American Playboy: The Hugh Hefner Story (2017) s01e03 Episode Script
Becoming Mr. Playboy
1 [Johnny Burnette.]
You've been lyin' [Hugh Hefner.]
By winter of 1955, America was rapidly changing.
[Johnny Burnette.]
Little boy blue [Hefner.]
The polio vaccine was officially approved by the FDA.
A small burger joint called McDonald's held its grand opening in Illinois.
[man.]
Disneyland is a delight for all youngsters.
[Hefner.]
Walt Disney opened his first theme park in Anaheim, California.
[Johnny Burnette.]
Little boy sad Someday baby [Hefner.]
And in Chicago, we were still making waves at Playboy.
[Johnny Burnette.]
is gonna give you lovin' as sweet as me [Hefner.]
In the year since we started taking our own photos, we'd begun adding playful elements to our photoshoots, hiding things like a tie or a set of golf clubs, to imply that a man was just off camera and giving our readers something to look for.
[Johnny Burnette.]
Someday, baby, you're gonna find Nobody in the world's gonna give you lovin' [Hefner.]
Thanks to our concept of the girl next door, readership had exploded from 70,000 copies a month in our first issue to 500,000 a month by the end of the year, and with annual sales reaching $3 million, I saw an opportunity to take Playboy even further by going after a source of revenue we'd barely tapped into advertising.
[Carmen McRae.]
Skyliner, skyliner Flying so freely [Hefner.]
After World War II, Americans got back to work, and the economy was booming.
[Carmen McRae.]
Higher, higher, ever higher Sunbeams are [Hefner.]
Suddenly, people had cash to spend on luxuries like cars, TVs, and new appliances, and they spent a lot, so major companies began putting massive amounts of money, over $5 billion a year, into promoting their products.
It was the Golden Age of Advertising.
[Christie Hefner.]
For most magazines, advertising is the largest source of revenue, and advertisers choose where to advertise based on the audience, the price, and the environment.
[Hefner.]
But Playboy had a different approach.
[Hefner.]
We were always, even in the very beginning when we needed the money, very, very tough in terms of our advertising policy.
I knew for starters that if we accepted the kinds of advertising that appeared in the pulp magazines, I would never be able to turn a magazine with nudes in it into a class publication.
[Hefner.]
I only wanted to run high-class ads, ones that would suit our features and articles.
[Cooper Hefner.]
My dad was very thoughtful about who he wanted to advertise in the magazine because he cared more about reputation than he did actually about the cash on the table.
He didn't want to be in business with people that didn't actually believe in the brand.
[Hefner.]
But now, with sales of Playboy at an all-time high, I knew it was time to start going after the big name brands that I wanted.
[knocking on door.]
Uh, Hef, they're here.
Okay.
Stall them five minutes, then bring them up to the studio.
Okay.
Get Victor to meet me on the second floor.
Now.
[Hefner.]
After months of tracking down potential advertisers, we finally got the attention of one of the most exclusive brands in town.
All I had to do was convince them to work with us.
Every little movement Every little thing you do Is it sleight of hand That commands my heart to love you? Every little movement Every little movement I'd like you to meet Vince Tajiri, our photo department head, Art Paul, art director, and this is Victor Lownes, head of promotions.
Welcome to Playboy.
Thanks very much.
[Lownes.]
Uh, Hef? This is Bob from The Diners' Club.
I'm so sorry to keep you waiting.
Hugh Hefner.
[Hefner.]
In 1955, the first independent charge card in the world was introduced in America.
It was called Diners' Club.
This was before American Express, Visa, or MasterCard were in the credit business, and Diners' Club members could use their cards at some of the best restaurants in the world.
The card was revolutionary, and I had a plan to get it into our magazine.
What do you think of the studio? Everything looks great.
As you may know, Janet here was the first Playmate we photographed ourselves.
Photographing our own models has seen a real spike in readership.
When they see your ad on our pages, I'm predicting they'll choose to spend their money using a Diners' Club card.
[Hefner.]
All it took was one look from Janet and Diners' Club was in.
[Richard Rosenzweig.]
These advertising guys didn't want to talk advertising.
They wanted to ask about the Playmates.
They were fascinated by it, and we were able to take advantage of that.
Why don't you come to my office and we'll talk some numbers.
Sellers? Bye, Janet.
[Hefner.]
With Diners' Club on board, it wasn't long before other big names followed, and soon, Playboy was featuring ads from Marlboro, Chanel, Imperial Whiskey, and Budweiser.
[Victor Lownes.]
When we went to see people like Anheuser-Busch, we could say to them, look, you've got to be in this magazine.
This magazine reaches more college men who are the next generation's leaders.
That was very influential.
[Hefner.]
Our new stream of revenue was enough to keep the business running comfortably meaning I could stay focused on the creative side of things.
[Charlaine Karalus.]
She looks amazing, Vince.
It's a shame they can't be this big in the magazine.
Let's put this up on the board, Vince.
[Hefner.]
Charlaine had a point.
Here in the office, the photographs felt more lifelike.
We started out with these great proofs, but then we had to shrink them down to fit in our magazine.
I knew there had to be a way to give our readers a better experience.
[Art Paul.]
I mean, what are our options here? Hef wants a bigger photo, so, tabloid, am I right? [Eldon Sellers.]
Are you talking about making the entire magazine twice as big? That means everything costs twice as much.
What's wrong with that? [Sellers.]
We've spent three years building a bond with our readers, right? They like the magazine the way it is.
[Ray Russell.]
Think about the ad sales.
[Sellers.]
Bigger ads.
More money.
[Russell.]
There you go, Eldon.
Problem solved.
Look, don't get mad at me 'cause I'm the only one here willing to tell the truth.
Don't get mad at me for calling bullshit.
[laughter.]
We'll just fold it.
Yeah.
Ladies and gentleman, the Playboy centerfold.
[laughter.]
[Bobby Bland.]
Love and affection [Hefner.]
In March of 1956, we put out our first issue ever with a fold-out centerfold featuring model Marian Stafford.
[Bobby Bland.]
I've got it all right here for you You needn't be lonely [Jason Buhrmester.]
The first Playboy centerfold I ever saw was probably in fourth grade at a friend's house.
And it's not just opening the cover.
That centerfold, that fold-out is that tactile experience of opening something and revealing something.
It just seemed like you were opening a door to a whole other world.
[Brett Ratner.]
It wasn't life-size, but you have no idea how many times I made love to that centerfold.
It took me there, visually took me there.
I thought that that girl was right there in front of me.
[Hefner.]
