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Created June 5,
2001 Updated
January 4, 2006 Updated April 6, 2007 |
©
The
Chicago Bar Project |
Chicago Playboy Club
116 E. Walton St.
(950N, 100E)
Chicago, IL 60611
(1960
1986)
February 29, 1960 was a historic day in
Chicago and in the
world. Playboy magazine owner
Hugh Hefner decided
that Leap Year would be an appropriate time for him
to open up the world's first Playboy Club on Walton Street in Chicago.
The club, having hired from the local talent pool, provided the first
appearance of the Playboy Bunnies. These Bunnies, with their satin corsets,
bunny ears and fluffy white tails served those fortunate enough to be "Keyholders"
in the style of the old gaslight clubs. As VIPs of the club, Keyholders
could enter the club at anytime and indulge in an atmosphere filled with
music, alcohol and nubile women. The flagship Chicago location was so
successful in its inaugural year that, it not only become the busiest club
in the world, but it was also the first of 40 locations
– each being referred to by Newsweek as a
"Disneyland for adults." The Chicago Playboy Club was a key addition to
the swanky Magnificent Mile hotel bar district, and helped solidify the greater
Rush and Division Street area as one of the most happening areas in the country
during the 1960's. While it has long since been shuttered as the nexus
of the Playboy Empire moved out to Los Angeles, its legacy remains. It is
this author's hope that something with similar sophistication and style as
the Chicago Playboy Club will one day re-emerge in Chicago as mindless
thumping dance music that fills up the soulless meat markets of late have
outlived their usefulness and appeal.
Genesis
Hugh Hefner started
Playboy magazine in his Hyde Park kitchen
on Chicago's South Side in 1953. In the years that followed, Playboy
became the most popular men's publication in the country. Men looked to it
for insight as to what to wear, where to go and what to buy in order to
become a sauve, stylish bachelor – in
addition to leering at the pictorials. In 1959, Playboy published a story
about a new nightclub chain, each branch of which was called the "Gaslight
Club." The first Gaslight Club opened in Chicago's Gold Coast in 1953
and was followed by locations in New York City (1956, where Elizabeth
Taylor worked while filming scenes for her Academy Award winning
performance in Butterfield 8), Washington D.C. (1959), Paris (1961),
and at Chicago's O'Hare Airport (1973).
Only the O'Hare Gaslight Club,
located within the
O'Hare Hilton is still in operation. These sophisticated watering holes
only admitted members that held keys to the club, thus attracting local
powerbrokers. The real story at the Gaslight Club was that predominantly
male patrons were served by the buxom "Gaslight Girls" that were decked out
in saucy costumes composed of tight-fitting corsets and fishnet tights. The whole scene was
a recycling of a drinking establishment style that was common in "The Gay Nineties" (the 1890's,
that is). The Playboy article generated over 3,000 inquiries about these establishments. According to
Bunny
– The Real Story of Playboy Magazine by
Russell Miller, this
inspired Hugh Hefner and partner Victor A. Lownes III to open a gaslight
key club of their own to capitalize on what seemed a huge latent demand, as
well as to supplant their patronage to other Chicago haunts that
included the Black Orchid, Chez Parée, and the Cloisters. To Hefner and
Lownes, the real beauty was that,
"The magazine could be used to promote the club
and the club could be used to promote the magazine."
"For several years (late 50's into the sixties), I was a dues-paying key holder in the Gaslight Club that was in the Near North. The Club as begun initially by the advertising executive, Burton Browne. The club's operation was much as you described it—a mansion, multiple rooms—some decorated as faux prohibition era speakeasies, drinks served in heavy china coffee mugs. After some time a, scaled-down version was opened in/at/near O'Hare. None of the Gaslight Clubs were affiliated with the Playboy Clubs started by Hugh Hefner. The Gaslight Clubs had a slightly more upscale tone versus the more overt sexual tone in the Playboy Clubs."
– J.R., January 3, 2006
The Old Colony Club
Lownes found the building
at 116 E. Walton that became the Playboy Club through Arthur Wirtz, owner of the Chicago Stadium and father of current Blackhawks despot,
"Dollar" Bill Wirtz. The establishment had previously served as the Colony Club, the
latest in a revolving door of establishments that also included the Cameo
Club. Instead of taking the risk of
paying $100,000 for the building, Playboy agreed to rent it for a low
amount, which was supplemented by a percentage of the profits. As it turned out, this
was a savvy arrangement for Wirtz who made far more in this way than the
building was worth. Once the terms were settled, the old Colony Club was
transformed into the Playboy Club, which was partially inspired by
Humphrey Bogart's character Rick and his bar "Cafe Americain" in Casablanca.
