"Life is too short to be living somebody else's dream." - Hugh Hefner
Hugh Hefner was one of America’s most intriguing figures. A lifelong champion for equality and a better world, his magazine Playboy had a freewheeling and hedonistic approach to nudity and sexuality that helped usher in the sexual revolution. Though Playboy has fielded criticisms for its objectification of women and promotion of extremely narrow standards of beauty, it can't be denied that Hef had an indelible influence on American culture. Whether that influence was overall a net positive or negative is up to you. Below you'll find 43 Swingin’ Facts about the legendary Hugh Hefner!
"In my wildest dreams, I could not have imagined a sweeter life." - Hugh Hefner
43. Underneath the Covers
Every truly iconic figure has their go-to fashion item. Think Bono's sunglasses, or Lady Gaga and her outrageous dresses. Hugh Hefner is no different: his iconic look revolved around an expensive housecoat.
So what did Hef wear underneath his famous pajamas? According to the New York Times: nothing!
42. Family Man
Hugh Hefner has been married three times and has four children by his first two wives.
41. That Signature Look
Hefner revealed in an interview that his go-to look of pajamas is a natural result of his late-night work habits. After moving his office into his bedroom in the 1960s, he realized he could wear his pajamas all day. He reportedly owned more than 200 pairs of silk pajamas in 20 colors, along with custom-tailored velvet and satin smoking jackets.
40. Descended from Greatness
In 1961, Hugh caught a Dick Gregory performance at a bar in Chicago called the Herman Roberts Show Bar.
On the back of that one performance, Hef decided to sign Gregory to come and work for him at the Playboy Club in Chicago.
Gregory later credited the performance at Playboy Club Chicago for helping to launch the rest of his career.
39. Enlisted Man
In 1944, during World War II, Hefner enlisted as an infantry clerk in the military. During basic training, he won a sharpshooter badge for firing an M1 rifle. Publishing was clearly his first love though—he contributed cartoons for the Army newspaper.
38. Higher Education
Hef attended the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and earned his Bachelor of Arts in psychology with a double minor in creative writing and arts. Later, he enrolled for a graduate course in sociology at Northwestern University but soon dropped out.
37. Thesis
Before dropping out of Northwestern, Hefner submitted a graduate paper titled, “Sex Behavior and the US Law”, in which he concluded that almost every American would be in jail if all the laws against various sex acts were enforced.
Hmmm... Definitely an interesting opinion!
36. Wait For It
Hugh Hefner told the Daily Mail that he had saved himself for marriage, and lost his virginity at age 22 to his first wife, Mildred Williams.
35. Inspiration
The origin story of any person who achieves wild wealth and heaps of fame is always hard to imagine. They must've been successful from the start, right?
Not so.
In 1951, Hef was working for Esquire, a men’s lifestyle magazine. He wasn't doing poorly, by any means... but he wasn't a world-beater yet, either.
But after being denied a $5 raise, Hef quit Esquire and founded his own men’s magazine. You can probably guess the name: it was Playboy.
34. Strong Start
Hef launched the first issue of Playboy in December 1953. The issue featured Marilyn Monroe’s nude calendar shoot. More than 54,000 copies were sold, at 50 cents each. Not a bad start.
33. What’s in a Name?
Playboy wasn’t Hef’s first choice for the name of his magazine. He originally called his publication Stag Party but changed the name after being advised by the already-existing men’s adventure magazine Stag that they would sue to protect their brand.
Based on all the Playboy-branded shirts, bags (even tattoos!) that you can see around any major city in North America, it's likely that things worked out pretty nicely.
32. Bunny Origins
Hef’s original vision for Stag Party had another flaw, that art director Art Paul pointed out: no one would be interested in women dressed as deer. Paul suggested the rabbit as a mascot: it conveyed a playfulness and sly sexual connotations. Paul later admitted to having created the logo in less than half an hour.
31. Playboy In Person
In 1960, Hefner and Playboy Enterprises started a chain of gentlemen’s clubs, the first opening in Chicago, Illinois. The clubs’ main attraction were attractive, scantily-clad women dressed as bunnies serving drinks. In 1961, the Chicago location had 132,000 visitors in a three-month period, making it the busiest club in the world. But by 1991, the club chain became non-operational. The franchise was revived again in the early 2000s, with clubs opening in Las Vegas, Macao, and Cancun, but they all closed again by 2014.
