
Linda Forsythe, Playmate of the Month February 1970, (left) pictured in The Girls of Christmas pictorial in NSS Playboy’s Holiday Book, 1972





“It’s been great growing up right next door to New York City,” says 19-year-old Linda Forsythe, “because Manhattan is the most exciting place to be; it’s ideal for single people. But you couldn’t give me enough money to live there the rest of my life; I’m too spoiled by the quietness – and cleanness – of home.” Hailing from Weehawken, New Jersey, this American beauty describes herself as a home-grown product of the Garden State. “But I’m no flower child,” she points out, “and I have little sympathy for the hippies and none for the revolutionaries. Sure, my generation is dissatisfied; and we’re more aware, perhaps, than our parents were at our age. But those in a position to change the course of this country are more likely to listen to a well-reasoned approach from young people who aren’t wrecking property or tying up traffic and campuses with protests that often turn out to be violent. The kids making all this noise are children, and if the world gets into their hands now, they’ll destroy it. Drastic changes – if they’re to be constructive – take time; it can’t happen all at once. I’m not always happy with the status quo, but I’m not about to drop out or start marching in the streets. I’m still a kid, too, and I have too much to learn.” Linda believes in working to change the system from within and – practicing what she preaches – will use her Playmate fee to further her career ambition to be a social worker. When we talked with her, she was preparing to leave the family homestead and move to Manhattan. “The courses I need,” she told us, “are available at New York University, which has an excellent graduate school in this field. I feel very strongly about doing social work, especially with children. Even though I hope to have my own someday, I’d like to adopt a child, too. There are so many kids who have no one; this world’s going to end up in their hands, eventually, and it’s up to us to help them. Meantime, I’m going to work and study – and play. So many people don’t seem to know how to enjoy life. Maybe I don’t, either, but I’m sure having all kinds of fun trying.”








Many Playmates from the 1960s, 1970s and early 1980s were pictured in the Japanese edition Mandala Calendar, January 1982. Among them were Pamela Jean Bryant, Playmate of the Month April 1978, Nancy Cameron, Playmate of the Month January 1974, Sharon Clark, Playmate of the Month August 1970, Danielle de Vabre, Playmate of the Month November 1971, Jill De Vries, Playmate of the Month October 1975, Susan Lynn Kiger, Playmate of the Month January 1977, Liv Lindeland, Playmate of the Month January 1971, Candy Loving, Playmate of the Month January 1979, Denise McConnell, Playmate of the Month March 1979, Patti McGuire, Playmate of the Month November 1976, Laura Misch, Playmate of the Month February 1975, Elaine Morton, Playmate of the Month June 1970, Karen Morton, Playmate of the Month July 1978, Hope Olson, Playmate of the Month October 1976, Janet Quist, Playmate of the Month December 1978, Cathy Rowland, Playmate of the Month August 1971, Lenna Sjööblom, Playmate of the Month November 1972, Crystal Smith, Playmate of the Month September 1971, Gail Stanton, Playmate of the Month June 1978, Linda Summers, Playmate of the Month August 1972, Jill Taylor, Playmate of the Month January 1970, Sondra Theodore, Playmate of the Month July 1977, Daina House, Playmate of the Month January 1976, Cyndi Wood, Playmate of the Month February 1973, Linda Forsythe, Playmate of the Month February 1970, Debbie Davis, Playmate of the Month June 1972, Heather Van Every, Playmate of the Month July 1971, Chris Koren, Playmate of the Month March 1970, Mesina Miller, Playmate of the Month September 1975, and Janis Schmitt, Playmate of the Month February 1978