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Nancy Cameron

Nancy in Playmate of the Month pictorial

Playboy Playmate Nancy Cameron in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Nancy Cameron in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Nancy Cameron in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Nancy Cameron in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Nancy Cameron in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Nancy Cameron in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Nancy Cameron in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Nancy Cameron in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Nancy Cameron in Playmate of the Month pictorial

Nancy Cameron, Playmate of the Month January 1974, pictured in Playmate of the Month pictorial, O Lucky Girl!, January 1974. The text accompanying the photos read:

O Lucky Girl!

Small-town miss Nancy Cameron took a chance on the big city – and it’s worked out just fine, thank you

January Playmate Nancy Cameron isn’t the introspective sort, but on the eve of her 20th birthday – which just happens to coincide with ours – we caught her in a reflective mood. “I’ve been thinking what would have happened if I hadn’t gotten away from home.” Home for Nancy was Arnold, Pennsylvania, a small town about 20 miles outside Pittsburgh. “I’d probably have gotten married – to my very old-fashioned high school sweetheart – and most likely have settled for a career as a dental assistant.” Nancy makes a face. “And I’d never have gotten to meet Alice Cooper.” We should explain that Miss January works for her boyfriend, Paul St. John, a rock-concert producer in Pittsburgh. Nancy books hotel reservations for incoming groups, ensures that rooms are supplied with ample provisions of food and drink and arranges press parties, limousine service and the like. “Somebody was throwing a party for Alice after the concert and Paul wanted me to go,” says Nancy. ‘But I told him I was tired and we argued about it. So I’m sitting home alone when the phone rings and there’s a man on the other end of the line saying, ‘Hello, Nancy. This is Alice.’ And I hear Paul laughing on the line like it was some big joke. But Alice was really quite nice. He straightened everything out between us.“ Nancy pauses, then says, “Now, I don’t mean to give the impression that I’m a close friend of every rock star who passes through Pittsburgh. I don’t even like to show up at the concerts. But if I hadn’t met Paul, I never would have had the opportunity to go in the first place.” In fact, says Nancy, it was Paul who encouraged her to go to Pittsburgh. “I had been working as a dental assistant for several months – in Arnold. That was a drag. I had been modeling, too, just for the sake of doing something different. I model two or three times a week; there’s not a whole lot of that kind of work in Pittsburgh. Anyway, one day I was on a job at a shopping center, promoting a modeling agency; Paul passed by, and we met. Since then, I’ve done things I’d never thought I’d ever be doing, met people I’d never thought I’d meet, had experiences I’d never thought I’d have.” At the time she took off for Pittsburgh, Nancy was just a few months out of high school. “I had been very popular,” she recalls, “secretary of my junior and senior classes, drum majorette, principal’s pet and all the rest. But I knew nothing of Rolls-Royces, rock stars, fine restaurants or big cities. The only time I’d ever gotten out of Arnold to any major new place was to Chicago, where I competed in a national gymnastic meet. [Nancy placed second in overall competition, which included turns on the uneven parallel bars, horse, rings and free exercise.] But then I had to go back to my job as a dental assistant. Eventually, when more modeling assignments started to come my way, I quit dentistry and worked nights as a receptionist at a country club. Which was OK, except with modeling during the day and working at night, my life consisted of not much more than work and sleep. That is, until Paul came along.” Nancy hasn’t abandoned her old life entirely, though. She still finds time for exercise with her sisters, who belong to Sokol, an Arnold gymnastic group. “I’ve been a gymnast my whole life, as have my parents and their parents before them. We’re all Slovak, and it would be hard to find a people crazier than the Slovaks. Since my mother is an instructor and my sisters still compete, I guess we can match any family as gymnast fanatics.” For the moment, however, Nancy says she can’t foresee a time when her passion for the sport would evolve into anything serious enough to give her Olympic aspirations. “I’m OK on the uneven bars, especially when I put my mind to it. But I’m terribly inconsistent, and I freeze under pressure. During one meet a while ago, I was doing a required routine on the rings. Suddenly I caught the judge’s eye and got so scared that I forgot an entire sequence. My mind went blank and by the time I came out of it, I was just hanging there improvising tricks I’d never done before.” When she’s not working out, Nancy divides her hours about equally between modeling assignments and concert production work. “Frankly,” she says, “I’d rather spend more of my time modeling, but I enjoy meeting the groups and helping them.” All the same, if she were asked to trade her present life for the one that would have awaited her had she remained in Arnold, we’re absolutely certain which one Nancy would choose. “But I’ve already made that choice,” she says. “I’m here with you now, aren’t I?” And how.

Categories
Crystal Smith

Crystal in Playmate of the Month pictorial

Playboy Playmate Crystal Smith in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Crystal Smith in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Crystal Smith in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Crystal Smith in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Crystal Smith in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Crystal Smith in Playmate of the Month pictorial

Crystal Smith, Playmate of the Month September 1971, pictured in Playmate of the Month pictorial, Sparkling Crystal. The text accompanying the photos read:

Sparkling Crystal

Busy making her mark in academe, Playmate Crystal Smith has her eye on postgrad goals

Puzzled as she may appear on our cover, Crystal Smith is way ahead of the game when it comes to putting her life together. A 20-year-old senior at Kansas State University in Manhattan, Crystal has definitely decided where she wants her College Radio / TV major to take her – straight into the entertainment media. Since her sophomore year, Crystal, a native Kansan, has geared her college work and extracurricular activities toward that goal. “As a freshman,” she admits, “I was really involved in campus social life – the whole pompon girl, sorority-fraternity party scene. But then I took stock and realized I was here to get a useful degree.” To break into films, TV or the theater, she says, “you can’t be a unitalent anymore. You have to be able to do everything – dance, sing and play musical instruments. Right now, I’m concentrating on my voice and opera classes. The dancing I’ve been doing all along. Two summers ago, I was a Rockette in Radio City Music Hall and now, during the school year, I’m operating a dance studio for girls at the U.S. Army Special Services Youth Activities Center outside Manhattan. Not only do the classes make me practice my dancing but teaching those little kids is really fun. Plus, the lessons have helped pay my college tuition.” Crystal also taught classes this summer, driving more than 100 miles to Manhattan from Kansas City on her one day off from modeling assignments and her job as a Playboy Club Bunny. (She appeared in our Bunnies of 1971 feature last month.) “It was a hectic schedule,” she says, “but I’ve always been happiest doing several things at once.” If all goes well, Crystal’s postgraduation days will be as busy as her college ones. “I’m planning to move to Los Angeles, where I hope to land singing and dancing work in films or television,” she says. “And, if I’m lucky, maybe someday I’ll have my own TV special!” Whether or not she gets her big break, we think Crystal is already special.

Categories
Cyndi Wood

Cyndi in digital images from Pinups

Playboy Playmate Cyndi Wood
Playboy Playmate Cyndi Wood

Cyndi Wood, Playmate of the Month February 1973, pictured in digital images from the pictorial, Pinups, December 1973. Only the top photo was used in the pictorial.

Categories
Mesina Miller

Mesina in NSS Sporting Women

Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in NSS Sporting Women
Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in NSS Sporting Women

Mesina Miller, Playmate of the Month September 1975, pictured in NSS Sporting Women, 1986

Categories
Hope Olson

Hope in NSS The Girls of Playboy 4

Playboy Playmate Hope Olson in NSS The Girls of Playboy 4
Playboy Playmate Hope Olson in NSS The Girls of Playboy 4
Playboy Playmate Hope Olson in NSS The Girls of Playboy 4
Playboy Playmate Hope Olson in NSS The Girls of Playboy 4
Playboy Playmate Hope Olson in NSS The Girls of Playboy 4

Hope Olson, Playmate of the Month October 1976, pictured in NSS The Girls of Playboy 4, 1980

Categories
Crystal Smith

Crystal in NSS Bunnies #1

Playboy Playmate Crystal Smith in NSS Bunnies #1
Playboy Playmate Crystal Smith in NSS Bunnies #1
Playboy Playmate Crystal Smith in NSS Bunnies #1

Crystal Smith, Playmate of the Month September 1971, pictured in NSS Bunnies #1, 1972

Categories
Jill De Vries

Jill in Playmate of the Month pictorial

Playboy Playmate Jill de Vries in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Jill de Vries in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Jill de Vries in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Jill de Vries in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Jill de Vries in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Jill de Vries in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Jill de Vries in Playmate of the Month pictorial

Jill De Vries, Playmate of the Month October 1975, pictured in Playmate of the Month pictorial, Country Girl. The text accompanying the photos read:

Country Girl

You won’t have to worry about keeping them down on the farm after they’ve seen Jill De Vries

As far as October Playmate Jill De Vries is concerned, big cities are strictly for the birds. A country girl born and raised in the hinterlands of Illinois, she has no use for crowds and skyscrapers, smog and subways. “Cities are just too busy, too hectic,” she says. “People are so involved in their own little worlds. And cityfolk always look so darn sullen and unhappy. Who needs it?” Not Jill, who has carved out an idyllic life for herself in a tiny farm community ten miles or so outside Bloomington, Illinois. Though she lives in a farmhouse, surrounded by 14 acres of hay and no visible neighbors, she spends most of her days either working in Bloomington as manager of her boyfriend’s shop, The Joint General Store, which deals mainly in water beds, boots and American Indian jewelry, or just lazily swimming in a nearby lake with her guy’s Labrador retriever, whose name, incidentally, is Karl Marx (“My boyfriend is a political-science major,” Jill explains). Once in a great while, she will go to Chicago on a shopping trip to buy merchandise for the store, but the experience always leaves her somewhat frazzled and jumpy. “I just can’t handle big-city life,” she says. “Not even for one afternoon.” And it’s no wonder. Of Dutch stock, Jill grew up in Wichert, Illinois (“a little-bitty Dutch community”), and spent much of her early youth helping her father grow tulips and gladioli. In fourth grade, she became a cheerleader, an extracurricular activity that lasted eight years, and took piano lessons, which lasted 11. Today, although somewhat out of practice, she can still play a Chopin nocturne with admirable proficiency. “For a long time,” she recalls, “I wanted to be a concert pianist – I was really quite serious about it, in fact. But my music teacher convinced me that it was really a rough life, and by the time college rolled around, I’d given up the idea.” By then, she’d also given up cheerleading, because, as she says, “I realized how dumb it really was.” Starting out at Illinois State, she wandered into the field of education, eventually majored in the subject and decided to teach kindergarten. Why kindergarten? “Because little children are so much fun to be with,” she says. With college more or less behind her (she still needs a few student-teaching credits) and teaching positions being scarce, her future is in limbo. But Jill isn’t worried – she’s too easygoing for that. In the meantime, she’s been doing some modeling (our June layout on Dads and Grads featured her as one of the girls popping out of a gift-wrapped box) and growing gladioli in her back yard. Jill says “I try to live for the moment and not worry about the future.” We’re not worried about your future, either, Jill.

Categories
Mesina Miller

Mesina in German edition Playmate of the Month pictorial

Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in German Playboy Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in German Playboy Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in German Playboy Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in German Playboy Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in German Playboy Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in German Playboy Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in German Playboy Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in German Playboy Playmate of the Month pictorial

Mesina Miller, Playmate of the Month September 1975, pictured in German edition Playmate of the Month pictorial, Mesina, September 1975

Categories
Mesina Miller

Mesina in Special Collector’s Edition ‘70s Playmates

Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in '70s Playmates
Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in '70s Playmates
Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in '70s Playmates
Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in '70s Playmates
Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in '70s Playmates
Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in '70s Playmates
Playboy Playmate Mesina Miller in '70s Playmates

Mesina Miller, Playmate of the Month September 1975, pictured in Special Collector’s Edition ‘70s Playmates, July 2014

Categories
Pamela Jean Bryant

Pamela in Playmate of the Month pictorial

Playboy Playmate Pamela Jean Bryant  in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Pamela Jean Bryant  in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Pamela Jean Bryant  in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Pamela Jean Bryant  in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Pamela Jean Bryant  in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Pamela Jean Bryant  in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Pamela Jean Bryant  in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Pamela Jean Bryant  in Playmate of the Month pictorial

Pamela Jean Bryant, Playmate of the Month April 1978, pictured in Playmate of the Month pictorial, Cutting Loose. The text accompanying the photos read:

Cutting Loose

When Pamela Jean headed for the Florida sun, she left her books behind

Those of you with eagle eyes and elephant memories will recognize Pamela Jean Bryant as one of the coeds featured in our September 1977 pictorial Girls of the Big Ten. She almost didn’t make it: The story of how Miss April came to our attention demonstrates the old adage that some days you can eat the bear and some days the bear eats you. Relates Pamela: “I have never regarded myself as particularly beautiful. I didn’t think anyone else did either. Only a few days before Playboy photographer David Chan showed up on the campus of Indiana University I had applied for a modeling job in a local fashion show and had been turned down. But I refuse to let setbacks get to me, so I responded to the ad David had put in the student newspaper, asking for girls to try out for a Girls of the Big Ten feature. I was surprised when, during our interview, he suggested that I was Playmate material.”

Over the next few months, as we became better acquainted with Pamela, we grew to respect her resilience and self-determination. “I’ve always been an optimist,” she says. “I never give in to other people’s opinions. I had a rather mixed-up childhood, shuttled from one foster home to another. I had seven mothers and seven fathers, and all of them told me my faults, my guilts, their idea of who I was. I’ve been told I’m lost and lonely by lost and lonely people. I’ve stopped listening to others and started listening to myself. I’m proud of the dent I’ve made in the world to date. I’m glad that I am young and have a career to look forward to. I’m going to strut my stuff and get by on the good times I give myself.”

At the end of her freshmen year, Pamela decided she could learn more about herself outside school. She packed as many of her belongings as would fit into a station wagon and set out for Florida. (“I had to leave behind my collection of stuffed animals, one from each foster home.”) She found a place to live in Palm Beach and, under the tutelage of a screenwriter friend, has begun piecing together her own life story. “I get up every morning and sit at the typewriter for two hours. I’m reliving my childhood and creating a new person.”

The screenwriter connection has opened a new career for Pam. She has hooked small parts in films. “I’m strong-minded but very open. My emotions are very much on the surface. That’s why I know I’ll make a good actress someday.” With that kind of attitude, we know tomorrow is bound to be a day Pam eats the bear.