The layout of the club is best described by
Russell Miller: "Each of four floors was designed as a
'room' in a mythical and fabulous bachelor pad—there was Playroom, a
Penthouse, a Library, and a Living Room. Teak and leather furniture, wood-paneled
walls and rich, autumnal shades prevailed in the decor. Playboy
magazine was in evidence everywhere—from framed original cartoons in the
'cartoon corner' of the Living Room, to huge, back-lit pictures of
Playmates in the Playmate Bar."
[Editor's note: it has come to our attention here at the CBP that several people claim that the Chicago Playboy Club was somehow located on the 14th floor of the Knickerbocker Hotel building at 163 E. Walton. The photo embedded in the first paragraph of this page is a picture of the building that once housed the Playboy Club, which is clearly four stories. After consulting with Russell Miller's book, Bunny, The Real Story of Playboy (1984), we have concluded that this contention has no historical accuracy and is, in other words, complete rubbish (along with claims of Al Capone's "secret stairwell" also being located there). However, we give the originators of this fable at the Knickerbocker Hotel credit for being effective storytellers... Today, the "One Magnificent Mile Building" stands where the Chicago Playboy Club once did.]
The Playboy Bunny
Prior to the club's
opening, one last detail needed to be worked out: what would the waitresses
wear? As it turns out, Lownes's girlfriend and Latvian refugee Ilse Taurins
suggested that they wear something in the style of the Playboy logo that
would still incorporate the titillation of the Gaslight Girls. The major
problem with this, however, was that the infamous logo, designed by Art
Paul was distinctively male. This did not deter Ilse and she created
a costume consisting of a strapless satin bodice (designed in 10 different
colors), fluffy tail and satin headband with ears. Suzy Leigh, standing
5'2" and sporting measurements of 37-23-32, was the original model for the
Bunny suit as she was felt to possess the ideal Bunny figure. It was the
tail that Hefner particularly loved and thus, the Playboy Bunny concept was
born. Following its initial development, the Bunny costume became the first
service uniform ever granted registration by the United States Patent and
Trademark Office. The costume was then modified over the years to reflect
changing times. A lightweight, one-piece outfit was developed (only in 34D
and 36D) in 1964, followed by psychedelic-print costumes in the late 60's,
a Bunny Cabaret costume with Espree mesh stockings, garters and dyed pumps
in the 80's, and themed outfits like the Cupid Bunny and the Carmen Miranda
Bunny were developed in 1985.
Out of more than four hundred hopefuls, Lownes then hired 30 of the "most
beautiful girls in Chicagoland" to be waitresses at the Playboy Club These were the first Playboy
Bunnies.
A Grand Opening
On
a bitterly cold day in Chicago in 1961, lines of eager prospective members
stretched around the block, warmed by ideas of what was to be found inside.
Membership was available to anyone willing to purchase a key
– $50 for residents and $25 for
out-of-towners. The "key" itself was metal and topped off with a rabbit
head, later replaced by a gold plastic credit card in typical 80's
uninspired fashion. Hefner and Lownes themselves were present on opening
night until the club closed at 4am. Not only did Keyholders gawk at ladies
in their colorful Playboy Bunny outfits, but
steaks and salads (no fancy hors d'oeuvres or desserts), cocktails and even
a pack of cigarettes with Playboy lighter were all available for the
standard price of $1.50 per item (which was felt to be exorbitant at the
time, at least for drinks). Entertainment was also available.
Popular crooners of the day, including Mel Torme, Barbara Streisand and a
19-year-old Aretha Franklin, performed in the Library while jazz was
featured in the Living Room. The Playboy Club was an instant success. In
the first month, over 16,800 patrons frequented the Club. By 1961, there
were 106,000 Keyholders and the place sold more food and drink than any
other restaurant or club in town. During the last three months of 1961, the
Club attracted more than 132,000 guests making it the busiest nightclub in
the world. Clubs then opened in Miami and New Orleans and, between the
first three, brought in over $4.5M in gross profits in the first year.
Membership Has Its Privileges
Playboy
Club Keyholders enjoyed the special benefit of being served by Playboy
Bunnies in their swanky attire. While the Bunnies were the epitome of
sexiness at the time, it was made very clear that she was unavailable for anything but the
serving of cocktails. Keyholders could look but not touch. The Bunnies
themselves were instructed, in a 44-page "Bunny Manual", that they could
not date customers, give out their phone numbers, or meet their boyfriends
or husbands within two blocks of the club. If they did, they would face the
tortuous penalty of being banned from the "hutch." Also key was
the mantra: "Always remember, your proudest
possession is your bunny tail." To ensure enforcement, a "Bunny
Mother" was hired and served both as confidant and enforcer of the rules.
