Friday, February 26, 2010

Centefold Venus of the Month 9: February - Linda Lusardi

Linda's centrefold from 33 years ago


We move outside the big two this month to return to February 1977 and the then 18 year old Linda Lusardi from Britain's Mayfair magazine.




Linda, or Lynda, as the pictorial had it, had been discovered by Photographer John Allum's wife model, and later photographer herself, Joanie.


Photographers John and Joanie Allum today


Linda was born in Palmer's Green in North London (now more famous for the fact that it has the largest Cypriot population outside Cyprus) and at the time this pictorial appeared she was still living with her parents in nearby Winchmore Hill.


Linda tweaks her self into action

Linda was about to make her first Page 3 appearance in The Sun newspaper and would later be voted "Best Page 3 girl ever" in 2005.




As we mentioned in a post over on The Adventures of Triple P we are not entirely convinced by her looks later in her career but feel that here, as a teenager, her face was somewhat softer than it became later. She certainly displays her magnificent 35C-23-34 figure to advantage in these pictures.


Girls and poles, eh?


Later in her career she denied ever doing full frontal shots but even in those pre-internet days it didn't take long for pictures from this shoot and another even more explicit set from Fiesta (under the name Suzanne) the following year to resurface. UK Penthouse republished some of these shots together with some from Fiesta in 1985. She also appeared in some continental magazines so fibbing about it was hopeless, especially as she appeared under her real name in this pictorial!


Lovely back view


Latterly, she has had a successful career as an actress. She had a role on dreadful Yorkshire based farming soap Emmerdale back in 2007 but left in 2008 to "concentrate on her family". Only yesterday, however, she said she would like to go back to Emmercale. Obviously the family is not as exciting as a regular pay cheque!



Linda is one of the most searched models on The Adventures of Triple P site so although we are not a huge fan we are, as ever, very happy to deliver what our discerning readers want.


One problem, that seems to fox many people, however, is how to spell her surname. We get a baffling collection of alternative spellings: Lusadi, Luserdi, Lucardi (obviously not Italian speakers as that would be a hard "c") etc.


February 1977 cover


Here we have the cover of the issue in question. Below we can see a shot done at the same time which Agent Triple P remembers with great affection.


Calendar girl


This was used in a calendar which must have appeared in 1979 as we remember this picture being in it. It was on the wall of the office in Heathrow Airport where Triple P worked for a time between school and university. It was very much our favourite picture of the twelve.



Needless to say you couldn't have a calendar up in an office like this anymore as the politically correct "wimmin" (or even worse, politically correct men) would make you take it down.




There were a number of women working in that office at that time and none of them objected to the calendar at all and in fact used to join in the debate about who was the best girl. We seem to remember that Linda's picture was everyone's favourite.


Splendid!


In fact, when Triple P left one of the girls in the office gave us the page from the calendar as a goodbye present! She was also suggesting that perhaps we could take some pictures of her. However, she was 28 at the time and Triple P was only 18 so we found her far too intimidating to follow her up on it, sadly, as she was a very finely contructed young lady indeed.

Mayfair issue 1



Mayfair is now the most collectable mens' magazine in the UkK, consistently going for highr prices than its contemporaries.  We recently saw this first issue being advertised at around £500. The magazine was first published by Fisk publishing in August 1966 riding on the back of the success of Penthouse, which had first appeared in Britain the year before.




The brainchild of Brian Fisk, the editor was Kenneth Bound who would stay at the helm until 1990. The magazine was very succesful and in 1968 it took over its slightly earlier (1964) rival King. In 1982 Robert Maxwell tried to buy the title from Fisk's widow. At this point the magazine's circulation was around 430,000 a month. Maxwell said: 'It is the Playboy of the British magazine world. It is not a "girlie" magazine - the best evidence of this is that it is the only one of its type which WH Smith distribute as well as Playboy.'



Bound, however, launched a management buyout and ran it for another seven years before selling to Paul Raymond publications who thereby acquired their last main rival (circulation was nearly 300,000 copies a month at this point).





Mayfair is still published but is more explicit than in the Fisk/Bound era. Unlike the Paul Raymond publications it never really followed Penthouse down the explicit genitalia route in the mid seventies and these pictures of Linda are typical of the level of explicitness shown from the magazine in the late seventies.





