy
Since
2003, a WWE Diva has posed nude and appeared on the
cover every year:
* 1999: Sable
* 2000: Chyna
* 2003: Torrie Wilson
* 2004: Torrie Wilson and Sable
* 2005: Christy Hemme
* 2006: Candice Michelle
* 2007: Ashley Massaro
Playboy
playmates, such as Carmella DeCesare and Karen McDougal
have also appeared in Diva Search in 2004. Trish Stratus,
Lita, Maria Kanellis, Debra, Sharmell Huffman, Stacy
Keibler and Melina Perez have all actively refused
to pose nude for Playboy magazine. Stratus has appeared
on sports talk show Off The Record and said that she
didn't pose because she wanted to be known as "multiple
time Women's Champion Trish Stratus" rather than
"the girl who posed in Playboy." Stratus
also claims that she refused the shoot because she
says she can still be sexy without taking her clothes
off. Dumas has said that she didn't pose because she
felt it was wrong for her character (who was known
as a role model for young girls at the time) to pose
for the magazine. Stacy refused to pose as she believes
it would be better if she "left something for
the imagination." Maria has said that she does
not wish to embarrass her sister, who is still in
high school.
Tammy
Lynn Sytch (Sunny) claimed to have refused an offer
by Playboy to pose for the magazine. However, Rena
Mero (Sable) later claimed that Playboy had actually
never approached Sytch, and that Sytch had fabricated
the whole story. (Credit:
Wikipedia).
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