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Jayne Marie Mansfield, Miklós "Mickey" Hargitay, Jr., Zoltán Hargitay, Mariska Hargitay and Antonio “Tony” Cimber — before ...
LOS ANGELES — Playboy founder Hugh M. Hefner, the pipe-smoking hedonist who revved up the sexual revolution in the 1950s and built a multimedia empire of clubs, mansions, movies and television ...
Hugh Hefner, the ultimate playboy who frolicked through life long enough to become an icon in his own time, died Wednesday night at the age of 91. Playboy Enterprises announced Hefner's death on ...
Hugh Hefner‘s son, Cooper Hefner, is seeking ownership of his late father’s iconic brand, Playboy, with a $100 million cash bid. In a statement to Fox News Digital, Cooper, 33, said he's ...
Nothing seemed off-limits for the late Hugh Hefner. His racy Playboy magazine may have been launched in the 1950s, running until 2020, but it remains a cultural icon today.
During the mid-1950s, Hugh Hefner and Playboy gain national success, giving Hefner an opportunity to speak out about social issues while enjoying the perks of being Mr. Playboy.
In life, Hugh Hefner and Marilyn Monroe never met. In death, their assorted miscellany has raised more than $4 million at a sale held by Julien’s Auctions.
Hugh Hefner’s Legendary Smoking Jacket and a Marilyn Monroe Dress and Are Heading to Auction Over 1,000 items from the legendary duo will be featured in a Julien's Auctions sale this spring.
Going under the hammer will be an assortment of more than 1,000 artifacts ranging from Hefner and Monroe’s early lives—both were born in 1926—to the 1950s and early ’60s, an era that ...
Hugh Hefner's life and legacy have always been complicated and controversial, but through dozens of interviews with Hefner's former girlfriends, Playmates, and employees, A&E's new documentary ...
In 1953 a 27-year-old entrepreneur named Hugh Hefner launched Playboy Magazine, an early sign of the sea-change that would occur in sexual mores in the 1960s.
Hefner’s Playboy bunnies were also known to live in the mansion and were subject to mandatory 9pm curfews and film nights three times a week where Hefner’s favourite 1950s flicks would be played.