The larger centerfolds were an instant hit with readers and quickly became synonymous with our brand.
To this day, when people hear the word "centerfold," they immediately think of Playboy.
Sales and subscriptions skyrocketed, and in December 1956, we hit a milestone when our third anniversary issue sold over a million copies.
And after just three years, Playboy was the number one men's lifestyle magazine in America.
We had beaten out Esquire, the magazine that, three years earlier, had refused to give me a $5 raise.
We were doing so well, I needed to bring on someone who could focus on the business side of the magazine.
So, I turned to an old friend who knew me better than any of the other guys, Bob Preuss.
Balance sheet? Perfect.
Hef always had someone that he relied on to be the business head.
In the early years, it was Bob Preuss, who'd been his college roommate.
[Hefner.]
Demand for the magazine was rising every month, and our staff could barely keep up.
If we were going to sustain the quality our readers expected from us, we not only needed to add more staff but we also needed someplace to put them.
But we didn't just move to a new office.
This time, we got our own building.
[The Grass Roots.]
The sound of your footsteps [Hefner.]
Four stories, 30,000 square feet.
[The Grass Roots.]
Telling me that you're near [Hefner.]
Plenty of space for our newly expanded staff [The Grass Roots.]
Your soft gentle motion, babe [Hefner.]
now over 100 people.
[The Grass Roots.]
Brings out a need in me That no one can hear Except in my midnight confessions [Hefner.]
We spent a quarter-million dollars to renovate it top to bottom.
It might have been a little indulgent, but I wanted my team to have the very best.
[The Grass Roots.]
When I say all the things that I want to I love you [Hefner.]
We're in my executive offices now on top of the Playboy building.
It's quite late at night and my working hours are kind of strange ones.
I usually begin work about 1:30 or 2:00 in the afternoon.
I get in half a day that way with the staff and things are quite hectic here during the day with conferences and various calls and things to attend to: layouts, editorial matters, etcetera.
Then I go into the second half of my day in the evening, and that's a little quieter.
There's nobody else here to bother me.
It works out pretty well that way.
[Hefner.]
At this point, I pretty much lived in the office full-time, but while my business was growing, so was my family.
In the midst of our mounting success, Millie gave birth to our second child, a boy named David.
But with the magazine taking up all of my time, I'll be the first to admit I wasn't acting like the type of father or husband my family needed.
[Christie Hefner.]
My father wasn't around a lot when my brother and I were growing up, but we would spend Christmas and birthdays with him, so I always thought of him, in hindsight, as kind of like a favorite uncle, someone you were related to who you knew loved you but didn't really know who your friends were or how your grades were going.
[Rosenzweig.]
It was 24/7 for him, which is why he did not really have a family life, even though he was married and had two children.
But he was working night and day.
And that was true for decades.
Arrange a meeting with everybody just to [Hefner.]
With success came attention, and in January of '57, I was invited to profile Playboy on an entirely new platform for me, one that was quickly becoming an American obsession television.
In 1957, television was taking the country by storm, and with only three networks to choose from, CBS, NBC, and ABC, roughly a third of the country might be tuned in to one program.
Good evening, I'm Mike Wallace.
The show is Night Beat.
[Hefner.]
Mike Wallace's Night Beat was a popular talk show known for addressing controversial topics, and I thought it would be the perfect opportunity to spread Playboy's message.
But I had never appeared on TV before, and I'd be lying if I said I wasn't nervous.
I knew that Night Beat was a very hot show in New York, a show that was getting a lot of reaction.
I also knew that it was a tough show and that he was asking tough questions.
And I had done very few interviews, even for print, in those days, because it was the very early days of the magazine.
A little under four years ago, a junior copywriter in Esquire Magazine's promotion department quit in a huff after he was refused a $5 raise.
You ready? And that refusal turned out to be one of the worst decisions ever made at Esquire because the name of that copywriter was Hugh Hefner.
You'll be fine.
He is now the editor-in-chief of Playboy Magazine, which claims to have pushed Esquire right out of first place.
Hugh, we checked this month's issue and found 20 pictures of girls in various stages of undress.
Now, sir, what's the kick that you get out of it? At the time that Playboy started, and this was one of the big reasons for beginning the book, we felt there as no magazine doing a really successful job of entertaining the audience that we're trying to hit.
Let's not hide behind altruistic motives, Hugh.
Chicago Magazine quoted you to the effect that sex will always be a primary ingredient of the magazine.
Isn't that really what you're selling? Kind of a high-class dirty book? Um, well, I don't, uh I'd make a pretty, uh, strong case, uh, in the feeling that the magazine, as far we are concerned, does not over-emphasize sex at all.
You think that this really reflects the tastes and the standards of young, male Americans? Truthfully? Truthfully, without any reservation, yes.
[Mike Wallace.]
When I first did my interview with Hugh Hefner, I wasn't just playing devil's advocate with him.
I thought that he was about to subvert the republic with some of the stuff that he was putting in Playboy Magazine.
What he was doing, basically, was, I thought, vaguely pornographic, vaguely obscene, and he was putting a nice cover on it by finding interesting intellectual stuff to lend a little class to what was essentially a trifle tawdry.
[Hefner.]
When I look at the tape, I see a very nervous kid who didn't have his act together and was searching for words.
Mike didn't take me very seriously.
He said, in between segments of the show, that he figured I'd be doing something else in five years, and I was hurt by that because it suggested to me that he didn't think I was sincere.
[Hefner.]
Mike Wallace had torn me apart on national television, and all I could think was that by appearing on the show unprepared, I had done Playboy more harm than good.
Part and parcel of being in the public eye is, people are going to have something to say about you.
You can either let it bother you, or if you are on the right side, just speak the truth.
[Hefner.]
I had to do something.
I needed to make it clear that I was making a magazine for a sophisticated audience.
[Hefner.]
The first initial dream was to try to package the sort of magazine for a young urban man that I would enjoy if I was a reader, and the perception didn't go much further than that.
Once that began, a time came when I really began to see the possibilities of livin' the life.
[Hefner.]
If I was going to change people's opinion of Playboy, I had to put myself in the spotlight and show the public that I wasn't just some creep peddling sex.
I was the epitome of a modern gentleman.
[Spencer Davis Group.]
Keep on runnin' [Hefner.]
Taking inspiration from famous figures like Frank Sinatra and characters like James Bond, I changed my look.
[Spencer Davis Group.]
Oh yeah Keep on runnin' [Hefner.]
I started dressing sharper [Spencer Davis Group.]
Runnin' from my arms [Hefner.]
and I even added a new accessory to my image, a pipe.
