16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny

Trista - February 12, 2019

Few jobs have been as glamorous as the Playboy Bunnies of the 1960s. In a time where women still lacked financial independence, Playboy Bunnies were able to earn wages large enough to buy their own homes. In addition to the pay, they also served in the incredibly elite, distinguished Playboy Clubs, which were mysterious and glamorous to the general population. Each Bunny beat out hundreds of other women to gain her illustrious position. They would then work around the rich and famous members of the elite clubs in Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, and London.

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
The cover of the 1968 Bunny Manual. Dangerous Minds.

16. Being a Bunny Came With an Instruction Manual

Almost everyone has had to follow an employee manual at some point in their lives. These are often excruciatingly dry documents that direct employees on conduct, how to request days off, and so on. Human Resources managers go over these with a fine-toothed comb to ensure compliance with local, state and federal employment laws. Not so in the wild west of women’s employment in the 1960s. The “Bunny Manual” for female employees of Hugh Hefner’s Playboy Clubs read more like a sadomasochism consent contract than a handbook for professional employees.

Rather than be treated as competent adults, Bunnies were managed by a summer-camp-like system of merits and demerits that would be applied for the smallest errors, such as having a “scruffy” tail on one’s uniform. Bunnies were also micromanaged in their behavior down to how they held and smoked cigarettes. Hugh Hefner wanted his Bunnies to seem otherworldly, and he enforced it through incredibly strict codes of personal and physical conduct. Drinking, eating, and agreeing to dates all would have ruined the ethereal veneer of his employees, and so were strictly banned by the Bunny Manual.

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
Three Bunnies posing with a ship’s wheel. Wikimedia.

15. The Manual Dictated How to Wear Heels and Smoke Cigarettes

Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar, but smoking cigarettes was no simple matter for Playboy Bunnies. The Bunny Manual had particular instructions on how to smoke cigarettes in a feminine and pretty fashion. Bunnies were to take only one delicate drag at a time and rest the cigarette on an ashtray between pulls. They were also to hold them alluringly between the index and middle finger, with a thumb on the filter, in what was called the “women’s” cigarette hold. More masculine positions, such as holding a cigarette between the thumb and index finger, were strictly prohibited.

Due to the requirement of constantly wearing three-inch or taller heels, the Bunny Manual also had tips on dealing with the pain of being in such high shoes. One recommendation was to roll the feet back and forth over a coke bottle to each sore arches. Interestingly, despite the rigorous requirements, many Bunnies looked back on their time in the Playboy Clubs and remarked upon the safety they felt in the environment. Compared to other clubs at the time, the Bunnies were much safer than other club girls, as the no-touching rule was strictly enforced in all of Hefner’s clubs.

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
A line-up of Playboy Bunnies. Wikimedia.

14. The Bunnies Had Strict Dress Code Rules

Unsurprisingly, given the image of the Playboy Club and the physical demands of being selected as a Bunny, their wardrobes were similarly unforgiving. The Bunny Manual laid out strict dress code rules. The uniforms, which were essentially satin bathing suits, were supposed to be worn “proudly and prettily.” The costumes must be dry cleaned, at the Bunny’s expense, and the ears must be worn centered and bent the correct way. No jewelry was to be worn other than the cufflinks on the bunny uniform. Shoes, which were also the responsibility of the Bunny to purchase and maintain, had to have a minimum three-inch heel.

In addition to the stringent uniform requirements, there were countless grooming and hygiene standards to be met. Pantyhose were required, and pantyhose were to be refrigerated between wears to reduce static. Bunnies, at all times, had to have a nice, fresh manicure. Bright colors of lipstick, such as red or coral, were required at all times. Wigs were also encouraged, to achieve the long, voluminous hair popular in the era. It goes without saying that Bunnies also had to keep their weight low, as the physical standards were very demanding.

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
A Bunny serving champagne to a gentleman. Getty Images.

13. Undercover Agents Tested Bunnies On The Manual

Hugh Hefner believed the most significant part of the allure of his Bunnies was their aloofness and being out of reach of both ordinary people and the patrons of his elite clubs. To ensure this, Hefner hired the Willmark firm of undercover detectives to monitor his Bunnies. The Bunny Manual, when detailing the various behavior policies, ominously reminded Bunnies that “you can never tell when you are being checked out by a Willmark Service representative.” The service was instructed to use its most attractive young male agents to tempt the Bunnies into revealing forbidden personal information or agreeing to date the agents. The Willmark representatives would attempt to entice the women to agree to dates or even sex work escort services outside of the club. One agent went so far as to offer a Bunny $1,000 to share her last name. She suspected he was an agent, and refused. Other agents offered cash, theatre tickets, and other perks if they shared personal information or agreed to see a man outside the club. While these restrictions preserved the mystery and allure of the Bunnies, as Hefner intended, they also greatly reduced the personal earning potential and social lives of his employees.