The prevention of even a whiff of scandal that could have provided enough
ammunition for the Playboy Club's numerous conservative enemies for the
joint to be shut down, was further ensured by Hefner and Lownes when they
hired the Willmark Service
System. This agency provided private detectives whose directive was to
continuously test the Bunnies and bartenders by trying to entrap them in
offering money for favors and thinly disguised requests for sex.
"I worked for Willmark for about 13 yrs and checked the Playboy Club in Baltimore in the 1960's. I had fun doing it but felt guilty trying to tempt the girls for sex. It was a lot of fun back in those days."
– J.F., March 8, 2004
While the public face of the Playboy Bunnies was strangely wholesome, there was a separate reality. In order that Hefner, Lownes and their friends could enjoy the fruits of their staff, there were "No. 1 Keyholders." This fortunate few did not have to pay for anything and could "entertain" Bunnies. As stated in the Bunny Manual: "Employees may enter and enjoy the facilities of the Club as bona-fide guests of No. 1 Keyholders." The dogs...
"A Bunny—like the Playboy Playmate—is the girl next door. She is the American romanticized myth... beautiful, desirable, and a nice, funloving person. A Bunny is not a broad or a 'hippy.' She may be sexy, but it's a fresh healthy sex—not cheap or lewd. The Playboy Club is more like show business than the saloon business, and the Bunnies are the stars. We have managers for directors, bartenders for stage managers, and porters and busboys for stagehands. You—the stars—are what bring the people into the Club. You are what gives the Club its glamour. We stress that Bunnies should not get too familiar with customers for just that reason. 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..."
– excerpt from "What is a Bunny?", written by Hugh Hefner's brother Keith Hefner

"Playboy Club Keyholders can see some of the best acts booked in anywhere but will also be hustled out of whatever room they're in the moment the show ends so that seating can be created for the next contingent. If you don't have a key to Playboy you can apply for a club membership at the door ($50) and get a cash key for the evening. For whatever it's worth, this is the original Playboy Club the proving grounds for semi-voyeurism, bunnies, the whole bit. The club is on four levels, with the VIP dining room a formal showcase of elegant appointments, butlers in livery and a menu that rolls from French to English and back again in a funny, pretentious way. All dinners in this room are $8.50 or $12.50. Meals in other rooms are mainly steak and potatoes, masterfully portion-controlled. Actually, the best way to use the club is to stay on the main floor, have some drinks and help yourself to the $1.50 buffet table. If you don't over-drink, you can come out with a reasonable tab. After midnight, the buffet becomes as good a breakfast buffet as any in town. Open 11:30 AM to 4 AM nightly. Closed on holidays.
"Playboy bunnies do hop to after-hour hangouts in the neighborhood, but the hutches keep changing. The last word was the Stork Lounge, directly across the street from Playboy, but don't count on it."
Excerpt from Jory Graham's Chicago, an Extraordinary Guide (1967)
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| Click here for an excerpt from Susan Schneider's book "Unforgettable: Vignettes of Love" which relates true juicy stories of couples meeting, including one from this former Chicago Playboy Club bunny named "Patty" |
The End of an Era
The Chicago Playboy Club enjoyed a long and successful run, but closed
in 1986. The last club in the US closed in 1988 in Lansing, Michigan, and
the last international club closed in 1991. After 31 years, the Playboy
Club was no more. In addition to the entertainment of Keyholders and
creation of the Playboy Bunny, one of the
lesser known achievements of Hefner was that by recruiting and integrating
black artists to provide entertainment at his Playboy Clubs, Hugh helped break
the color barrier in the American South. Today, the
Regal Knickerbocker
Hotel has replaced the Chicago Playboy Club and Hotel, and in 2000, that
stretch of Walton was given the honorary name of "Hugh Hefner Way." The
original magazine headquarters was located nearby as was the original
Playboy Mansion at 1340 N. State St., both of which have also moved on. Sadly, nothing has quite replaced the Playboy Club in Chicago.
Many have tried, but those that have come closest today are places like the
Leopard Lounge,
Redhead Piano Bar and
Coq d'Or.
For the complete story of the Playboy Clubs, check out the
Playboy
Club anniversary retrospective, or visit the modern day version,
Playboy Cyber Club.
Click here for a the story of Pete's "First Bunny" in Baltimore
"Back in the sixties, I would visit Chicago several times a year for business purposes, or for pleasure with my wife. Our favorite spot was the original Playboy Cub. We would spend countless hours at the piano bar listening to the Harold Harris Trio. What pleasant memories."
– B.C., October 11, 2004
"Today girls, tomorrow the world."
~ Have a good story relating to this bar? E-mail it to me. ~
[back to the Chicago Bar Project]
written by Sean Parnell