[Spencer Davis Group.]
To make you understand [Hefner.]
For the first time, my photo was prominently featured in the pages of Playboy [Spencer Davis Group.]
Hey hey hey [Hefner.]
paired with an article detailing my interests, fashion sense, musical taste [Spencer Davis Group.]
Hey hey hey [Hefner.]
and my rise to success.
[Spencer Davis Group.]
It makes me feel so sad [Jason Buhrmester.]
He invented the character and then became the character.
I think, in a lot of ways, he was surprised how many American men responded to that and wanted to engage in a lifestyle on that level.
[Hefner.]
In 1959, I was even asked to appear in an ad from a Chicago Mercedes dealership, promoting their 300 SL convertible.
In Chicago, Hefner was almost immediately the biggest celebrity in town, but that spread quickly to the rest of the country.
[Spencer Davis Group.]
Hey hey hey Everyone is talking about me [Hefner.]
For the next two years, I started giving interviews to any publication that would have me [Spencer Davis Group.]
Everyone is laughing at me [Hefner.]
and little by little, I started gaining national notoriety.
[Spencer Davis Group.]
Keep on runnin' I literally became a different person, and I think that the commitment in terms of changing my lifestyle, that wasn't so tough.
There was already a fascination with Playboy as a phenomenon.
It was just a matter of sort of takin' off the Clark Kent outfit and puttin' on the cloak and flyin' out the window.
[Spencer Davis Group.]
Hey hey hey Everyone is talking about me It makes me feel so sad So keep on runnin' Hey hey [Hefner.]
With my star on the rise, all kinds of new business opportunities were on the table for me, and in 1959, the most intriguing was from a local television producer from Chicago named James McGinn.
I want to make a variety show.
Special guests, celebrity performers.
Playmates dressed, of course.
Who did you have in mind to host? You.
You're Mr.
Playboy.
[announcer.]
From Broadway, from Hollywood [Hefner.]
At the end of the '50s, variety shows like The Tonight Show, Sid Caesar's Show of Shows, and The Ed Sullivan Show were pulling in massive ratings.
I realized if Playboy could capture even a small percentage of those viewers, we could extend our brand far beyond just the magazine.
[Cooper Hefner.]
I think the motivation for pursuing television was that it offered another platform to share the brand philosophy.
[Hefner.]
But even with the backing of a Chicago TV station, I knew we faced tough competition.
If we were going to succeed, we needed to come up with a concept that would really set us apart.
Playboy Magazine was always about presenting a fantasy lifestyle beautiful women, high-end design, and the latest in American culture.
I wanted to bring that experience to a television audience, and just like that, Playboy's Penthouse was born.
[Rosenzweig.]
The concept of Playboy's Penthouse was the magazine come to life.
It was a show that was taking place in Hef's living room, and Hef was the host of the party.
[Hefner.]
The show was going to be a huge undertaking, so I asked the entire staff of the magazine to pitch in, including one of our newest hires, Dick Rosenzweig.
[Rosenzweig.]
I began working for Playboy in 1958.
I was hired as an advertising trainee.
But then Eldon came to me and asked me to be the production syndication manager of this new television show.
Nobody really in our company was qualified to do that, but we all chipped in, as we did in those days, and did double and triple duty.
[Hefner.]
We may have had an amateur staff and a tiny budget, but Playboy's growing reputation allowed us to lock in an incredible show line-up.
Stand-up comedian Lenny Bruce, best-selling author Rona Jaffee, 1958 Playmate of the Month Joyce Nizarri, and my personal favorites, jazz legends Ella Fitzgerald and Nat King Cole.
[Hefner.]
I used jazz throughout the '50s as a major element in the magazine.
That music spoke to me and contained those dreams that I identified with so much.
[Hefner.]
We had our lineup complete, but with just days before we aired, we got word that broadcasters in the South were threatening to pull our show.
You have to understand, this was the late 1950s, a time of racial segregation and growing racist sentiments in the South.
In 1959, this is four years after the Montgomery bus boycott, a woman locked up for sitting in the front of a bus who paid the same fare as white people.
In that same season, rights workers were killed trying to register people to vote and had to beg the Department of Justice and the FBI to intervene during that very ugly transition from slavery to Jim Crow desegregation.
It was a very violent season of fear and polarization.
[Hefner.]
Protests on both sides were breaking out across the country, and with our program planning to show white and black people socializing, Southern television stations were outraged.
So either we pull Nat and Ella or they pull us? Pretty much.
Look, gentlemen, we cannot afford to lose the South.
That's half our audience.
The stations have all the power.
Fuck the stations.
It's censorship.
Nat King Cole stays and so does everyone else.
We're making the show I want to make, and if the South pulls us, they pull us.
We start taping tomorrow night.
[Dick Cavett.]
People who were not old enough to be around back then and see those Playboy shows would probably see nothing wrong with them.
Why not have black artists and black musicians and black comedians and black guests? But in the '50s, that was very much a red flag to certain people and even stations in certain parts of this country, and Hefner's intentional ability to break that barrier was really a public service on his part and rather daring.
[Hefner.]
On October 24th, 1959, we premiered our first episode of Playboy's Penthouse, and sadly, the Southern stations stuck to their guns and refused to air it.
But we had made something I was truly proud of.
I'll admit, I was nervous to be the frontman on a brand-new television show, but I was excited to see my vision on TV.
Hello there.
Glad you could join us this evening.
I'm Hugh Hefner, editor/publisher of Playboy Magazine, and your host.
This is Playboy's Penthouse.
Come on in and meet some of our guests.
Well, here we have Eleanor Bradley and Ms.
Joyce Nazarri, two of our most popular Playmates, and Lenny Bruce, foremost exponent of sick humor and Oh! [laughing.]
Isn't that sick? Oh, boy, the champagne is really making my nose bubbly, Uncle Hugh.
Nat, what a surprise! Great.
I'm very pleased you could come up this evening.
- Thank you.
- Come on in.
[Hefner.]
I was proud to feature Nat King Cole and Ella Fitzgerald as two of our first guests.
Thank you.
Nat, this is Spec, A.
C.
Spectorsky.
[Hefner.]
They represented the best in American jazz, and our show wouldn't have been complete without them.
[Rosenzweig.]
These were very talented professionals in their line of work, jazz, and Hefner has always felt that it was right and proper to have the most talented and interesting people on this show.
It's great having you with us, Ella.
A real pleasure, as always.
The group is here, and I wonder if you'd sing a song for us.
Well, we can try and do something for you.
[Ratner.]
It was so cleverly filmed and photographed because it was a subjective camera.
