Playboy founder Hugh Hefner, hedonistic symbol of sexual revolution, dead at 91
‘Hef’, who built an empire based on buxom models and the louche lifestyle that he embodied, will be buried next to Marilyn Monroe
Hugh Hefner, the founder of Playboy magazine who turned his swinging lifestyle into a professional calling and taught Americans to be more open about sex, has died. He was 91.
Hefner died from natural causes surrounded by friends and family at his home, the Playboy Mansion, in Los Angeles, according to a post on Playboy’s official Twitter feed and a news release published on PR Newswire. Hefner is to be buried in a crypt he bought next to the grave of Marilyn Monroe in Los Angeles.
Pictures of a nude Monroe catapulted Playboy to success with its first edition in 1953.
The direct descendant of a Puritan who arrived in America on the Mayflower, Hefner shattered traditional attitudes to sex in the 1950s and ’60s with centrefold pictorials of semi-naked women and articles on gender relations. Playboy’s celebration of the female body and redefinition of male pastimes transformed sex from a forbidden topic into dinner-table conversation.