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Miss Scott’s shapely figure and ultrafeminine dressing-room set apparently made her an instant hit with the readers who purchased the third issue of Hef’s infant magazine: she became an extremely popular Playmate, drawing stacks of letters from the legions of her enthusiastic supporters. It wasn’t until the mid 1990s that the two were revealed to be the same person.Īnother of Hefner’s fortunate discoveries from the well-filled files of the John Baumgarth Calendar Company in Melrose Park, Illinois was pretty-in-pink Miss February, Margaret Scott. For many years thereafter, many assumed that Marilyn and Margaret actually were two different people. However for the first of her Playboy appearances, Waltz was billed as Margaret Scott. She was the first of two women to become a three-time Playmate.
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Margaret Scott known as Marilyn Waltz, she was Playboy’s Playmate of the Month in the February 1954, April 1954 and April 1955 issues. She later ditched acting and went into real estate. Waltz was also in Playboy’s April 1955 edition.
![margaret scott playboy margaret scott playboy](https://pbplaymates.com/files/2019/10/Pat-Lawler-450x450.jpg)
Hefner assumed it was a different woman and discovered the truth when he was looking over photos for a compendium Playboy book in 1990. Born in 1931, she used the pseudonym Margaret Scott for her first nude shoot but appeared again in the magazine in April under her real name. In a way.The Playmate for February 1954 was an actress, singer and model whose real name was Marilyn Waltz. Actually, considering those one hundred-plus television roles you could even argue that, in a way, she was just as successful as Monroe. She was a Playboy Playmate of the Month in November 1958, which means that, like Marilyn Monroe, she made the leap from nude model to Hollywood star.
![margaret scott playboy margaret scott playboy](https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/9WQAAOSw1HZeoxQ0/s-l64.jpg)
Did she ever towel off, as our juvenile quip suggests? She did. Most of those roles were uncredited, but she piled up almost twenty. Known as the ultimate gentlemen’s retreat, key-holding patrons stalked the clubs as they were waited on by countless beautiful ladies. Hugh Hefner opened his first Playboy club in Chicago in 1960, starting a revolution for women who were legitimately proud to work there. Her bigscreen appearances were sporadic, but included Breakfast at Tiffany's, All in a Night's Work, Johnny Cool, and Cape Fear. The Original Playboy Bunnies, Then and Now. Staley mostly acted on television in shows such as The Asphalt Jungle, Hawaiian Eye, 77 Sunset Strip, and Mission: Impossible, amassing more than one hundred smallscreen credits, by our quick count. actress Joan Staley and was made somewhere in Southern California in 1958. It's the most sunshiny shot we've seen in a while. We're going to use a non-word to describe this photo. We found this on, but we're going to see if we can locate a few in real life. The magazine is so vibrant we uploaded every page that had either photos or art, making for a whopping fifty panels to enjoy below. In addition to all those attractions, you get illustrations by Dwight Howe, Ken Wyeth, John Martin, and Jack Lyons. Jem also poached July 1956 Playboy centerfold Alice Denham, which must have served as a shot across Hefner's bow. It came out during the heyday of the era when magazines of this type gave equal billing to Hollywood celebrities and erotic stars (something we try to emulate on Pulp Intl.), which means you'll not only see rare photos of actresses like Anita Ekberg, Jayne Mansfield, and Kim Novak, but also burlesque dancer and model Candy Barr (on the cover and in the beautiful masthead page), model Betty Brosmer (who was Weider's wife), and dancer Lili St. The scans above and below are from the very first issue of Jem, published this month in 1956. He also launched the similar imprint Monsieur. Above you see the cover of Jem magazine, founded by famed bodybuilder Joe Weider as one of the first high budget competitors to Playboy.