You were the audience walking into that penthouse.
You were watching them.
You felt like you were there with them.
And that's when I think Hef started being a kind of living, breathing visual interpretation of that man that you're reading about.
[Hefner.]
It was exactly what I had envisioned.
It was hip, fun, and thanks to our featured Playmates, it was also sexy.
I saw it as a chance for Playboy to become bigger than just a magazine.
Bring another drink [Hefner.]
But without the South, there was no guarantee that we'd pull in enough viewers to keep the show on the air.
[Jesse Jackson.]
There were a few people who had the courage of their convictions to stand with us.
Hefner's money and reputation was on the line.
He identified unequivocally with social justice and with the civil rights movement of that time.
[chatter.]
[knocking.]
The ratings data came in, and I wanted you to hear it from me first.
Is it good or bad? [sighing.]
They want to make a 26-week commitment.
- Really? - Yeah.
They're even asking about a second season.
A second Congratulations, Mr.
Playboy.
[laughter.]
[Hefner.]
Even without the South, the response was better than I had expected.
[David Eisenbach.]
The civil rights movement has a particularly profound effect on the younger generation and on those who want to see themselves as hip and cool.
It is no longer cool and hip to be racist.
And Hugh Hefner latches onto that notion.
He feels it.
[Hefner.]
Papers across the country were talking about us.
The show was a hit, and we went on to book even bigger names.
If he does that again, I'll punch him a shot in the mouth.
[Patty Farmer.]
Sammy Davis was a big visitor, as was Tony Bennett Tony's gonna wail a little bit here.
[Patty Farmer.]
who was a great friend to playboy Cy Coleman, so it was just a litany of who the cream of the crop was in entertainment at that time.
[Hefner.]
The success of Playboy's Penthouse only solidified our status as the top-selling men's magazine in the country.
Let's go for two.
Thanks.
[Hefner.]
We had a guaranteed circulation of over a million copies per month, and I was now running a company worth over $20 million.
This is Donna Lynn, our Playmate for November, and if Donna doesn't look exactly like a waitress [Hefner.]
But while my business was going great [Hefner.]
that's because in Hollywood, the scene is a little different.
[Hefner.]
not everything in my life was perfect.
pretty special things, and we thought Donna was pretty special, even by those standards.
[Buhrmester.]
Hef invents the idea of the modern bachelor without really knowing if that person actually exists other than himself, and to tell you the truth, he wasn't even that person.
He was married and living in Chicago.
We'll break for just a minute and we'll be right back.
[Millie Gunn Williams.]
I wasn't seeing him that much.
We would do the holidays, the family days, together, but we weren't acting together as a couple.
He lived his own life.
He didn't do it to be cruel.
It hurt, but it wasn't a deliberate cruelness.
I always respected him, and I think he always respected me.
I think we recognized that we were dissimilar.
We were dissimilar.
And what I wanted, if I were in a marriage, what I wanted from it is something he couldn't give me.
[Hefner.]
After a decade of marriage, Millie and I decided that the best thing for both of us was a divorce.
- Thank you.
- Thank you.
[Hefner.]
I believed, initially, that marriage would be the answer to my romantic dreams, and it wasn't.
And I think that that hurt and disappointment led me in another direction.
[Hefner.]
Now that I was on my own, nothing was stopping me from fully embracing the Playboy lifestyle.
So I did what every guy in his thirties dreams of doing.
I bought a bachelor pad.
[Bobby Bland.]
Sometimes your love [Hefner.]
The four-story, 40-bedroom house was in the heart of Chicago.
I dropped $400,000, or about 3.
2 million today.
[Bobby Bland.]
Sometimes your love [Hefner.]
And if you think that sounds like a lot, I spent another ten times that on renovations.
And let me tell you, it was worth every penny.
[Bobby Bland.]
Is just like honey [Hefner.]
The main room is, of course, my favorite.
It has woodwork in it and a size and magnificence that you rarely find in America today.
It looks more as though it belongs on an English countryside than in the heart of Chicago's near northside.
The hi-fi here in the middle of the room was custom-built for the house, and down below the main room, we have the swimming pool.
It's kind of like walking into a part of Acapulco, I guess you might say.
There are palm trees there and a waterfall.
[Bobby Bland.]
You got a funny little way [Ratner.]
Hef had a pool in his living room, but Hef didn't swim.
Hef had the finest wine, but he doesn't drink.
He's the greatest host ever.
It was about other people's pleasure, for other people to enjoy.
[Hefner.]
In addition to housing Chicago's only private indoor swimming pool, my mansion was fitted with the latest technology, plus a bowling alley, hidden walkways, a movie theater, and a full catering kitchen.
[Bobby Bland.]
You got a funny little way [James Caan.]
This house in Chicago was amazing.
Me and Peter Boyle, we started looking all around the place, and we found ourselves in a swimming pool on the second floor.
And there was this one place where you slid down a pole and you got into this pillowed room that had a glass front and that was the pool.
[Bobby Bland.]
Makes me feel all right [Hefner.]
But the most legendary room of all was my master bedroom.
I designed it to look like something out of a Bond movie, and the centerpiece was a circular, rotating bed.
[Hefner.]
And the point of this, of course, is not simply a merry-go-round.
It's really turned the room itself into four separate living sections so that I can have it facing the hi-fi area, facing the TV over here, or for the work service or the fireplace.
[Bobby Bland.]
Yeah, and it makes me feel all right [Hefner.]
I'd transformed the mansion into a bachelor's paradise, and in December of 1961, I published a ten-page spread in the magazine that gave my readers an inside look.
[Bobby Bland.]
Sometimes your love [Cooper Hefner.]
Every decision that my dad made was about fostering the brand, so the mansion in Chicago was a reflection of the brand's values, which were his values.
It was a place where you could have a really good time but still find intellectual conversation if you wanted to.
It was an adult playground.
[Bobby Bland.]
That's why I don't want No other lover [Hefner.]
With the introduction of the mansion, I literally got out from behind the desk and then it was party time.
[Bobby Bland.]
I said honey child Quiet nights of quiet stars [Hefner.]
What had started out as my home had now become the hottest spot in Chicago.
[Hefner.]
I spent money and invested money in the future of this magazine and company and this dream in a way that made no kind of business sense.
All reason and logic were gone, and everything I touched turned into gold.
[Hefner.]
I was living the life I'd always dreamed of, and I'd finally become the ultimate bachelor.
Every little movement Every motion of your hips I feel the compulsion To pull you to my sweet lips Is it a black magic spell you put me under? This miracle moment Never let it end Every little movement Is beyond improvement You are the magician I've been wishing for forever Every little movement Every little movement
You've been lyin' [Hugh Hefner.]