Agent Triple P is, of course, a completist so will finish this entry with half a dozen pictures taken by John Allum during the shoot which didn't appear in the February 1977 magazine.





These pictures would have been too explicit for Mayfair at this time as Linda is showing far too much pussy.





More fruit for Linda.




Linda brushes up. Nice tummy button!





Monday, February 22, 2010

Curling Venus: Claudia Toth


Claudia Toth


Agent Triple P enjoys watching the Winter Olympics much more than the summer games, although for many reasons Vancouver 2010 has not been as satisactory as others he has watched in the past. He should be very involved in the whole thing but isn't somehow. This is odd as he has visted Vancouver and Whistler many times and the only other Winter Olpmpics city he has has been to was Innsbruck. He is very familiar with the locations of the events therefore. He was even involved with VANOC the organising committee for a while on a couple of issues.

Claudia uses a whole body sensing technique to decide where her next stones should be carved from


One big issue is that Vancouver just doesn't look wintry enough. Its nice to see Hazel Irvine giving her updates from the end of Canada Place with the lovely piles of sulphur in the background but it should be snowy mountains and fir trees not ships and float planes!

Claudia and the Austrian curling team: the other babe is her sister




The other problem, of course, is the eight hour time diference. Triple P has missed most of the ski-ing events which are shown early evening UK time. Switching on live, at present, for the late night show it is always curling. Triple P has been to several curling rinks in Canada. It is a very popular sport there. He even had a meeting in the cafe of the curling rink in Maple Ridge, BC once! What he wants to watch is bobsleigh, ski-ing and maybe a few stick-like women (where is the new Katarina Witt?) in short skirts in the figure skating. What he gets is curling. The problem with curling is that it is completely addictive to watch. Triple P has been staying up until 1.30am watching men and women sliding bits of Scottish granite over the ice. I suppose it's one of the few sports where great Britain has any chance of winning a medal: our bob-skeleton lady Amy Williams, being something of a surprise winner. Incidentally, we are sure that at Salt Lake City it was called skeleton-bob but now they have reversed this, presumably so it doesn't sound like a character from Pirates of the Caribbean.

Very much Triple P's sort of woman!


Anyway, back to curling and the rather splendid Claudia Toth captain (or "skip" as we afficionados know it!) of the Austrian team of a few years ago. Sadly, Austria didn't make the curling for this Olympics so we will have to make do with these pictures from a couple of years back. Claudia was the former girlfriend of America's wayward skier, Bode Miller, until he dumped her. Is he insane? Er, well he was the man who went out on a heavy drinking session before the 2006 Olympic downhill race and, not surprisingly, failed to deliver his predicted gold medal.


Claudia gets her rock off

The black and white photos of Claudia are from a women of curling (honestly!) calendar from 2005. Claudia turned down German Playboy, sadly, but she is still a fine looking young lady for some icy sliding fun. She is obviously good with a broom as well, which would be very useful given the state of Agent Triple P's study floor at present.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Japanese diving Venus: Awabi fisher by Hiroaki Takahashi

Awabi Fisher (c. 1936)


This print by Hiroaki Takahashi was published by Fusui Shobo who, like others in this short Shin Hanga period, was inspired by the classic Ukiyoe artists of classical times. This picture also owes a lot to Goyo in its restrained use of patterened colour with a bold female nude.

Hiroaki, who also used the name "Shotei", was born in Tokyo in 1871. He first studied classical Japanese painting at the age of nine. He started producing prints for the publisher Watanabe in 1907 but unlike Goyo was much more prolific: producing some 500 prints for Watanabe before the disastrous Kanto earthquake of 1923 and another 250 afterwards. He also produced another 200 prints for Shobido Tanaka. This is a rather atypical print for Hiroaki who tended to concentrate on landscapes such as the one below.

River boats in the evening (c.1930) by Hiroaki Takahashi


The girls who dived for Awabi (abalone) had a reputation in Japan for great sensuality and the artist has captured the effect of long, wet hair on bare shoulders in an almost tactile way.

These diving girls (Ama) were the exception in Japanese art to the non-depiction of nudes and many of the classical artists depicted Awabi or pearl divers.



