But when her enormous success as a model backfired into public hysteria, she had decisions to make. She could stand and fight, or she could run away. She chose to fight. In the wake of it all, Tula would become the first of many things, much to her surprise. Life was good. But everything changed the following year.
As news emerges that, humbled by the free explicit pornography on the internet, Playboy is to cease printing pictures of naked women, we look back with puzzlement on a now baffling institution. The Sun newspaper, which, earlier this year, taunted liberals by pretending to drop Page 3, surrounded its end-of-the-pier pornography with end-of-the-pier journalism. The blend was seamless. Nothing like Playboy exists in popular culture: French intellectuals musing about post-structuralism alongside photographs of inexplicably naked country girls bending uncomfortably over convenient haystacks.
Donald Clarke: James Bond and ‘Playboy’ turn over a new leaf
Alongside interviews with well-known public figures, PLAYBOY also has a long history of publishing short stories and novels by some of the world's most notable writers. The March issue is also notable for having a pictorial featuring Jill St. John who, just over a decade later, would star in as Tiffany Case in Diamonds Are Forever - becoming the first American actress to play a Bond girl. In the film Diamonds Are Forever in order to confuse his contact Tiffany Case, Bond replaces his wallet with that of diamond smuggler Peter Franks Joe Robinson who he has just killed.
She saves Bond's life more than once before paying with her own. Eva Green has gone on to become one of Hollywood's biggest stars and not flinched in bearing her awesome figure for her art, including some very explicit scenes in the arthouse movie The Dreamers. Curvy Denise Richards played Dr.