By winter of 1955, America was rapidly changing.
[Johnny Burnette.]
Little boy blue [Hefner.]
The polio vaccine was officially approved by the FDA.
A small burger joint called McDonald's held its grand opening in Illinois.
[man.]
Disneyland is a delight for all youngsters.
[Hefner.]
Walt Disney opened his first theme park in Anaheim, California.
[Johnny Burnette.]
Little boy sad Someday baby [Hefner.]
And in Chicago, we were still making waves at Playboy.
[Johnny Burnette.]
is gonna give you lovin' as sweet as me [Hefner.]
In the year since we started taking our own photos, we'd begun adding playful elements to our photoshoots, hiding things like a tie or a set of golf clubs, to imply that a man was just off camera and giving our readers something to look for.
[Johnny Burnette.]
Someday, baby, you're gonna find Nobody in the world's gonna give you lovin' [Hefner.]
Thanks to our concept of the girl next door, readership had exploded from 70,000 copies a month in our first issue to 500,000 a month by the end of the year, and with annual sales reaching $3 million, I saw an opportunity to take Playboy even further by going after a source of revenue we'd barely tapped into advertising.
[Carmen McRae.]
Skyliner, skyliner Flying so freely [Hefner.]
After World War II, Americans got back to work, and the economy was booming.
[Carmen McRae.]
Higher, higher, ever higher Sunbeams are [Hefner.]
Suddenly, people had cash to spend on luxuries like cars, TVs, and new appliances, and they spent a lot, so major companies began putting massive amounts of money, over $5 billion a year, into promoting their products.
It was the Golden Age of Advertising.
[Christie Hefner.]
For most magazines, advertising is the largest source of revenue, and advertisers choose where to advertise based on the audience, the price, and the environment.
[Hefner.]
But Playboy had a different approach.
[Hefner.]
We were always, even in the very beginning when we needed the money, very, very tough in terms of our advertising policy.
I knew for starters that if we accepted the kinds of advertising that appeared in the pulp magazines, I would never be able to turn a magazine with nudes in it into a class publication.
[Hefner.]
I only wanted to run high-class ads, ones that would suit our features and articles.
[Cooper Hefner.]
My dad was very thoughtful about who he wanted to advertise in the magazine because he cared more about reputation than he did actually about the cash on the table.
He didn't want to be in business with people that didn't actually believe in the brand.
[Hefner.]
But now, with sales of Playboy at an all-time high, I knew it was time to start going after the big name brands that I wanted.
[knocking on door.]
Uh, Hef, they're here.
Okay.
Stall them five minutes, then bring them up to the studio.
Okay.
Get Victor to meet me on the second floor.
Now.
[Hefner.]
After months of tracking down potential advertisers, we finally got the attention of one of the most exclusive brands in town.
All I had to do was convince them to work with us.
Every little movement Every little thing you do Is it sleight of hand That commands my heart to love you? Every little movement Every little movement I'd like you to meet Vince Tajiri, our photo department head, Art Paul, art director, and this is Victor Lownes, head of promotions.
Welcome to Playboy.
Thanks very much.
[Lownes.]
Uh, Hef? This is Bob from The Diners' Club.
I'm so sorry to keep you waiting.
Hugh Hefner.
[Hefner.]
In 1955, the first independent charge card in the world was introduced in America.
It was called Diners' Club.
This was before American Express, Visa, or MasterCard were in the credit business, and Diners' Club members could use their cards at some of the best restaurants in the world.
The card was revolutionary, and I had a plan to get it into our magazine.
What do you think of the studio? Everything looks great.
As you may know, Janet here was the first Playmate we photographed ourselves.
Photographing our own models has seen a real spike in readership.
When they see your ad on our pages, I'm predicting they'll choose to spend their money using a Diners' Club card.
[Hefner.]
All it took was one look from Janet and Diners' Club was in.
[Richard Rosenzweig.]
These advertising guys didn't want to talk advertising.
They wanted to ask about the Playmates.
They were fascinated by it, and we were able to take advantage of that.
Why don't you come to my office and we'll talk some numbers.
Sellers? Bye, Janet.
[Hefner.]
With Diners' Club on board, it wasn't long before other big names followed, and soon, Playboy was featuring ads from Marlboro, Chanel, Imperial Whiskey, and Budweiser.
[Victor Lownes.]
When we went to see people like Anheuser-Busch, we could say to them, look, you've got to be in this magazine.
This magazine reaches more college men who are the next generation's leaders.
That was very influential.
[Hefner.]
Our new stream of revenue was enough to keep the business running comfortably meaning I could stay focused on the creative side of things.
[Charlaine Karalus.]
She looks amazing, Vince.
It's a shame they can't be this big in the magazine.
Let's put this up on the board, Vince.
[Hefner.]
Charlaine had a point.
Here in the office, the photographs felt more lifelike.
We started out with these great proofs, but then we had to shrink them down to fit in our magazine.
I knew there had to be a way to give our readers a better experience.
[Art Paul.]
I mean, what are our options here? Hef wants a bigger photo, so, tabloid, am I right? [Eldon Sellers.]
Are you talking about making the entire magazine twice as big? That means everything costs twice as much.
What's wrong with that? [Sellers.]
We've spent three years building a bond with our readers, right? They like the magazine the way it is.
[Ray Russell.]
Think about the ad sales.
[Sellers.]
Bigger ads.
More money.
[Russell.]
There you go, Eldon.
Problem solved.
Look, don't get mad at me 'cause I'm the only one here willing to tell the truth.
Don't get mad at me for calling bullshit.
[laughter.]
We'll just fold it.
Yeah.
Ladies and gentleman, the Playboy centerfold.
[laughter.]
[Bobby Bland.]
Love and affection [Hefner.]
In March of 1956, we put out our first issue ever with a fold-out centerfold featuring model Marian Stafford.
[Bobby Bland.]
I've got it all right here for you You needn't be lonely [Jason Buhrmester.]
The first Playboy centerfold I ever saw was probably in fourth grade at a friend's house.
And it's not just opening the cover.
That centerfold, that fold-out is that tactile experience of opening something and revealing something.
It just seemed like you were opening a door to a whole other world.
[Brett Ratner.]
It wasn't life-size, but you have no idea how many times I made love to that centerfold.
It took me there, visually took me there.
I thought that that girl was right there in front of me.
[Hefner.]
The larger centerfolds were an instant hit with readers and quickly became synonymous with our brand.