This earlier picture, by Toyohara Kunichika (1835-1900), depicts Awabi divers in action and was published in 1886.

Most Popular Items: January 2010

Elizabeth Ann Roberts. We wonder if the radio is one too?



Here are the most popular searched items for January (December's ranking in brackets). Seven new entries and seven girls drop out this month.

1 (2) Pubic Wars. Two more episodes this week!
2 (3) Elizabeth Ann Roberts. Back up a place.
3 (2) Louann Fernald. Drops one against Elizabeth Ann.
4 (4) Sue and Louise Elvin. Naughty Australian mother and daughter.
5 (7) Lani Todd. Strong showing takes her into the top 5 for first time.
6 (-) Avril Lund. New entry for early Penthouse Pet of the Year.
7 (10) Jennifer Lewis. Cyber girl bounces back.
8 (6) Melodye Prentiss. A long-term favourite.
9 (-) Alenka Bikar. New entry for Slovenian sprinter with distinctive posterior.
10 (13) Evelyn Treacher. First US Penthouse Pet climbs a couple.
11 (9) Veronika Zemanova. Busty Czech continues slow slide.
12 (8) Gloria Root. Another long-term favourite Playmate.
13 (-) Ulla Lindstrom. New entry for Penthouse Pet and first Page 3 girl.
14 (16) Lenna Sjööblom. Up again for most scanned woman.
15 (5) Hyapatia Lee. Big drop for porn star.
16 (-) Maureen O'Hara. Popular Hollywood star of the past.
17 (-) September Morn. Chabas' popular "naughty" painting.
18 (-) Polynesian Girls. The lureof South Seas sirens.
19 (14) Ola Jordan. Still in there despite end of Strictly.
20 (-) Susan Ryder. Naughty Penthouse cutie from the seventies.

The top ten artistic searches were:

1 (7) September Morn. Girl in a lake hits main top 20.
2 (3) Flaming June. Lord Leighton's orange masterpiece.
3 (1) Marie-Louise O'Murphy. Boucher's (and Casanova's and Louis XIV's) girl.
4 (-) David Hamilton. Just one picture on the blog attracted a lot of hits for English born photographer.
5 (5) Lady Godiva. In her many guises.
6 (-) Syrinx by Arthur Hacker. Poor nymph chopped up to make pan pipes.
7 (-) Aphrodite of Kyrene. Greek statue from Libya.
8 (4) David Wright. Forties and fifties pin-up artist.
9 (9) Courbet's Nude in White Stockings.
10 (2 ) Lady Godiva by John Collier.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Venus Revealed: The Pubic Wars 4 1972 Part 2



The second half of 1972 would see the arrival of Playboy's new Oui magazine; designed to poach readers from Bob Guccione's increasingly popular Penthouse. Playboy's July cover, which advertised an article on the history of lingerie inside, was a collage of vintage photographs and much more imaginiative than Penthouse's efforts.

Carol O'Neal for Playboy in July 1972


July saw another pubic Playmate, only the third in thirteen months, Carol O'Neal who was the first Playmate to be shot by later Playboy mainstay photographer Richard Fegley. Carol had been a receptionist for Playboy in Chicago but later married the Chicago Bears quarterback who she met during the shooting of her pictorial.


Paula Pritchet flashes again for July 72


The July issue also carried a feature on two Paulas: actress Pritchett and dancer Kelly.  Co-incidentally (or maybe not) these two had been some of the very first pubic girls in the magazine.




By the middle of 1972 Penthouse's circulation had just passed two million. This was a still a long way short of Playboy but was considerably more than any of the opposition and a significant increase on the original US circulation of less than three years before.


Lesley Sprawls


Pet of the Month for July, Lesley Harrison demonstrated how much the Penthouse girls were now sprawling about with their legs akimbo.  So much so in this case that Guccione had had to resort to the concealing properties of flowers once more.  This time it wasn't the whole pubic area being concealed but just where her labia might be visible.  Guccione, it seems, had already identified the next taboo zone to be attacked.  Also inside Penthouse suffered from a slight case of Playboy-like pictorial as their other photo feature featured minior actress Brooke Mills who kept her nether regions well covered in 1960s style.




