Hugh Marston Hefner (born April 9, 1926 in Chicago, Illinois) is the founder and editor-in-chief of Playboy magazine. He has become a charismatic icon and spokesman for the sexual revolution and of personal freedom.
Hefner has stated that he entered the army a virgin and left the army a virgin. He eventually lost his virginity aged 22.
Upon his release, he majored in psychology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and resumed his relationship with Mildred Williams. They married on June 25, 1949 and had two children, Christie and David Paul (born August 1955), a computer programmer. Christie is Chairperson of Playboy Enterprises (PEI). Hefner divorced Mildred in 1959.
Despite spending less than three years in college before graduating, Hefner found time to edit Shaft, and sold cartoons to magazines. His first salaried job was with a firm that produced and printed cardboard cartons.
After later serving in both the subscription department and as a copywriter for Esquire, he left in January 1952 after being denied a $5 raise. He moved on to Children's Activities, then took his biggest gamble in 1953 by loaning his furniture for $400 and raising $10,000 from 45 investors - including $1,000 from his mother ("Not because she believed in the venture," Hefner told E! in 2006. "But because she believed in her son.") - to start Playboy.
Hefner claims he hatched the idea for Playboy while in college, and that the name for the magazine came from his decision that his "baby" should have the name he "knew he was himself". In truth, the original working title of his magazine was Stag Party but Hefner was forced to change it to avoid a trademark conflict with the existing Stag Magazine. The name "Playboy" was suggested by a friend, Eldon Sellers, with Hefner noting that rabbits were the "playboys" of the animal world. Cartoonist Arv Miller remodeled the stag in a smoking jacket to a rabbit in a smoking jacket and the transformation was complete.
From his experience in advertising, Hefner saw the need to package sexuality into aspirational categories, to tell a story about it that placed men in the narrative itself in a way that was not just acceptable but desirable. In launching Playboy, perhaps the smartest thing Hefner did was to reinvent himself as an urbane sophisticate who enjoyed the company of young women.
The first issue of the magazine arrived in December 1953 (with no date on the cover), and had a nude photo of Marilyn Monroe inside. Hefner had purchased the rights to the photos for a mere $200, then watched his investment sell nearly 54,000 copies. During its first three years, other material in the magazine consisted of reprints from other magazines, but then became strictly original.
Hefner saw his first brush with the law come in 1958 when he, a teenager named Elizabeth Ann Roberts, and her mother were arrested in Chicago after photos of Roberts appeared in Playboy. After authorities realized that Hefner had been told she was 18 years old, charges of contributing to the delinquency of a child were dropped.
The first Playboy Jazz Festival took place in Rhode Island in 1959 and has become a staple for the most prominent musicians in the field.
Hefner opened up the first "Playboy Club" in Chicago, which featured women in bunny costumes serving drinks to customers who listened to many of the same guests that populated Hefner's television show. In less than two years, the number of clubs had expanded to 12, with over 125,000 patrons paying either $25 for a charter membership or $50 for a lifetime membership. During the 1980s, the Clubs folded, Playboy lost its casino licenses in Atlantic City and the U.K. Hefner suffered a stroke in 1985. Three years later, he passed control of Playboy's business operations to his daughter Christine.
In 1989, he ended a 35-year bachelor party, and, on July 1, married Kimberley Conrad, that year's Playmate of the Year. They separated in 1998, though have yet to divorce. They had two children: Marston Glenn, born on Hefner's 64th birthday, and Cooper Bradford, born on September 4, 1991. Cooper is now studying in Ojai Valley School, California. While Hefner was monogamous, the THS profile suggested that Conrad was not.{fact}
During some years, Hefner has said that he was "'involved' with maybe eleven out of twelve months worth of Playmates."* Hefner has had sustained relationships with Donna Michelle, Marilyn Cole, Lillian Muller, Patti McGuire, Terri Welles, Shannon Tweed, and Brande Roderick, all of whom were chosen "Playmate of the Year". Other noteworthy attachments include Barbi Benton, Karen Christy, ex-Sunday school teacher Sondra Theodore, and actress Carrie Leigh, who filed a $35 million palimony suit against him. Benton remains a fixture in Hefner's life and a regular visitor to the Playboy Mansion, which she found for him.
After his separation, Hefner began living with an ever-changing number of women, ranging in age from 18 to 28. He told Vanity Fair: "And here's the surprise bit—it's what they want!" The actual nature of these relationships is the subject of speculation. No children have yet come of them, nor does Hefner have children from outside his marriages. The 2005 reality television series The Girls Next Door profiles his most recent girlfriends, Holly Madison, Bridget Marquardt and Kendra Wilkinson. While the three all spend time with Hefner, Holly shares his bed at night.
The Hugh M. Hefner First Amendment Awards were created by daughter Christie in 1979 "to honor individuals who have made significant contributions in the vital effort to protect and enhance First Amendment rights for Americans."
1926 births | American magazine editors | Magazine founders | Magazine publishers (people) | American socialites | American World War II veterans | Businesspeople | Chicagoans | Hollywood Walk of Fame | Living people | Playboy | Pornographers | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign alumni
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