To this day, when people hear the word "centerfold," they immediately think of Playboy.
Sales and subscriptions skyrocketed, and in December 1956, we hit a milestone when our third anniversary issue sold over a million copies.
And after just three years, Playboy was the number one men's lifestyle magazine in America.
We had beaten out Esquire, the magazine that, three years earlier, had refused to give me a $5 raise.
We were doing so well, I needed to bring on someone who could focus on the business side of the magazine.
So, I turned to an old friend who knew me better than any of the other guys, Bob Preuss.
Balance sheet? Perfect.
Hef always had someone that he relied on to be the business head.
In the early years, it was Bob Preuss, who'd been his college roommate.
[Hefner.]
Demand for the magazine was rising every month, and our staff could barely keep up.
If we were going to sustain the quality our readers expected from us, we not only needed to add more staff but we also needed someplace to put them.
But we didn't just move to a new office.
This time, we got our own building.
[The Grass Roots.]
The sound of your footsteps [Hefner.]
Four stories, 30,000 square feet.
[The Grass Roots.]
Telling me that you're near [Hefner.]
Plenty of space for our newly expanded staff [The Grass Roots.]
Your soft gentle motion, babe [Hefner.]
now over 100 people.
[The Grass Roots.]
Brings out a need in me That no one can hear Except in my midnight confessions [Hefner.]
We spent a quarter-million dollars to renovate it top to bottom.
It might have been a little indulgent, but I wanted my team to have the very best.
[The Grass Roots.]
When I say all the things that I want to I love you [Hefner.]
We're in my executive offices now on top of the Playboy building.
It's quite late at night and my working hours are kind of strange ones.
I usually begin work about 1:30 or 2:00 in the afternoon.
I get in half a day that way with the staff and things are quite hectic here during the day with conferences and various calls and things to attend to: layouts, editorial matters, etcetera.
Then I go into the second half of my day in the evening, and that's a little quieter.
There's nobody else here to bother me.
It works out pretty well that way.
[Hefner.]
At this point, I pretty much lived in the office full-time, but while my business was growing, so was my family.
In the midst of our mounting success, Millie gave birth to our second child, a boy named David.
But with the magazine taking up all of my time, I'll be the first to admit I wasn't acting like the type of father or husband my family needed.
[Christie Hefner.]
My father wasn't around a lot when my brother and I were growing up, but we would spend Christmas and birthdays with him, so I always thought of him, in hindsight, as kind of like a favorite uncle, someone you were related to who you knew loved you but didn't really know who your friends were or how your grades were going.
[Rosenzweig.]
It was 24/7 for him, which is why he did not really have a family life, even though he was married and had two children.
But he was working night and day.
And that was true for decades.
Arrange a meeting with everybody just to [Hefner.]
With success came attention, and in January of '57, I was invited to profile Playboy on an entirely new platform for me, one that was quickly becoming an American obsession television.
In 1957, television was taking the country by storm, and with only three networks to choose from, CBS, NBC, and ABC, roughly a third of the country might be tuned in to one program.
Good evening, I'm Mike Wallace.
The show is Night Beat.
[Hefner.]
Mike Wallace's Night Beat was a popular talk show known for addressing controversial topics, and I thought it would be the perfect opportunity to spread Playboy's message.
But I had never appeared on TV before, and I'd be lying if I said I wasn't nervous.
I knew that Night Beat was a very hot show in New York, a show that was getting a lot of reaction.
I also knew that it was a tough show and that he was asking tough questions.
And I had done very few interviews, even for print, in those days, because it was the very early days of the magazine.
A little under four years ago, a junior copywriter in Esquire Magazine's promotion department quit in a huff after he was refused a $5 raise.
You ready? And that refusal turned out to be one of the worst decisions ever made at Esquire because the name of that copywriter was Hugh Hefner.
You'll be fine.
He is now the editor-in-chief of Playboy Magazine, which claims to have pushed Esquire right out of first place.
Hugh, we checked this month's issue and found 20 pictures of girls in various stages of undress.
Now, sir, what's the kick that you get out of it? At the time that Playboy started, and this was one of the big reasons for beginning the book, we felt there as no magazine doing a really successful job of entertaining the audience that we're trying to hit.
Let's not hide behind altruistic motives, Hugh.
Chicago Magazine quoted you to the effect that sex will always be a primary ingredient of the magazine.
Isn't that really what you're selling? Kind of a high-class dirty book? Um, well, I don't, uh I'd make a pretty, uh, strong case, uh, in the feeling that the magazine, as far we are concerned, does not over-emphasize sex at all.
You think that this really reflects the tastes and the standards of young, male Americans? Truthfully? Truthfully, without any reservation, yes.
[Mike Wallace.]
When I first did my interview with Hugh Hefner, I wasn't just playing devil's advocate with him.
I thought that he was about to subvert the republic with some of the stuff that he was putting in Playboy Magazine.
What he was doing, basically, was, I thought, vaguely pornographic, vaguely obscene, and he was putting a nice cover on it by finding interesting intellectual stuff to lend a little class to what was essentially a trifle tawdry.
[Hefner.]
When I look at the tape, I see a very nervous kid who didn't have his act together and was searching for words.
Mike didn't take me very seriously.
He said, in between segments of the show, that he figured I'd be doing something else in five years, and I was hurt by that because it suggested to me that he didn't think I was sincere.
[Hefner.]
Mike Wallace had torn me apart on national television, and all I could think was that by appearing on the show unprepared, I had done Playboy more harm than good.
Part and parcel of being in the public eye is, people are going to have something to say about you.
You can either let it bother you, or if you are on the right side, just speak the truth.
[Hefner.]
I had to do something.
I needed to make it clear that I was making a magazine for a sophisticated audience.
[Hefner.]
The first initial dream was to try to package the sort of magazine for a young urban man that I would enjoy if I was a reader, and the perception didn't go much further than that.
Once that began, a time came when I really began to see the possibilities of livin' the life.
[Hefner.]
If I was going to change people's opinion of Playboy, I had to put myself in the spotlight and show the public that I wasn't just some creep peddling sex.
I was the epitome of a modern gentleman.
[Spencer Davis Group.]
Keep on runnin' [Hefner.]
Taking inspiration from famous figures like Frank Sinatra and characters like James Bond, I changed my look.
[Spencer Davis Group.]
Oh yeah Keep on runnin' [Hefner.]
I started dressing sharper [Spencer Davis Group.]
Runnin' from my arms [Hefner.]
and I even added a new accessory to my image, a pipe.
[Spencer Davis Group.]
To make you understand [Hefner.]