Over at Playboy Enterprises Inc. they were getting ready to launch their version of Lui magazine into the US market, which they had christened Oui (although this name caused some concern in the US where many readers didn't know how to pronounce the title). Hugh Hefner had decided that the reason for Penthouse's success was its European character. Half of Oui's content would be put together by Daniel Filipacchi's French team at Lui and half by a Playboy team in the US; although Playboy would get most of the money.


Linda Summers on the beach for August 1972

 

Hefner hoped that Oui would give him the chance to compete with the increasingly more explicit Penthouse whilst preserving Playboy's girl-next-door approach.    His August Playmate, Linda Summers, joined the still rare group of Playmates who had flashed some fur (very little in her case) in the centrefold.




However, France wasn't the only European country that Hefner had his mind on.  The August issue also featured a pictorial on the Girls of Munich (to tie in with that year's Olympics).  One of the featured girls was twenty year old actress Birgit Zamulo (who was in fact, Austrian).


Birgit (right) with Swedish actress Marie Forså in Girl Meets Girl (1974)


Birgit made her first film the following year and made a number of racy European films over the next decade. 


First foreign edition of Playboy


That month Playboy launched its first foreign edition in Germany. Whilst these foreign editions (more were to follow) would often feature the same Playmates as the American editions, different photographs might be used and, increasingly, local girls were used as Playmates.




Penthouse would have been well aware of the imminent arrival of Oui in the US so it is no surprise that in their August issue Pet of the Month, Maryam Maylam has no less than seven full frontal pictures plus the centrefold.


Maryam feels the fur


She was also shown, in what was still a very rare occurence, sensuously touching her fur.


Playboy magazine receptionist Sandra Josefski gives it some serious platform shoes in this effective shot


September's Playboy came with platform shoes and their most explicit bare bottom shot to date as Sandra Jozefski poses on the cover. That month's Playmate kept her shorts on for the centrefold but gave us a fine fluffy shot elsewhere in her pictorial.


Susan Miller and her sensational tummy


Incidentally, Susan Miller, the Playmate in question, must be the only centrefold ever to be shown in the unemployment office signing on!  She didn't do too badly for herself, however, and ended up in a long relationship with noted British stage director and writer Patrick Garland (although he eventually married actress Alexandra Bastedo (The Champions)-obviously a man of taste).




Also appearing in this issue was the first advertisement for Oui. "Oui is a whole new outlook for the young American man." said the blurb. "An international point of view.  A Continental sense of humor."  Whether a  Continental sense of humor is a good thing is debatable, of course.  It left its description of the girls until last. "And the women.  Truly unique. Truly beautiful.  And quite unlike the girl next door."  Here, then, they admitted to what they hoped would be the great differentiator and the weapon to attack Penthouse.




Penthouse, meanwhile, was ready and put together a strong issue to fight back with.  It was, conveniently, their third anniversary issue in the US so they could trumpet this fact as an attraction on the cover. 


Isobel Orobiyi rubs it for September's Penthouse


September's Pet went even further than the previous month's in the pussy touching stakes, although she was cunningly presented, in another classic Penthouse voyeuristic shot by Bob Guccione, behind some elaborate wrought iron. Nonetheless, nothing could change the fact that she appeared to be actually rubbing her mound, rather than just inadvertantly touching it. If you wanted to identify Penthouse's first faux masturbation shot then this was it. The inference was clear: not only is this a beautiful, naked, sexual girl but you are watching her getting herself excited. The ultimate expression (so far) in Penthouse's voyeuristic approach.


Doubling the pussy power in Woodstock Generation from September 1972


September's Penthouse also featured a set featuring two women photographed at Woodstock (the site of the American pop festival not the town in Oxfordshire). This featured some gentle lesbian cavorting in only their second girl/girl pictorial. Whilst Playboy had recently featured a pictorial of men and women together they had not put two girls together.




In Penthouse's only previous girl/girl pictorial any relationship between the girls was very much implied (almost more by the text than the pictures) whereas this pictorial included a photograph of one girl kissing the other's nipple in a much more sensuous handling of the subject by Amnon Bar-Tur. You can see the entire pictorial here.  Reaction to this pictorial was more positive than to 1970's Two Women with D.O. writing from Palo Alto to say "I am still quivering over Woodstock generation.  Do something like this again...".



