One man’s Playboy: Encounters with Hefner through the years
LOS ANGELES » It is time to confess something I did as a teenage mail handler in the late 1960s, when Playboy reigned supreme, its rabbit-head logo stamped on a voluptuary empire of publishing, television, restaurants and bunnies.
Each month, I would intercept a half-dozen copies of Playboy magazine at a busy Los Angeles post office, slip them out of their plain brown wrappers and set them aside. Postal workers with a free moment would pass the magazines across the desks and cancellation machines. Then they carefully tucked the issues back into their wrappers and sent them on to their rightful subscribers.
Occasionally, complaints cropped up in Playboy’s letters-to-the-editor column: Some prankster at the post office had put a postage-due stamp across the Playmate of the Month’s breasts.
Though tempted, I never did that — I had too much respect for the magazine. I had read Playboy since I was 13, thanks in large part to a crusty old newsstand operator who would willingly sell a copy to any kid who had the 75 cents to pay for it.
I knew about Hugh Hefner. Who didn’t? Depending on your perspective, Hefner — who died this week at age 91 — either launched the sexual revolution or set women’s rights back by half a century. Or both. But in the pages of Playboy, he seemed impossibly cool, with his pipe and silk pajamas and the apparent ability to attract all the most beautiful women in the world, first to his Chicago mansion and then to a spectacular castle in the tony Holmby Hills section of Los Angeles.
Even if generations retold the joke that they read Playboy for the articles, Hefner was serious about words. In the pages of Playboy, I discovered the works of writers like Kurt Vonnegut and Ray Bradbury, after perusing the photos, of course. Years later, I got to tell Bradbury that I came across one of his greatest short stories, “The Laurel and Hardy Love Affair,” in Playboy. He said he had a special affection for the magazine, which serialized his breakthrough novel “Farenheit 451” soon after it was founded.
Author Gay Talese might have described Playboy best in 2015 when he said it was “the first magazine in the mainstream that could both be called a literary magazine and a magazine for masturbation.”
I twice encountered Hefner, the first time nearly 20 years after sorting those magazines. In 1988, he called a news conference to announce he was countersuing a woman who had sued him for palimony. To get there, I traveled up along the turreted, Tudor-style mansion’s long driveway to a big fountain, careful to obey the sign that read “Drive Slowly, Playmates at Play.”
Hefner was nearly 62. But minus the pipe and trading his pajamas for a leisure suit, he looked pretty much like the guy in the magazine. M&M candies, said to be his favorite, were in bowls everywhere, and reporters were encouraged to indulge. The man whose magazine offered definitive advice on scotch and other whiskeys, had his favorite beverage in hand, a Pepsi.