BookRags.com Literature Guides Literature
Guides
Criticism & Essays Criticism &
Essays
Questions & Answers Questions &
Answers
Lesson Plans Lesson
Plans
My Bibliography Periodic Table U.S. Presidents Shakespeare Sonnet Shake-Up
Research Anything:        
History | Encyclopedias | Films | News | Create a Bibliography | More... Login | Register | Help
Not What You Meant?  There are 9 definitions for Playmates.

Playmate

Print-Friendly
About 6 pages (1,925 words)

Bookmark and Share Know this topic well? Help others and get FREE products!
For the word "playmate" in the common sense, see its definition in Wiktionary.
2004 Playmate of the Year Carmella DeCesare meets with fans
2004 Playmate of the Year Carmella DeCesare meets with fans

A Playmate is a female model featured in the centerfold/gatefold of Playboy magazine as Playmate of the Month (or PMOM). The PMOM's pictorial includes nude photographs and a centerfold poster, as well as a short biography and the "Playmate Data Sheet", which lists her birthdate, measurements, turn-ons, and turn-offs. At the end of the year, one of the twelve Playmates of the Month is named Playmate of the Year (PMOY). Playmates of the Month are paid $25,000 USD and the Playmate of the Year receives an additional $100,000 USD plus a car and a motorcycle. In addition, Anniversary Playmates are usually chosen to celebrate a milestone year of the magazine. As of September 2006, 635 women have been Playmates of the Month. Playboy encourages potential Playmates to send photos with "girl next door" appeal for consideration; others may submit photos of Playmate candidates, and are eligible for a $2,500 USD finder's fee if their model is selected. In addition, "casting calls" are held regularly in major U.S. cities to offer opportunities for women to test for Playboy. The Playboy photographers and Hugh Hefner then select which models become Playmates. The Playmate of the Year is chosen personally by Hugh Hefner, taking into account an annual readers' poll. According to Playboy,[1] there is no such thing as a former Playmate, “Once a Playmate, always a Playmate”.

Contents

History

See also: #Playmate firsts

The first model called a Playmate of the Month was Margie Harrison, Miss January 1954 (the second issue of Playboy). (Marilyn Monroe, who was featured in the first issue, was "Sweetheart of the Month".) Generally a woman may only appear once as a Playmate, but in the early years of the magazine some models were featured multiple times. Marilyn Waltz (February 1954, April 1954, April 1955 — her first appearance was as Margaret Scott) and Janet Pilgrim (July 1955, December 1955, and October 1956) are tied for the most appearances. Margie Harrison (January 1954, June 1954) and Marguerite Empey (May 1955, February 1956) are the only other women to appear more than once as Playmates. Under current law in most US jurisdictions, publishing nude pictures of a model younger than 18 would be a felony. However, in the early years of the magazine, laws regarding corruption of a minor were less well established. Several playmates - including Nancy Crawford (April 1959), Donna Michelle (December 1963), Linda Moon (October 1966), and Teddi Smith (July 1960) - posed when they were seventeen. Elizabeth Ann Roberts (January 1958) posed when she was sixteen. Hugh Hefner and Roberts' mother were arrested as a result but the case was subsequently dismissed because Roberts' mother had signed a statement that her daughter was eighteen before the photoshoot.[2] In more recent years, Ursula Buchfellner posed for the German edition of Playboy when she was sixteen and subsequently posed for the American edition (October 1979) when she was eighteen. Traditionally, PMOYs are announced in May of each year at a media luncheon at the Playboy Mansion. Each year's Playmate of the Year appears on the cover of her PMOY issue - the issue in which her PMOY pictorial is featured, usually the June issue of the next year after her first appearance in the magazine, sometimes the July issue. However, from 2003 to 2005, PMOYs did not appear on the covers of their PMOY issues, and 2007 PMOY Sara Jean Underwood did not, either. Instead, celebrities appearing in celebrity pictorials in the PMOY issues have appeared on the covers. The first Playmate to show pubic hair (although hardly visible) on her centerfold was Gloria Root, Miss December 1969. The first full frontal nude centerfold was Liv Lindeland's (January 1971). An underwater photo by Russ Meyer taken of Marguerite Empey for her second appearance as a Playmate in February 1956 also showed pubic hair, but this photo did not attract public attention as much as Lindeland's centerfold appearance. Neither did a picture showing the corner of Melodye Prentiss's pubic hair in July 1968. The trend of playmates showing pubic hair would continue in the 1970s and 1980s. In September 2001, Dalene Kurtis became the first Playmate to appear without any pubic hair. Another trend to start in the 1990s was the appearance of body piercing, such as navel piercing, and tattoos on the bodies of Playmates.