Pet of the Year Tina McDowell fluffs herself up in September


Whether this was a deliberate attempt to up the erotic content of that month's edition or not it can't be a coincidence that Penthouse featured three pictorials instead of two that month (the other was of Pet of the Year Tina McDowell) given that this was the launch month of Hefner's new Oui. McDowell had been the girl whose boldly pubic pose in Richmond Park had caused Hefner to comment: "That's not photography. That's pornography."  Here she reappeared as Pet of the Year also touching her fur.



American-born actress Nadia Cassini fronts Oui's first edition


So, what was Hefner's anti-Penthouse publication like? Well, rather like Penthouse really, rather self consciously peppered with "news" stories from Europe, although it had no less than four pictorials, The first, of a Dutch fashion model was pubic free as was the second, introducing Oui's (less talented) equivalent of Vargas, Aslan, in a feature about him photographed at his house where he conveniently seems to keep a supply of undressed girls to hand (who also keep their knickers on).  The first issue's cover featured American actress Nadia Cassini (who, ironically, was born in Woodstock) who also posed nude inside (very much sans knickers).


The magnificent Nadia Cassini

Looking like Penthouse, however, was critical for Playboy in trying to grab readership. A survey in 1972 showed that 95% of Penthouse's readers were in the valuable 18-34 readership category compared with Playboy's 67%.  Oui had to capture the younger market.

Florence and friend in Oui September 1972


Oui was an instant hit; selling all 750,000 of its print run in two weeks. The following month's issue sold 825,000 copies. However, there was soon controversy over their first centrefold who was, according to Oui, a French girl called Florence Fossorier.  Florence was depicted with a man in her pictorial and, indeed, her centrefold, which was certainly a contrast to the Playboy "unseen male presence" or the Penthouse "voyeuristic" approaches.


Lottie in Penthouse March 1971


Penthouse, however, claimed that Florence wasn't Florence at all but was an Austrian model called Lottie Gunthart who had been their March Pet in 1970. Not only was Playboy copying their magazine they were copying their centrefolds too! This may have been a disinformation strategy to annoy Playboy or it may actually have been true. They certainly look identical!




On to October and the annual Bunnies of... feature provided, as had been the case lately, an appropriate dose of fur including this shot of jet Bunny Carole Green reclining in Hefner's DC-9.


"Coffee, tea or me?"


Playboy's October Playmate, Sharon Johansen, also displayed a lovely golden fleece and, indeed, by now it was clear that those who thought that Liv Lindeland's centrefold might be a one off were way off beam as Playboy's Playmates strated to regularly flash the fur in their centrefolds.  Sharon was, in fact, the seventh Playmate to do so in 1972, whereas there had only been three in the whole of 1971.


Sharon Johansen for October 1972


Hefner risked the ire of those from the Deep South with a pictorial featuring American footballer turned actor Jim Brown with a convincingly excited looking Stella Stevens (Miss January 1960).


Stella and Jim fight racism


October's Penthouse featured English girl Janet Dunphy as Pet of the Month who was photographed in and around Guccione's new hotel complex in Yugoslavia.  Having spent so much money on it he was going to promote it for all it's worth.




As this newspaper piece explains Janet used to be a telephonist at a police station before her stint as Pet of the Month switched her over to modelling.

Now then, now then. What's going on 'ere?


Janet's centrefold was notable in that it was the first where the Pet has her hand on her pussy and, also, it was the first legs apart pose in a centrefold picture, offering a glimpse of her mound.



November's Playboy was remarkable for two reason: one immediately apparent the other would take more time.




What became immediately clear was that this issue was Playboy's best selling issue.  Not just up until that moment; it remains their best selling issue ever at an amazing  7,161,561 copies!


Lenna: shortly to become a geek princess and the most printed centrefold in history


The other notable feature of the issue, which would only make it famous in retrospect, was that part of the centrefold featuring Swedish Playmate Lenna Sjööbloom later went on to be used as the industry standard scanning image.




