Women with naked ambition
Alicia Robinson
Just one week ago, the town’s movers and shakers got all dressed up
and headed for the Sutton Place Hotel for the annual Mayor’s Dinner.
On Thursday, in a room on the ninth floor of the hotel, girls were
taking off their clothes to be photographed.
Some were nervous; some seemed nonchalant, in some cases because
they’d done it before.
“I’ve been waiting to do this since 2000,” said Sheisha Wright, a
22-year-old who works at an amusement park. “A lot of people were
telling me I should.”
Friends apparently thought she’d make a good model for Playboy,
which held a casting call Thursday in Newport Beach to find girls for
their “special edition” magazines.
Wright drove here from Downey to fill out forms, have a few
Polaroids taken and wait her turn to enter a private room and pose
nude for a Playboy photographer.
“I think the only thing I’m nervous about is my height,” she said.
“I’m only 5-1.”
Most of the time there were half a dozen young women milling
around the room in robes or leafing through the lingerie magazines on
the coffee table. One of the magazine rifflers was Coleen Sanford, an
18-year-old waitress who lives in Huntington Beach.
She said she doesn’t want to be in Playboy; she just came along to
support her friend, an 18-year-old new mom who wanted to pose.
“It’s not really my thing,” said Sanford. “If that’s what she
wants to do, that’s cool for her.”
Even without Sanford, the casting call was well-populated, with
about 100 hopefuls scheduled to be seen, and at least one walk-in.
“We see two girls every 15 minutes. That’s about all we can
handle,” said Linda Kenney, a producer and makeup artist who’s worked
with Playboy since 1979.
Beckoned by ads in print, on the radio and invitations via e-mail,
they came from all around Southern California and beyond. Sharon
Benson, 29, came all the way from Phoenix.
“I just want to be featured in the magazine -- no big career
goal,” said Benson, a model and swimsuit designer. “Playboy always
makes you beautiful.”
Some of the girls’ photos will go on a website, but mainly Playboy
was looking for models for “College Girls,” “Vixens,” “Lingerie” and
other theme publications. There have always been people who
disapproved, but the magazine has stood the test of time, broadening
its offerings to include a TV channel, videos and a website as well
as a variety of products.
“[Now] you see Playboy products everywhere,” Kenney said.
“Compared to what is currently available in the genre, Playboy’s
really one of the more conservative [magazines].”
For some girls, it’s just an extension of modeling, and they feel
OK about it because they consider Playboy to be a reputable magazine.
Ali Willingham, 29, thought so.
A former actress who’s finishing a communications degree in Los
Angeles, Willingham said she’s not sure how her parents in Santa Cruz
would react to her posing, but none of her L.A. friends will bat an
eye.
“I think it’ll just be cool to say I did it,” she said.
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