For the first time, my photo was prominently featured in the pages of Playboy [Spencer Davis Group.]
Hey hey hey [Hefner.]
paired with an article detailing my interests, fashion sense, musical taste [Spencer Davis Group.]
Hey hey hey [Hefner.]
and my rise to success.
[Spencer Davis Group.]
It makes me feel so sad [Jason Buhrmester.]
He invented the character and then became the character.
I think, in a lot of ways, he was surprised how many American men responded to that and wanted to engage in a lifestyle on that level.
[Hefner.]
In 1959, I was even asked to appear in an ad from a Chicago Mercedes dealership, promoting their 300 SL convertible.
In Chicago, Hefner was almost immediately the biggest celebrity in town, but that spread quickly to the rest of the country.
[Spencer Davis Group.]
Hey hey hey Everyone is talking about me [Hefner.]
For the next two years, I started giving interviews to any publication that would have me [Spencer Davis Group.]
Everyone is laughing at me [Hefner.]
and little by little, I started gaining national notoriety.
[Spencer Davis Group.]
Keep on runnin' I literally became a different person, and I think that the commitment in terms of changing my lifestyle, that wasn't so tough.
There was already a fascination with Playboy as a phenomenon.
It was just a matter of sort of takin' off the Clark Kent outfit and puttin' on the cloak and flyin' out the window.
[Spencer Davis Group.]
Hey hey hey Everyone is talking about me It makes me feel so sad So keep on runnin' Hey hey [Hefner.]
With my star on the rise, all kinds of new business opportunities were on the table for me, and in 1959, the most intriguing was from a local television producer from Chicago named James McGinn.
I want to make a variety show.
Special guests, celebrity performers.
Playmates dressed, of course.
Who did you have in mind to host? You.
You're Mr.
Playboy.
[announcer.]
From Broadway, from Hollywood [Hefner.]
At the end of the '50s, variety shows like The Tonight Show, Sid Caesar's Show of Shows, and The Ed Sullivan Show were pulling in massive ratings.
I realized if Playboy could capture even a small percentage of those viewers, we could extend our brand far beyond just the magazine.
[Cooper Hefner.]
I think the motivation for pursuing television was that it offered another platform to share the brand philosophy.
[Hefner.]
But even with the backing of a Chicago TV station, I knew we faced tough competition.
If we were going to succeed, we needed to come up with a concept that would really set us apart.
Playboy Magazine was always about presenting a fantasy lifestyle beautiful women, high-end design, and the latest in American culture.
I wanted to bring that experience to a television audience, and just like that, Playboy's Penthouse was born.
[Rosenzweig.]
The concept of Playboy's Penthouse was the magazine come to life.
It was a show that was taking place in Hef's living room, and Hef was the host of the party.
[Hefner.]
The show was going to be a huge undertaking, so I asked the entire staff of the magazine to pitch in, including one of our newest hires, Dick Rosenzweig.
[Rosenzweig.]
I began working for Playboy in 1958.
I was hired as an advertising trainee.
But then Eldon came to me and asked me to be the production syndication manager of this new television show.
Nobody really in our company was qualified to do that, but we all chipped in, as we did in those days, and did double and triple duty.
[Hefner.]
We may have had an amateur staff and a tiny budget, but Playboy's growing reputation allowed us to lock in an incredible show line-up.
Stand-up comedian Lenny Bruce, best-selling author Rona Jaffee, 1958 Playmate of the Month Joyce Nizarri, and my personal favorites, jazz legends Ella Fitzgerald and Nat King Cole.
[Hefner.]
I used jazz throughout the '50s as a major element in the magazine.
That music spoke to me and contained those dreams that I identified with so much.
[Hefner.]
We had our lineup complete, but with just days before we aired, we got word that broadcasters in the South were threatening to pull our show.
You have to understand, this was the late 1950s, a time of racial segregation and growing racist sentiments in the South.
In 1959, this is four years after the Montgomery bus boycott, a woman locked up for sitting in the front of a bus who paid the same fare as white people.
In that same season, rights workers were killed trying to register people to vote and had to beg the Department of Justice and the FBI to intervene during that very ugly transition from slavery to Jim Crow desegregation.
It was a very violent season of fear and polarization.
[Hefner.]
Protests on both sides were breaking out across the country, and with our program planning to show white and black people socializing, Southern television stations were outraged.
So either we pull Nat and Ella or they pull us? Pretty much.
Look, gentlemen, we cannot afford to lose the South.
That's half our audience.
The stations have all the power.
Fuck the stations.
It's censorship.
Nat King Cole stays and so does everyone else.
We're making the show I want to make, and if the South pulls us, they pull us.
We start taping tomorrow night.
[Dick Cavett.]
People who were not old enough to be around back then and see those Playboy shows would probably see nothing wrong with them.
Why not have black artists and black musicians and black comedians and black guests? But in the '50s, that was very much a red flag to certain people and even stations in certain parts of this country, and Hefner's intentional ability to break that barrier was really a public service on his part and rather daring.
[Hefner.]
On October 24th, 1959, we premiered our first episode of Playboy's Penthouse, and sadly, the Southern stations stuck to their guns and refused to air it.
But we had made something I was truly proud of.
I'll admit, I was nervous to be the frontman on a brand-new television show, but I was excited to see my vision on TV.
Hello there.
Glad you could join us this evening.
I'm Hugh Hefner, editor/publisher of Playboy Magazine, and your host.
This is Playboy's Penthouse.
Come on in and meet some of our guests.
Well, here we have Eleanor Bradley and Ms.
Joyce Nazarri, two of our most popular Playmates, and Lenny Bruce, foremost exponent of sick humor and Oh! [laughing.]
Isn't that sick? Oh, boy, the champagne is really making my nose bubbly, Uncle Hugh.
Nat, what a surprise! Great.
I'm very pleased you could come up this evening.
- Thank you.
- Come on in.
[Hefner.]
I was proud to feature Nat King Cole and Ella Fitzgerald as two of our first guests.
Thank you.
Nat, this is Spec, A.
C.
Spectorsky.
[Hefner.]
They represented the best in American jazz, and our show wouldn't have been complete without them.
[Rosenzweig.]
These were very talented professionals in their line of work, jazz, and Hefner has always felt that it was right and proper to have the most talented and interesting people on this show.
It's great having you with us, Ella.
A real pleasure, as always.
The group is here, and I wonder if you'd sing a song for us.
Well, we can try and do something for you.
[Ratner.]
It was so cleverly filmed and photographed because it was a subjective camera.
You were the audience walking into that penthouse.
You were watching them.