30. Civil Rights
In 1960, when racial segregation denied black Americans equal rights, Hefner started the first Playboy Club in Chicago and offered admission to people of all races.
Well done Sir!
29. Obscenity
In 1963, an issue of Playboy featured nude pictures of American actress Jayne Mansfield in bed with a man present. The spread was deemed vulgar and obscene, which led to Hefner's arrest on charges of obscenity. However, the charges against him were dropped after the jury was unable to reach a verdict.
28. Universal Symbol
By the 1970s, Playboy’s signature rabbit head logo was so well-known that readers could simply draw a rabbit head on an envelope and pop it in the mail. The logo was so recognizable that the letters would arrive at their intended destination of Playboy headquarters.
27. Uncertain Future
The first issue of Playboy wasn’t printed with an issue number or date. Despite the star power of Marilyn Monroe, Hef wasn’t sure the magazine would get a second issue.
Better safe than sorry, I suppose.
26. Thanks, Mom
While raising funds for the launch of Playboy, Hef wasn’t too proud to hit up mom and dad. His father, a public accountant, didn’t think the magazine was a good investment. As Hef was about to leave, his mother took him aside and handed him a cheque for $1,000 from her own savings.
Later Hef said, "Not because she believed in the venture, but because she believed in her son." What a mom!
25. Young Eyes
When Hef’s daughter Christie (from his first marriage) visited the mansion as a teenager, “the mansion was cleaned up with all the kinky stuff put away” in an effort to keep her from knowing what was going on. She must have found out later, as she became president of the company.
24. Challenging Critics
Hefner famously offered a special discounted subscription rate for Playboy for priests and church officials. Why? He wanted to encourage debate with those who criticized his magazine for its nude photos and promotion of liberal values including sexual freedom, hedonism, and racial equality.
That's an interesting take.
23. Thought Experiment
In 1955, Hugh Hefner published a short story by Charles Beaufort, titled “The Crooked Man”. The story was about straight men being persecuted in a gay world. After receiving numerous pieces of hate mail, he released a statement saying “If it was wrong to persecute heterosexuals in a homosexual society then the reverse was wrong, too.”
Pretty forward thinking, you have to admit.
22. Body Double
When Hefner hosts a dinner party or gathering but is unable to attend, he sends a life-sized cardboard cutout of himself to attend in his place. That’s one way to never miss a party.
21. Giving Back
In 2011, students at the Steinmetz College Prep high school in Chicago made a plea for Hugh Hefner to donate money to cover printing costs of their school newsletter. Hefner agreed to support the school for five years with a $50,000 grant.
20. Social Good
Initial funding for the first rape kit came from Hugh Hefner and the Playboy Foundation. Hefner’s daughter, Christie, was friends with Martha Godard, an activist and rape survivor who began advocating for the kits in the 1970s.
19. Party Plane
In the 1960s, Hugh Hefner owned a personal Douglas DC9 Jetliner called the Big Bunny. It was painted black and had private bedrooms, a discotheque, a movie theatre, and a crew of jet bunnies in black miniskirts. The plane was also decked out with a round bed covered in fur, showers, and even a powder room.
18. When Hefner
When Hefner became a father for the third and fourth times, his two sons were raised at the Playboy Mansion. Nudity was banned, and the grounds became littered with toys and games. The “Playmates at Play” sign was rewritten to read “Children at Play”
17. Equality
Hugh Hefner was a steadfast supporter of gay rights and the fight for legalization of same-sex marriage. In an editorial he wrote, published in the magazine in 2012, he wrote, “The fight for gay marriage is, in reality, a fight for all of our rights.” In an argument reminiscent of his graduate school paper he wrote in his youth, he wrote, “Their goal is to dehumanize everyone’s sexuality and reduce us to using sex for the sole purpose of perpetuating our species. To that end, they will criminalize your entire sex life.”
16. Playing by the Rules
Despite Hefner’s reputation for hedonism and liberalism, he reportedly had strict rules for the “girlfriends” who lived with him in the Playboy Mansion. Past girlfriends have publically complained about the severe restrictions and regulations, including a zero-tolerance policy on drugs and drunkenness, a no-visitors policy, and a strict 9 pm curfew.
15. Apparently There is a Line
Hefner criticized Joe Francis, founder of the Girls Gone Wild franchise. Said Hef, “I’m not a fan because I think it’s exploitative and I don’t think he’s a very nice guy”.