November would also see Playboy launch its second foreign edition, this time in Italy, in conjunction with local publisher Rizzoli


US Cover

The November issue of Penthouse showed the difference between the "naughtier" European and US markets which Oui was seeking to exploit. For the first (but not the last) time Penthouse displayed different versions of the cover picture in the two editions. On the cover of the US edition Pet Angela Adams picture has been cropped and over exposed compared with much more boldly nipple-baring UK version.


UK cover


Inside, Angela posed for a rather curious shot where she seems to be emptying a teapot full of water over her fleece. Perhaps the implication was that her nether regions needed cooling down, in which case a more traditional jug might have made a less eccentric choice!


Pour taste...


The appearance of Oui, rather than enabling Playboy to launch a two front attack on Penthouse, just encouraged more competition, leading to a whole host of new challengers for both Penthouse and Playboy.
 
 
Oui for November 1972
 
 
The first of these, Gallery, also appeared from a base, like Playboy, in Chicago.  In fact there were more similarities than just the location of its offices.
 

Gallery's first issue November 1972


Just as Oui was a shameless copy of Penthouse so Gallery was a quite shameless rip-off of Playboy. It was punblished by Ohio entrepreneur Ron Fenton who got the magazine fronted by top criminal attorney F Lee Bailey (later to be one of OJ Simpson's defence lawyers) possibly to frighten off any potential lawsuits! Fenton even insisted on a seven letter title (like Playboy), used the same typeface for the magazine's title and actually opened his office across the street from Playboy in Chicago. The first issue even had the same interview subject (Pullitzer Prize winning columnist Jack Anderson) as Playboy did that month.  Interestingly, the first issue said that the magazine would not enter the "current publishing contest to see who can print the most daring display of pubic hair!" That view would not last!




Gallery's second issue, in December, shows exactly how closely they were copying Playboy. Even the L-shaped layout of the type on the centrefold was the same!  The sunny outdoor centrefold  of Claudie Perrin made a nice change from all those over-done studio shots by Playboy, however.




Gallery also dispensed with the Playboy-type black and white "real life" pictures, however, in favour of, well, black and white nudes of their centrefold.  Other than that, however, the articles, interviews and even the style of the cartoons were amazingly similar.


Claudie in artistic black and white


It's no wonder that readers mistakenly believed Gallery to be a sister publication of Playboy's.  Very annoying for Playboy when they had spent a huge amount of money on Oui (which would never really be profitable).


December Playboy


After November's record circulation the only way for Playboy was down. yes they were still well ahead of Penthouse but the gap was closing rather alarmingly.  Also, whilst Playboy was selling more advertising pages than Penthouse at the end of the year, their total had dropped slightly whereas Penthouse's advertising sales had increased by 20%.


More colour for Mercy


Perhaps feeling the pressure for the first time, Playboy gave December 1972 Playmate, Mercy Rooney, five pages plus the centrefold rather than the usual three.  Importantly, the extra pages were all colour to try to compete with the nine colour pages plus centrefold that Penthouse accorded its Pets.



Half girl, half goat


Miss Rooney flashed a lot of hair in her centrefold but, unfortunately, it seemed to be mostly sheep's hair in one of the strangest centrefold outift choices ever.




By the end of 1972, 99% of Penthouse's sales were from newsstands and  they were making money on every issue even before they sold any advertising..  It wasn't just advertising sales (boosted by employing Penthouse Pets to do a lot of the selling) that were growing, either. By October 1972 Penthouse's circulation was growing by 300,000 copies a month and the total for that month was 2.7 million. By the end of the year Penthouse was printing 4,000,000 copies in the US and another 500,000 in the UK.

Gwen makes free


December's Penthouse brought their first formal boy/girl set with the Ken Marcus photographed  One and One Make Free featuring dancer Gwen Selvage.  The only couples they had had in the magazine before this were those from the sets of the regular film reports they did of, usually, continental films.  But, as we have seen, in this they actually trailed Playboy.



Lynn gives us a hint of Penthouse's first split beaver



December's Pet was singer Lynn Carey who posed to showcase her group, Mama Lion, who also appeared in many of her pictorial's photographs. As a result, she had the lowest number of nude shots of any Pet. However in one of them she displayed a hint of a split mound; neatly leading us on to the next battleground.