You felt like you were there with them.
And that's when I think Hef started being a kind of living, breathing visual interpretation of that man that you're reading about.
[Hefner.]
It was exactly what I had envisioned.
It was hip, fun, and thanks to our featured Playmates, it was also sexy.
I saw it as a chance for Playboy to become bigger than just a magazine.
Bring another drink [Hefner.]
But without the South, there was no guarantee that we'd pull in enough viewers to keep the show on the air.
[Jesse Jackson.]
There were a few people who had the courage of their convictions to stand with us.
Hefner's money and reputation was on the line.
He identified unequivocally with social justice and with the civil rights movement of that time.
[chatter.]
[knocking.]
The ratings data came in, and I wanted you to hear it from me first.
Is it good or bad? [sighing.]
They want to make a 26-week commitment.
- Really? - Yeah.
They're even asking about a second season.
A second Congratulations, Mr.
Playboy.
[laughter.]
[Hefner.]
Even without the South, the response was better than I had expected.
[David Eisenbach.]
The civil rights movement has a particularly profound effect on the younger generation and on those who want to see themselves as hip and cool.
It is no longer cool and hip to be racist.
And Hugh Hefner latches onto that notion.
He feels it.
[Hefner.]
Papers across the country were talking about us.
The show was a hit, and we went on to book even bigger names.
If he does that again, I'll punch him a shot in the mouth.
[Patty Farmer.]
Sammy Davis was a big visitor, as was Tony Bennett Tony's gonna wail a little bit here.
[Patty Farmer.]
who was a great friend to playboy Cy Coleman, so it was just a litany of who the cream of the crop was in entertainment at that time.
[Hefner.]
The success of Playboy's Penthouse only solidified our status as the top-selling men's magazine in the country.
Let's go for two.
Thanks.
[Hefner.]
We had a guaranteed circulation of over a million copies per month, and I was now running a company worth over $20 million.
This is Donna Lynn, our Playmate for November, and if Donna doesn't look exactly like a waitress [Hefner.]
But while my business was going great [Hefner.]
that's because in Hollywood, the scene is a little different.
[Hefner.]
not everything in my life was perfect.
pretty special things, and we thought Donna was pretty special, even by those standards.
[Buhrmester.]
Hef invents the idea of the modern bachelor without really knowing if that person actually exists other than himself, and to tell you the truth, he wasn't even that person.
He was married and living in Chicago.
We'll break for just a minute and we'll be right back.
[Millie Gunn Williams.]
I wasn't seeing him that much.
We would do the holidays, the family days, together, but we weren't acting together as a couple.
He lived his own life.
He didn't do it to be cruel.
It hurt, but it wasn't a deliberate cruelness.
I always respected him, and I think he always respected me.
I think we recognized that we were dissimilar.
We were dissimilar.
And what I wanted, if I were in a marriage, what I wanted from it is something he couldn't give me.
[Hefner.]
After a decade of marriage, Millie and I decided that the best thing for both of us was a divorce.
- Thank you.
- Thank you.
[Hefner.]
I believed, initially, that marriage would be the answer to my romantic dreams, and it wasn't.
And I think that that hurt and disappointment led me in another direction.
[Hefner.]
Now that I was on my own, nothing was stopping me from fully embracing the Playboy lifestyle.
So I did what every guy in his thirties dreams of doing.
I bought a bachelor pad.
[Bobby Bland.]
Sometimes your love [Hefner.]
The four-story, 40-bedroom house was in the heart of Chicago.
I dropped $400,000, or about 3.
2 million today.
[Bobby Bland.]
Sometimes your love [Hefner.]
And if you think that sounds like a lot, I spent another ten times that on renovations.
And let me tell you, it was worth every penny.
[Bobby Bland.]
Is just like honey [Hefner.]
The main room is, of course, my favorite.
It has woodwork in it and a size and magnificence that you rarely find in America today.
It looks more as though it belongs on an English countryside than in the heart of Chicago's near northside.
The hi-fi here in the middle of the room was custom-built for the house, and down below the main room, we have the swimming pool.
It's kind of like walking into a part of Acapulco, I guess you might say.
There are palm trees there and a waterfall.
[Bobby Bland.]
You got a funny little way [Ratner.]
Hef had a pool in his living room, but Hef didn't swim.
Hef had the finest wine, but he doesn't drink.
He's the greatest host ever.
It was about other people's pleasure, for other people to enjoy.
[Hefner.]
In addition to housing Chicago's only private indoor swimming pool, my mansion was fitted with the latest technology, plus a bowling alley, hidden walkways, a movie theater, and a full catering kitchen.
[Bobby Bland.]
You got a funny little way [James Caan.]
This house in Chicago was amazing.
Me and Peter Boyle, we started looking all around the place, and we found ourselves in a swimming pool on the second floor.
And there was this one place where you slid down a pole and you got into this pillowed room that had a glass front and that was the pool.
[Bobby Bland.]
Makes me feel all right [Hefner.]
But the most legendary room of all was my master bedroom.
I designed it to look like something out of a Bond movie, and the centerpiece was a circular, rotating bed.
[Hefner.]
And the point of this, of course, is not simply a merry-go-round.
It's really turned the room itself into four separate living sections so that I can have it facing the hi-fi area, facing the TV over here, or for the work service or the fireplace.
[Bobby Bland.]
Yeah, and it makes me feel all right [Hefner.]
I'd transformed the mansion into a bachelor's paradise, and in December of 1961, I published a ten-page spread in the magazine that gave my readers an inside look.
[Bobby Bland.]
Sometimes your love [Cooper Hefner.]
Every decision that my dad made was about fostering the brand, so the mansion in Chicago was a reflection of the brand's values, which were his values.
It was a place where you could have a really good time but still find intellectual conversation if you wanted to.
It was an adult playground.
[Bobby Bland.]
That's why I don't want No other lover [Hefner.]
With the introduction of the mansion, I literally got out from behind the desk and then it was party time.
[Bobby Bland.]
I said honey child Quiet nights of quiet stars [Hefner.]
What had started out as my home had now become the hottest spot in Chicago.
[Hefner.]
I spent money and invested money in the future of this magazine and company and this dream in a way that made no kind of business sense.
All reason and logic were gone, and everything I touched turned into gold.
[Hefner.]
I was living the life I'd always dreamed of, and I'd finally become the ultimate bachelor.
Every little movement Every motion of your hips I feel the compulsion To pull you to my sweet lips Is it a black magic spell you put me under? This miracle moment Never let it end Every little movement Is beyond improvement You are the magician I've been wishing for forever Every little movement Every little movement