14. Unauthorized
After Vanessa Williams was stripped of her Miss America title, Hugh Hefner was offered the nude photos that lead to her resignation. He turned them down saying “There was never any question of our interest. But they clearly weren’t authorized and because they would cause considerable embarrassment, we decided not to publish.”
13. An Honor
Hugh Hefner had an endangered subspecies of Marsh rabbit, Sylvilagus palustris hefneri. The species was named after him in 1984 by James D. Lazell Jr, whose research was generously funded by the Playboy Corporation.
12. He Put the “Y” in Hollywood
Hefner helped save a Hollywood landmark—the Hollywood sign—twice. In the 1970s, Hef offered up $27,000 at a charity auction to restore the letter “Y” in the sign. In 2010, he donated $900,000 to preserve the 138-acre tract of land surrounding the sign.
11. Nice Digs
The Playboy Mansion was acquired by Playboy Enterprises in 1971 for over $1 million. Its previous owner was significantly less swinging—it was owned by world-renowned chess player and engineer Louis D. Statham. Hef renovated the 22-room mansion with a game room, movie theatre, zoo/aviary, a tennis/basketball court, and a swimming pool complete with waterfall and grotto. The mansion also housed the editorial offices of Playboy Enterprises, who officially owned the mansion. In 2016, the Mansion was sold for $100 million to Hostess Brands co-owner Daren Metropolous, on the condition that Hef be allowed to stay in the mansion for $1 million per year in rent. Metropolous only collected rent once—Hefner died the year following the sale.
10. Priorities
In the final years of his life, Hugh Hefner had gone almost completely deaf. This may have been a side effect of his liberal use of the erectile dysfunction drug Viagra. Karissa Shannon, one of his “girlfriends”, told The Sun, “he would rather have sex than have his hearing.”
9. What A Tally
In Hugh Hefner’s 91 years, how many women did the world’s most famous Playboy bed? He claims to have always been faithful while married but also claims to have “made up for it” while he was single between his three marriages. In 2015, Hef told Esquire that he had slept with “over a thousand” women.
8. World’s Largest
Hugh Hefner holds not one but two Guinness World Records. One, for being the longest-serving editor-in-chief of a magazine. The other, for holding the world’s largest collection of personal scrapbooks.
7. For Posterity
Hef’s penchant for scrapbooking is no joke. As of 2011, Hefner had almost 2,400 volumes of scrapbooks in the attic of his mansion, filled with pictures of his various parties and gatherings. He hired a dedicated archivist, Steve Martinez, to oversee his life’s project, and left instructions that the last volumes be filled with his obituaries after his death. Think this list will make it in?
6. Disrespectful
John Lennon almost got beaten up during a mid-1970s visit to Hefner’s Playboy mansion. The ex-Beatle was drinking heavily when he put out a cigarette on a priceless painting by French impressionist painter Henri Matisse.
5. Unfortunate News
After consummating his first marriage with Mildred Williams, she told Hef that she had cheated on him before their wedding, while he served in the army. "That was the most devastating moment in my life," Hefner said. The couple stayed together for 10 years and had two children, Christie and David. They would eventually divorce, and Hefner's true playboy days would begin.
4. Bad Habit
Hefner had a bit of a bad habit: he reportedly drank as many as 36 bottles of Pepsi a day.
Holy moly. And then man lived to be 92! That seems quite honestly impossible. He must have been wildly healthy otherwise.
3. Gross Grotto
Part of the reason Hefner ended up selling the Playboy Mansion was that it was starting to fall into disrepair towards the end of his life. This became quite obvious in 2011, when 123 guests who had attended a pool party at the Mansion came down sick shortly after. Health inspectors later found the bacteria that causes Legionnaires' Disease in the hot tub, a bug that's quite easy to prevent with regular cleanings. Still dream about visiting the Grotto?
2. Obsession
Hugh Hefner had an obsession with Marilyn Monroe, whose nude calendar shoot graced the very first issue of Playboy, even though the two never met. In 1992, he purchased the crypt next to hers at the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery for $75,000.
1. Final Resting Place
Hefner passed away of natural causes at his home in Holmby Hills, Los Angeles, California on September 27, 2017, at the age of 91. He was laid to rest, as he wished, in the crypt he purchased beside Marilyn Monroe.
Sources: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35