Hugh Hefner has passed away at the age of 91

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OldSchool

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http://www.thewrap.com/hugh-hefner-playboy-founder-dies-91/

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Playboy founder and icon Hugh Hefner died on Wednesday evening at 91, a spokesperson for the men’s magazine said.

Hefner passed of natural causes at his home, the famed Playboy Mansion in Los Angeles, surrounded by loved ones.

“My father lived an exceptional and impactful life as a media and cultural pioneer and a leading voice behind some of the most significant social and cultural movements of our time,” his son and current Playboy Chief Creative Officer Cooper Hefner said in a statement.

“He will be greatly missed by many, including his wife Crystal, my sister Christie and my brothers David and Marston, and all of us at Playboy Enterprises,” Cooper added.


Playboy began on Hefner’s kitchen table 64 years ago, his official obit says, and spawned a branded empire that encompasses print and digital publications, merchandise and other portfolio companies.

“By putting up his furniture as collateral for a loan and borrowing the rest from family and friends, Mr. Hefner published the very first issue of Playboy in December of 1953. It was an instant sensation,” Hefner’s bio reads.

A symbol of progressive (and excessive) sexual liberation, Playboy was a hotbed of star writers during the heyday of magazine journalism — a place where nudes existed beside essays and profiles from Ray Bradbury, John Updike, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Margaret Atwood, Jack Kerouac and Kurt Vonnegut.

More to come. Read the full release from Playboy …

Hugh M. Hefner, the American icon who in 1953 introduced the world to Playboy magazine and built the company into one of the most recognizable American global brands in history, peacefully passed away today from natural causes at his home, The Playboy Mansion, surrounded by loved ones. He was 91 years old.

Starting from his kitchen table 64 years ago, Mr. Hefner’s uncompromising vision drove the creation of not just the iconic and groundbreaking magazine, but what has become one of the world’s most enduring and recognizable brands. In the process, Playboy became the largest-selling and most influential men’s magazine in the world, spawning a number of successful global businesses. To this day, the magazine is published in more than 20 countries around the world and products featuring the company’s trademarks drive more than $1 billion in sales annually.

“My father lived an exceptional and impactful life as a media and cultural pioneer and a leading voice behind some of the most significant social and cultural movements of our time in advocating free speech, civil rights and sexual freedom. He defined a lifestyle and ethos that lie at the heart of the Playboy brand, one of the most recognizable and enduring in history. He will be greatly missed by many, including his wife Crystal, my sister Christie and my brothers David and Marston, and all of us at Playboy Enterprises,” said Cooper Hefner, Chief Creative Officer of Playboy Enterprises.

After serving in the Army, attending college and working for number of years in the magazine publishing industry, Mr. Hefner became convinced that there was a market for an upscale men’s magazine. By putting up his furniture as collateral for a loan and borrowing the rest from family and friends, Mr. Hefner published the very first issue of Playboy in December of 1953. The magazine was an instant sensation.

From the very start, Playboy was about more than just the beautiful women featured in its pages. Mr. Hefner took a progressive approach not only to sexuality and humor, but also to literature, politics and culture. Within its pages, Playboy published fiction by such writers as Ray Bradbury, Charles Beaumont, John Updike, Ian Fleming, Joseph Heller, Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Margaret Atwood, Jack Kerouac and Kurt Vonnegut.

The now standard-setting “Playboy Interview” debuted in 1962 when frequent contributor Alex Haley interviewed jazz legend Miles Davis. Mr. Haley’s Playboy interviews, which are still important reads for cultural historians, also included Malcolm X (1963), Martin Luther King (1965), and perhaps most famously, George Lincoln Rockwell (1966), the founder of the American Nazi Party.

As the host of a television series, “Playboy’s Penthouse,” Mr. Hefner paved the way as the first televised program to feature mixed groups of African American and white performers and audience members together. He also fought against the racist Jim Crow laws in the South by integrating Playboy Clubs in Miami and New Orleans.

When the U.S. Post Office refused to deliver Playboy to subscribers through the mail, he fought all the way to the Supreme Court, winning a landmark decision which was widely considered a victory for free speech. He fought the country’s archaic “sodomy laws,” firmly believing that the government had no place in American bedrooms. His work in this area has been recognized as influential by historians of the gay rights movement.

In 1980, Mr. Hefner championed the reconstruction of the Hollywood sign and was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his efforts. In the shadow of the sign that he helped to preserve, Mr. Hefner stages the annual Playboy Jazz Festival at the Hollywood Bowl, an event which is in its 39th year.

This year, a 10-episode docudrama series on Mr. Hefner’s life, entitled American Playboy, appeared on Amazon.
 

SteezyEndo

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Probably 1 guy who has lived life to the fullest, and seeing and doing things that any man would dream of. Wish I knew him good enough to be invited to his kickass parties. RIP Hef.
 

~lyser

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Usually when somebody dies we can console one another by saying "well, he is in a better place". I am not sure that holds true for Hef.
 

Selassie I

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I heard on the radio this morning that Hef's grave site is right next to Marilyn Monroe's.
 

DaveFan'51

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As a young man I really enjoy He'f Magazine, It was so much more than the nude center fold! It had it all, Art, entertaining advice, style types, interviews with Celebs, just everything you wanted to find out about as a young man!
He had one hell of a Life style!!
 

Mackeyser

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When I was growing up, there were 3 things on the back of the toilet in the family bathroom: a Bridge (card game) magazine, Playboy and if I was really lucky, the Wall Street Journal.

I was really young, so I always got excited when a WSJ was left, but I liked to read on the back of the toilet and naturally opened them up.

From a young age, I got to read AMAZING interviews and cutting-edge literature as well as get to see nude women who were very attractive and natural (this was in the 70s and very early 80s). So I grew up with this image that women were fantastic, beautiful, complex PEOPLE who had their own wants, needs, and desires. This as opposed to the first time many years later I saw a Penthouse and I thought even as a youth that Penthouse was more about a man's projection of a woman versus how a woman would choose to present themselves. I honestly found Penthouse to be offputting.

Much of what I learned from those pages, from the ribald humor to the raunchy jokes to the revolutionary cultural content, has served me well as a man, husband, father, and citizen.

Hef led the charge to talk about sex, sensuality, and sexuality a fun and real way. At least at the time, the women were natural (was before the airbrushed poses), beautiful women who existed in the world. Most of them weren't actresses or models as well.

Everyone has their favorites... 25th Anniversary with Candy Loving sitting in that Champagne cup...blew my mind. The Kim Basinger edition where she became Playmate of the year. I truly feel that Kim Basinger's PotY layout was as much as an homage to the ideal female figure as Arnold Schwarzenegger's poses were an homage to the male form. There were others as well as the editions with interviews of Alex Haley, Wilt Chamberlain, Fidel Castro, and so many others...

Playboy was part of a movement as well as moment.

I would further argue that it wasn't porn at all, but erotica and literature at a time when those boundaries were able to be pushed. Moreover, it wasn't about being extreme, but fun, honest and real.

His stance on fighting segregation is very important, too. Very important.

He became a bit of a caricature at the end, but his legacy is far more important than his iconic pipe and robe.