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
1960s Playboy Bunnies. Vogue.

12. Bunnies Weren’t Allowed to Eat or Drink At Work

Despite working long shifts, Bunnies were not allowed to eat, drink or even chew gum while working. Liquor was especially off-limits, with Bunnies having to refuse any drink offered to them or purchased for them by clients of the clubs. Bunnies were allowed to smoke during their shifts, as long as they followed the smoking etiquette prescribed by the Bunny Manual. Not letting his Bunnies be seen eating or drinking helped preserve that otherworldly, superhuman quality he so valued in his female employees.

The policy against eating at work may have had another intended goal: keeping the Bunnies’ weights down. Gloria Steinem, during her infiltration, reported that she was weighed every single day at the start of her shift to ensure she was staying thin enough. What better way to keep your employees thin than banning them from eating for eight hours a day! Regardless of the intent, the rule against eating or drinking helped to reinforce the misogynistic ideal of a woman who exists on air and sunlight and doesn’t have any bodily functions or needs. In truth, the Bunnies were as close as possible to automatons present simply for male entertainment.

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
A group of 1960s Bunnies. Pinterest.

11. Bunnies Earned Merits and Demerits

Perhaps the most outlandish part of the famed Bunny Manual is its use of a merit and demerit system to govern the Bunnies. With an order that seemed one part military and one part summer camp, the Bunnies would receive demerits for even the tiniest of infractions, including having an unspecific “scruffy” tail on one’s uniform. If multiple faults were earned, punishments would be incurred. Other demerit sources included chipped manicures, runs in nylon stockings, and chewing gum.

Another area for demerits was in personal presentation. The Bunny Manual dictated that Bunnies were always to be cheerful and have a smile on their faces. While it is standard in the service industry to encourage a pleasant demeanor, incurring demerits for letting your smile lapse for just a moment is dehumanizing at best. On another dehumanizing note, despite not being allowed to fraternize with club patrons, all Bunnies were forced to undergo a pelvic examination and blood test for STIs. Failure to submit to these tests was grounds for termination, and merely being late for the appointment was worth 20 demerits.

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
Playboy Bunnies balancing serving trays. Reddit.

10. A “Bunny Council” Resolved Disputes

In lieu of an actual Human Resources department and proper grievance reporting system, the Playboy Club relied on a “Bunny Council” that worked in coordination with Bunny Mothers to manage any disputes or issues among female staff. According to the 1968 Bunny Manual, the Bunny Council consisted of a representative from each club room. Once per month, all the representatives met with the club’s Bunny Mother to speak on behalf of the Bunnies from their rooms. The Bunny Mother was then responsible for presenting the comments, in writing, to the General Manager of the club.

In addition to the Bunny Council, there were general Bunny Meetings once per month which all Bunnies were required to attend. The Bunny Manual stated that missing a Bunny Meeting was to be treated as severely as skipping an entire work shift. The Bunny Council was intended to handle feedback that Bunnies were uncomfortable staring at the larger Bunny Meetings. After each Bunny Council meeting, the General Manager’s feedback on the provided comments would be disseminated among all of the Bunnies. Despite the rather odd way of handling it, it is clear that the Playboy Club operated as a well-organized business and treated their Bunnies as regular employees, despite the supposed glamor and mystery of the position.

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
The first Black Playboy Bunnies. Vintage Everyday.

9. Bra Stuffing Was A Serious, Lucrative Business

The Bunny club uniforms came with only two bust sizes: 34D and 36D. If you are unfamiliar with bust sizing, both of these sizes are for very small rib cages with huge breasts. Bra sizing is the contract between your rib cage size and the size of the fullest part of your chest, so a 34D means a vast difference between the rib cage and chest size. Since many women aren’t born with that large of breasts, bra stuffing was an essential part of wearing the Playboy Club uniform.

Women would use numerous different items, including socks, kleenex, and crumpled dry cleaning bags, to fill out the cups of their uniforms. When Gloria Steinem infiltrated the Bunny club, she was given a uniform two inches smaller than her body everywhere except her chest. Her Bunny mother gave her a plastic dry-cleaning bag to fill out the chest area. Bra stuffing and using multiple layers of bras are among tricks still used by dancers, “booth babes” and other performers. The Bunnies also used their extra bra cup space to stash their tips, which led to their bras being known as “the vault.”

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
A lineup of 1960s Bunnies. Business Insider.

8. Bunny Mothers Governed the Bunnies

In a system reminiscent of fraternity and sorority mothers, Bunny Mothers supervised the Playboy Bunnies and acted as mentors. The Bunny Manual compared the Bunny Mothers to college advisers and specified that they would especially help the Bunnies with their physical appearance. Bunny Mothers supervised costume appearance, makeup application, and the other physical standards prescribed by the merit-demerit system. Gloria Steinem verified in her undercover article that the Bunny Mothers provided “friendly personal counseling.” Since all women were employees of the Playboy Club and not independent contractors, as is standard in strip clubs, there wasn’t a culture of competition that is often documented among strip club workers. The Playboy Club employee culture was most frequently compared to a college sorority.

Bunny Mothers were also responsible for delivering the harsher elements of the club’s lifestyle. One Bunny Mother told a 28-year-old woman that “When you start looking wilted, you’re through as far as Hef is concerned,” referring to club founder Hugh Hefner. Bunny Mothers inspected Bunnies before they started their shifts to ensure compliance with club rules and also managed the daily weigh-ins to ensure Bunnies stayed in the correct physical condition. Bunny Mothers also provided bra stuffing material and advice to help women fill out their uniforms.

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
A young Hugh Hefner with early Playboy Bunnies. New York Post.

7. Bunnies Couldn’t Date or Fraternize With Club Members

One of the core tenets of Hugh Hefner’s business model was portraying the unattainability of his Playboy Bunnies to his club members. A Bunny Manual told Bunnies, “Men are very excited about being in the company of Elizabeth Taylor, but they know they can’t paw or proposition her. The moment that they felt they could become familiar with her, she would not have the aura of glamour that now surrounds her. The same must be true of our Bunnies.” Bunnies could be fired on the spot if it were discovered they had gone on a date with a club patron. It is speculated that part of this rule was also to help protect the club from claims of running a brothel or escort service.

However, there was a group of men exempt from this policy: C1 Keyholders. The group of C1 Keyholders consisted of Hugh Hefner himself, executives of the Playboy company, and any rich and famous men that Hugh Hefner wanted to impress. Bunnies were explicitly allowed to date any man who was a C1 Keyholder. While these policies are quite draconian by today’s standards, past Bunnies argue that the policies helped keep them safe from inappropriate behavior and unwanted advances.

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
Hugh Hefner with Playboy Bunnies. Chicago Tribune.

6. International Bunnies Were Trained in America

Training for Playboy Bunnies was very rigorous, as documented by Gloria Steinem, with Bunnies having to successfully pass through several phases of training before being allowed on the club floor. Women had to learn the “bunny dip” a way of pouring drinks without leaning. They also had to learn hundreds of liquor names and cocktail recipes by heart to impress guests. Women undergoing the training were supposed to come away from it with a “mix of cheekiness, charm, and enterprise.”

Due to wanting a remarkably uniform culture and feel between all clubs, including international locations, Playboy required all Bunnies to be trained in the United States. When the London Playboy club opened, Hugh Hefner personally chose the women who would become Bunnies and flew them to the US for their intensive six-week training. Even American women from diverse backgrounds were required to go through the cultural practice, with one former black bunny saying, “I was a young Black girl coming from South Central LA. So the difference between a New York steak and a filet mignon, or what chicken Kiev was, I didn’t know. What were they talking about? The six weeks of training, all the brand names, what [mixer] goes with what. I’d never heard anyone have a gin-and-tonic with lime.”

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
Playboy Bunnies. Alamy/Daily Mail Online.

5. Jet Bunnies Staffed Hugh Hefner’s Personal Plane

In 1970, Hugh Hefner bought a private plane and renovated it at the cost of $34 million in today’s currency. He painted the plane jet black and added lights to pick out the playboy logo on the side of the plane. Inside, the aircraft was basically the Playboy Mansion with rich leather furniture and even a giant bed for Hefner to lay on during flights. Hefner referred to the plane as the “Big Bunny” and had former Bunnies trained as flight attendants so he could have Bunnies on his plane during every flight.

Former Bunnies from Chicago and Los Angeles were trained by Continental Airlines to be flight attendants and wore modified Playboy Bunny uniforms that included black boots, black mini-dresses, and aviator scarves. In keeping with his outlandish image, one recipient of a Big Bunny flight described Hugh Hefner as spending “most of his time in his salon at the back, lounging in pajamas on an oval bed covered in silk sheets and Tasmanian opossum fur bedspreads.” The Jet Bunnies, he noted, whipped up fancy dinners and staffed a discotheque in the middle of the plane.

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
A Bunny serving a drink. Ultra Swank.

4. Earning Money as a Bunny Was Harder Than Advertised

The advertised wages for Bunnies in 1961 were $200 to $300 a week, a great deal at the time. However, earning that much wasn’t always so easy. Bunnies had a portion of their tips claimed by the club. Bunnies also had to arrive at least an hour to get dressed and do their hair and makeup, which was unpaid time. Demerits for makeup application errors, chipped nails, and so on would lead to docked wages. Bunnies also had to purchase and maintain their uniforms through expensive dry cleaning.

Bunnies determined to make good pay could take on extra opportunities, including working for private parties. Bunnies did, in most cases, make excellent tips due to the wealth required for men to join the club. Celebrities, executives, and members of organized crimes were frequent patrons of the club and typically tipped very generously. Men were often mocked by photo and cigarette girls, who worked the floor selling both for a nickel a piece if the men paid only the recommended amount. One former Bunny remembered making over $1,000 a week, an unheard-of amount for women at the time. She made so much in cash she forgot to cash her paychecks at the end of the week.

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
Ottawa Playboy Bunnies. Ottawa Rewind.

3. The Bunny Hiring Process Was Very Exclusive

The pay for Playboy Bunnies was advertised as $200 to $300 a week, which, at the time, was the equivalent of the salary of a Madison Avenue ad man, like Don Draper in Mad Men. Given the extremely high pay, there was an incredible amount of competition for the positions. Women had to meet the initial requirements of being thin and conventionally attractive and most often, white. They had to be, in the words of a Playboy recruiting poster, “not a broad or a ‘hippy.” The women had to meet the subjective standard of being sexually appealing without being lewd or cheap-looking.

If women met those standards, which few reportedly did out of over 400 in the initial hiring process, the women needed to also be between the ages of 21 and 24 and either single or married, no engaged or dating women were permitted. Women were then subjected to mandatory physical examinations by a physician to test for STIs, pelvic condition, the straightness of their legs, overall health, and more. It should be noted that none of these tests were required due to local or state regulations of waitresses at the time, they were unique to the Playboy clubs.

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
A group of Bunnies. Flickr.

2. Bunnies Were a New Type of Escort

A former Playboy Bunny, Kathryn Leigh Scott, reflected on the culture of the Playboy Club saying, “If you think about it, Hefner started his magazine when young men were coming home from the Korean War. A lot were the first in their family to go to college. They were entering a more cosmopolitan, sophisticated world, and he, therefore, started that magazine. It was sort of a primer for young men, giving them advice on what hi-fi equipment to buy, how to take a girl out to dinner, order in a restaurant.” Hefner took dancing girls and female escorts out of the seedy underbelly of dive bars and strip clubs and made them an unobtainable icon of beauty and culture.

Hefner was mostly single-handedly responsible for ushering in this new culture of high-brow escort services. The exclusivity of the club keyholders and the wealth needed to acquire a key made doors open for those who owned the keys. Only one in every four members who received a key ever actually visited a Playboy Club, just holding the key was enough of a status symbol to be influential.

16 Secrets in the Life of a 1960s Playboy Bunny
Playboy Bunnies on strike in London in 1972. Getty Images.

1. Bunnies Went On Strike

Since Playboy Bunnies were employees and not contractors, they could organize and strike, just like any other employees. So, in 1972, they did! Unsurprisingly, given the relatively hostile union conditions in the United States, it was the London Playboy Bunnies who first went on strike in 1972. The Bunnies were attempting to join the Transport and General Worker’s Union. As the London Club rapidly grew in popularity and earnings, the Bunnies wanted to join a union to ensure they were receiving an equitable share of the club’s profits and enjoying safe working conditions.

In 1975, Chicago Bunnies went on strike with different aims. The Chicago women wanted the freedom to date any man who frequented the club, not just C1 Keyholders, the freedom to use their own names as their Bunny names, and the ability to attend the clubs themselves as key holders. The Chicago strike was closely aligned with sex-positive feminism and the women’s liberation movement, the debate around which was raging across the United States at the time. The Bunnies argued that many of the rules from the club’s creation in 1961 were no longer appropriate and shouldn’t apply to the Bunnies of 1975.

 

Where did we find this stuff? Here are our sources:

Biography – Hugh Hefner

Refinery29 – Here’s What It Took to Be a Playboy Bunny Back in The Day

Little Things – 14 Rules Playboy Bunnies Were Forced to Follow According to A 1968 Club Manual

Business Insider – A Day in The Life of a Playboy Bunny, And How the Controversial Job Has Changed Over 60 Years

The Vouge – Gloria Steinem Knows Firsthand How the Original Playboy Bunnies Got Their Hourglass Shape

The Globe Mail – What Does the Playboy Bunny Suit Mean in The Slutwalk Era?

New Zealand Herald – Playboy Mansion: Bunnies Reveal Hugh Hefner’s Bizarre and Degrading Sex Rituals

Vanity Fair – A Bunny Thing Happened: An Oral History of the Playboy Clubs

Medium – When Playboy Bunnies Ruled

Popsugar – A Former Playboy Bunny Shares 8 Secrets About the Job That Will Surprise You

Business Insider – Hugh Hefner’s Playboy Empire’s Rise & Fall

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