Subject:
Spectorsky brought in fiction by Vladimir Nabokov ... |
From:
"Sandy P. Klein" <spklein52@hotmail.com> |
Date:
Mon, 13 Mar 2006 09:23:56 -0500 |
To:
spklein52@hotmail.com |
Hugh Hefner, the founder and editor-in-chief of Playboy,
always said that his ideal for the magazine’s famous Playmate of the
Month, the woman in the centerfold photo, was “the girl next door with
her clothes off.” In other words, he was trying to take his readers
back to a time before their first sexual experience, a time when they
still liked their stuffed bear and thought that a naked woman might be
something like that. Taschen has just published “The Playmate Book: Six
Decades of Centerfolds” ($39.99), by Gretchen Edgren, a contributing
editor to Playboy, and the book is a
testament to Hefner’s fidelity to his vision. Six hundred and thirteen
women are represented, but there is one basic model. On top is the face
of Shirley Temple; below is the body of Jayne Mansfield. Playboy
was launched in 1953, and this female image managed to draw,
simultaneously, on two opposing trends that have since come to dominate
American mass culture: on the one hand, our country’s idea of its Huck
Finn innocence; on the other, the enthusiastic lewdness of our
advertising and entertainment. We are now accustomed to seeing the two
tendencies combined—witness Britney Spears—but when Hefner was a young
man they still seemed like opposites. Hence the surprise and the
popularity of Playboy.
In 1956, looking to raise the tone, Hefner hired Auguste Comte Spectorsky, an East Coast sophisticate, as his editorial director, and Spectorsky brought in fiction by Vladimir Nabokov, James Baldwin, and the like. But to the history of journalism, and probably to the readers, too, Playboy’s fiction was far less important than its interviews, inaugurated in 1962. Among the subjects were Miles Davis, Peter Sellers, Bertrand Russell, Malcolm X, Billy Wilder, Richard Burton, Jawaharlal Nehru, Jimmy Hoffa, Albert Schweitzer, Nabokov, Jean Genet, Ingmar Bergman, Dick Gregory, Henry Miller, Cassius Clay, and George Wallace, and that’s just for the first three years. The questioning was long (seven to ten hours) and confrontational. Presumably for that reason—and maybe, too, because this was a skin magazine and what the hell—the subjects often said what they did not say elsewhere. As a result, their words are still being quoted.!
Search the Nabokv-L archive at UCSB
All private editorial communications, without exception, are read by both co-editors.