Diamond Days
Playboy Sweden|January 2023
To celebrate the 60th anniversary of the iconic Playboy Bunny, we asked more than a dozen Bunnies-and one Rabbit-to take a hop with us down memory lane
Tori Lynn Adams, Cat Auer, Andie Eisen and Michele Sleighel
Diamond Days

On February 29, 1960 the first Playboy Club opened its doors, and into pop culture bounded the Bunny. With her satin ears, sheer stockings, boned corset, and white tail (the cuffs and collars came later), she has resided in our collective imagination ever since. Like the indelible Playboy Rabbit Head, the Bunny symbolizes the ideal of sophisticated pleasure. But unlike the inanimate logo, the Bunnies had the hard work of actually bringing that ideal to life.

It was a good job - if you could get it. Hundreds of Bunny hopefuls typically applied at each new club, some company-owned and others franchise-operated. Bunnies could be found working in 25 states and seven countries and, after Playboy's private DC-9 airplane took off in the early 1970s, in the sky as well. From Jamaica to New Jersey, London to Lansing, and Omaha to Osaka, the Playboy hotels, casinos, and resorts offered endless amenities and activities horseback riding, scuba diving, skeet shooting, skiing, roulette. The bushy-tailed Bunny was the ever-present standard bearer (and still is: Visit our Playboy Club in London).

Bunny training was rigorous, and standards were high. The so-called Bunny Mothers were managers who enforced rules laid out in the intimidatingly thick Bunny Manual, but for the Bunnies, tips and other perks including tuition assistance and appearance fees made the difficult job worthwhile. In the early 1980s, for example, Bunnies hired to appear at events approved by Playboy earned $17.50 an hour - more than five times the minimum wage.

The clubs were showplaces for comedians, jazz musicians, and other performers, but it was the Bunnies, with their practiced-to-perfection perch, stance, and dip, who were the steady draw. For a short while in the mid-1980s, Rabbits male servers who were Bunny counterparts had their time in the New York hutch; more than 1,500 men applied for 25 positions.

This story is from the January 2023 edition of Playboy Sweden.

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This story is from the January 2023 edition of Playboy Sweden.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.