Notable Playmates

Playmates who became known for more than their Playboy appearance(s) include (with the date of their appearance):

Anniversary Playmates

Playmate firsts

  • First Playmate to be chosen three times: Marilyn Waltz (Miss February 1954, April 1954, and April 1955 — her first appearance was as Margaret Scott)
  • First and only month in Playboy history to not have a Playmate - Miss March 1955 (no issue published)
  • First centerfold (two-page): Janet Pilgrim (Miss July 1955)
  • First fold-out centerfold (three-page): Marian Stafford (Miss March 1956)
  • First foreign-born Playmate: Elsa Sorensen (Miss September 1956) who was from Denmark
  • First Playmate twosome (two in the same month): Pat Sheehan and Mara Corday (Misses October 1958)
  • First Playmate to fill out a Playmate Data Sheet (not included): Marianne Gaba (Miss September 1959)
  • First Asian-American Playmate: China Lee (Miss August 1964)
  • First African-American Playmate: Jennifer Jackson (Miss March 1965)
  • First Playmate to get breast implants: Sue Williams (Miss April 1965)[2]
  • First Playmate to commit suicide: Sue Williams (Miss April 1965)
  • First twins to be Playmates: Mary Collinson and Madeleine Collinson (Misses October 1970)
  • First Playmate to be younger than Playboy: Monica Tidwell, Miss November 1973 (she was born in January 1954, when Playboy's second issue was on the newsstand)
  • First Playmate with signed centerfold: Jill De Vries (Miss October 1975)
  • First sisters to be Playmates in different months: Janice Pennington (Miss May 1971) and Ann Pennington (Miss March 1976)
  • First Playmate Data Sheet (included): Sondra Theodore (Miss July 1977)
  • First video playmate (1982): Lonny Chin (who was also the magazine centerfold in the January 1983 issue)
  • First mother and daughter to be Playmates: Carol Eden (Miss December 1960) and her daughter Simone Eden (Miss February 1989)
  • First Playmate of the Month to be a Penthouse Pet of the Month (October 2000) as well: Linn Thomas (Miss May 1997)
  • First triplets to be Playmates: Erica, Nicole and Jaclyn Dahm (Misses December 1998)
  • First Playmate without pubic hair: Dalene Kurtis (Miss September 2001)
  • First Playboy Cyber Girl to become Playmate: Stephanie Heinrich (Miss October 2001.) She's the first Cyber Girl of the Week (September 2000), as well as the first Cyber Girl of the Month (January 2001).
  • First Playmate to have been a Miss USA (1995): Shanna Moakler (Miss December 2001)

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Playboy.com: Playmate Milestones
  2. ^ a b Acocella, Joan. "The Girls Next Door", The New Yorker, 2006-03-20, p. 144. Retrieved on 2006-06-06. 

References

External links

View More Summaries on Playmate
 
Ask any question on Playmate and get it answered FAST!
Answer questions in BookRags Q&A and earn points toward
discounted or even FREE Study Guides and other BookRags products!
Learn more about BookRags Q&A
Copyrights
Playmate from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

Article Navigation
Join BookRagslearn moreJoin BookRags




About BookRags | Customer Service | Report an Error | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy