Categories
Danielle de Vabre

Danielle in Playmate of the Month pictorial

Playboy Playmate Danielle de Vabre in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Danielle de Vabre in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Danielle de Vabre in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Danielle de Vabre in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Danielle de Vabre in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Danielle de Vabre in Playmate of the Month pictorial

Danielle de Vabre, Playmate of the Month November 1971, pictured in Playmate of the Month pictorial, Snow Job. The text accompanying the photos read:

Snow Job

Miss November left the land of the mounties for the Colorado mountains and a dream winter as a ski instructor

If Danielle de Vabre ever becomes an author, as she hopes to eventually, it’s a good bet that she’ll write about a young French-Canadian girl who spends a perfect winter as a ski instructor in the Colorado Rockies. Not only is the sport a favorite subject of hers but the plot happens to be autobiographical. “The idea of skiing in the Rockies grew in my mind while I was in high school,” explains the slope-minded native of Montreal. ‘I’d skied the Laurentians in Canada for years and often heard people discuss the high elevation and deep powder of the Colorado ranges.“ So, a year and a half ago, after her graduation from high school, Danielle’s parents agreed that, before beginning her English-literature studies at a Montreal college, she should have her dream adventure in the Western U.S. “My parents knew that if I started school right away, I would resent being there and, consequently, my concentration would suffer.” There was one condition in their agreement, however: Danielle was to finance the trip herself. “I was counting on finding a job as a ski instructor and figured I’d need just enough cash to get me there, plus a little nest egg in case I had a hard time getting work.” The problem of how to earn some money was solved after an interview at the local Playboy Club: For the next few months, Danielle worked as a Bunny while waiting to hear from the Colorado resorts to which she’d applied. Finally, she received a positive reply from the Steamboat Springs ski school’s Skeeter Werner, sister of the late Olympic skier Bud Werner. “I was elated. I’d already saved enough to pay for my transportation, so I started packing immediately.” Danielle confesses to fearing that Colorado would fail to match her high expectations, but that apprehension was forgotten as soon as she saw Steamboat Springs and met Skeeter and the staff. “Steamboat’s scenery alone would make the spot charming. But the combination of gorgeous surroundings plus the friendliness of all the people told me instantly that I was going to have a fantastic stay.” Danielle showed her zeal by spending most of her free time on the slopes by herself. “I couldn’t get enough skiing and I really hated it when the time came to leave, but I’d promised my folks I would stay just four months.” Back in Montreal, Danielle soon discovered that her sojourn in Steamboat Springs hadn’t quenched her wanderlust. “Some friends I met in Steamboat are spending this season in Norway and they’re urging me to come. If I go – and I’d sure love to – I’ll send home long letters filled with personal impressions and descriptions of the people I meet and the places I visit. And I’ll make sure my parents save them. I did that last year and found that it’s a great way to gather material for the scene of a possible story.” We’re sure readers will agree that any scene including delightful Danielle is certainly worth writing home about.

Categories
Cathy Rowland

Cathy in Japanese edition pictorial

Playboy Playmate Cathy Rowland in Japanese Playboy pictorial Playmates Forever!

Cathy Rowland, Playmate of the Month August 1971, pictured in Japanese edition pictorial, Playmates Forever!, June 1984

Categories
Elaine Morton

Elaine in NSS The Girls of Playboy 1

Playboy Playmates Elaine Morton and Deanna Baker in NSS The Girls of Playboy 1

Elaine Morton, Playmate of the Month June 1970, (left) pictured in NSS The Girls of Playboy 1, 1973

Categories
Karen Morton

Karen in NSS Celebrating Centerfolds

Playboy Playmates Karen Morton, Penny Baker, Kaya Christian and Barbara Ann Lawford in NSS Celebrating Centerfolds Vol. 3

Karen Morton, Playmate of the Month July 1978, (top left) pictured in NSS Celebrating Centerfolds Vol. 3, 1999

Categories
Susan Lynn Kiger

Susan in 1978 Playmate Calendar

Susan Lynn Kiger in Playmate Calendar

Susan Lynn Kiger, Playmate of the Month January 1977, pictured in 1978 Playmate Calendar

Categories
Liv Lindeland

Liv in Japanese edition pictorial

Playboy Playmates Marilyn Cole and Liv Lindeland in Japanese Playboy pictorial Playmates Forever!

Liv Lindeland, Playmate of the Month January 1971, (right) pictured in Japanese edition pictorial, Playmates Forever!, June 1984

Categories
Pamela Jean Bryant

Pamela in 1979 Playmate Calendar

Playboy Playmate Pamela Jean Bryant in Playmate Calendar

Pamela Jean Bryant, Playmate of the Month April 1978, pictured in 1979 Playmate Calendar

Categories
Sharon Clark

Sharon in Playmate of the Month pictorial

Playboy Playmate Sharon Clark in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Sharon Clark in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Sharon Clark in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Sharon Clark in Playmate of the Month pictorial
Playboy Playmate Sharon Clark in Playmate of the Month pictorial

Sharon Clark, Playmate of the Month August 1970, pictured in Playmate of the Month pictorial, The Clark Expedition. The text accompanying the photos read:

The Clark Expedition

To sample life in another culture, Sharon Clark chooses a remote Pacific hideaway

The Micronesian archipelago of Truk would have fired the imagination of Joseph Conrad: several dozen luxuriantly tropical isles, linked only by fuel ships that traverse the intervening waterways once every few months, bearing provisions ranging from cigarettes to rice. Moen, the second-largest island, is a roughhewn American outpost and is graced, improbably enough, by such rare fauna as Sharon Olivia Clark. It’s a long way (about 8000 miles) from Norman, Oklahoma, where Sharon earned her degree in sociology; from St. Louis, where she later read manuscripts for a publisher of medical texts; and from Los Angeles, where she was living when she decided to strike out for more exotic regions. Inviting us along for the ride, Sharon went native earlier this year to experience life as it’s lived on an “island paradise” in the Pacific and to teach English to local high school students. The quality of life on Moen, Sharon quickly discovered, is very different from that in the States: “Home” is a Quonset hut (so is the classroom where she works); transportation on the otherwise impassable roads is by motorcycle; and the mercantile community in her village consists of a general store, a commissary where frozen meat is sold, plus three other establishments that deal in canned goods. The climate is idyllic; the temperature averages 85 degrees and the lagoons are bluer than blue. Yet since our return to the States, Sharon wrote (Moen can’t be reached by telephone) that there’s trouble in paradise – a circumstance she attributes to the American Government, which administers Truk under a trusteeship. In addition to introducing the tin can and other pollutants, American culture has done much, in Sharon’s opinion, to undermine the Trukese way of life: “Instead of helping the natives develop their fisheries, the Americans are giving them Government jobs and turning Truk into a bureaucratic welfare state. We’ve taken our economy and set it down on top of theirs. The locals accept this, but with undertones of resentment.” And the presence of the Peace Corps, she feels, does little to counteract the effects of this subtle colonialism: Too few of the Corps men are involved in the crucial fishing industry. What aggravates the situation and gives the future a gloomy cast, Sharon says, is a lack of communication between the administrators from across the sea and their charges – who, she claims, “act sluggish when they’re around the Americans, giving them the mistaken impression, after a while, that the islanders are all lazy.” Sharon recognizes, however, that the American way of life, which seems so out of place in Truk, is her own: “I’ve learned that I don’t really groove on the ‘simple life’ – much as I hate to see it destroyed. I like to see cars moving on four-lane highways. I miss the movies and skiing trips; I even miss the changes in climate.” Sharon is also frustrated by her teaching job: “It’s difficult to find reading matter in English that’s relevant to these kids.” Accordingly, despite her affection for the islanders, Sharon is planning to return to the States. But she doesn’t regret her adventure; it’s given her a new appreciation not only of America’s fast-paced culture but also of the need to apply the brakes on occasion and take time out for a self-renewing interlude of ease – South Pacific style.

Categories
Patti McGuire

Patti in 1978 Playmate Calendar

Playboy Playmate Patti McGuire in Playmate Calendar

Patti McGuire, Playmate of the Month November 1976, pictured in 1978 Playmate Calendar

Categories
Jill De Vries

Jill in Netherlands edition feature, Playboy Heritage

Netherlands Playboy feature Playboy Heritage
Netherlands Playboy feature Playboy Heritage

Jill De Vries, Playmate of the Month October 1975, pictured in Netherlands edition feature, Playboy Heritage, November 2014