'Custom outfits and you'll earn far more than other girls': The Playboy Club Bunny recruitment brochures from the 1960s (2024)

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A recruitment brochure for Bunnies working at Hugh Hefner's Playboy Clubs in the early 1960s touts custom outfits, a glamorous lifestyle, access to celebrities and promises 'you'll earn far more than other girls.'

Playboy Clubs were exclusive bars, nightclubs and casinos that served food and drink from 11.30am until 'the wee small hours' that began opening in 1960 and thrived from Las Vegas and New York to London and Tokyo through the 1980s.

The lovely young waitresses and servers were the the signature attraction at the clubs. Each one wore a skimpy bunny costumes - complete with ears and a bushy tail.

Some of the Bunnies were former Playboy magazine models, but most were aspiring actresses, models, singers or other ambitious women who were hoping to tap into the glamorous world of Playboy.

'Custom outfits and you'll earn far more than other girls': The Playboy Club Bunny recruitment brochures from the 1960s (1)

Step into the spotlight: A Playboy Club brochure from the late 1960s or 1970s promises that Playboy Bunnies will travel and meet 'internationally famous people in show business, sports, politics, industry and finance'

'Custom outfits and you'll earn far more than other girls': The Playboy Club Bunny recruitment brochures from the 1960s (2)

'Custom outfits and you'll earn far more than other girls': The Playboy Club Bunny recruitment brochures from the 1960s (3)

Calling all Bunnies: The brochure touted the benefits - and requirements - of waitresses and hostesses at exclusive Playboy Clubs around the world. The bars, lounges and casinos in cities from New York and Tokyo to Des Moines, Iowa, featured scantily-clad young women in bunny costumes

'Custom outfits and you'll earn far more than other girls': The Playboy Club Bunny recruitment brochures from the 1960s (4)

Checklist: Bunnies must have a 'charming personality, cheerful disposition and attractive appearance and posture,' according to a checklist in the brochure. Women over age 25 need not apply

'Custom outfits and you'll earn far more than other girls': The Playboy Club Bunny recruitment brochures from the 1960s (5)

Young and beautiful: Bunnies like Churece Charbonneau, 22 (left), a former nurse, and Sandra Gatz, 19, a former receptionist, (right) were the signature attraction of the exclusive Playboy Clubs

The vintage literature was first posted on the site Ex-Playboy Bunnies, a site for former employees of Playboy Clubs. It was later publicized by BuzzFeed.

The brochure does not mince words about the requirements to become a Bunny.

'Bunnies have no standard height and weight requirements, but a Bunny must be properly proportioned,' one page says.

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A checklist includes: 'Charming personality, cheerful disposition and attractive appearance and posture.'

'Girls' over age 25 need not apply.

The application includes a narrow list of previous careers Bunnies are likely to come from - a relic of the 1960s when young women had far fewer opportunities in the professional world.

'Custom outfits and you'll earn far more than other girls': The Playboy Club Bunny recruitment brochures from the 1960s (8)

Song and dance: The brochure promises that some Bunnies will be allowed to perform on stage at the clubs - or even play Carnegie Hall

'Custom outfits and you'll earn far more than other girls': The Playboy Club Bunny recruitment brochures from the 1960s (9)

Center of attention: Playboy Clubs were exclusive and glamorous from the 1960s through the 1980s when Playboy opened dozens of locations across the globe

'Custom outfits and you'll earn far more than other girls': The Playboy Club Bunny recruitment brochures from the 1960s (10)

Ladies man: The Playboy Club empire was the brainchild of Hugh Hefner, pictured top left surrounded by some of his Bunnies

The options included are: College student, stewardess, school teacher, actress, dancer, model, secretary, office clerical, receptionist.'

The application also ask for height, weight, hair color and measurements for bust, waist and hips.

However, Playboy promises big perks for Bunnies who work at Playboy Clubs.

'You'll earn far more than other girls,' the brochure says. 'A typical Chicago Bunny may, for example, earn an average of $200 a week.'

Bunnies are also offered travel opportunities and assures applicants: 'You'll meet internationally famous people in show business, sports, politics, industry and finance in the glamorous and exciting atmosphere of the luxurious Playboy Clubs.'

Other perks include a custom-tailored bunny outfit provided by Playboy, along with iconic ears and a tail.

Shoes and hosiery, however, had to be purchased by each Bunny.

'Custom outfits and you'll earn far more than other girls': The Playboy Club Bunny recruitment brochures from the 1960s (11)

Big money: Playboy Clubs promised high income - $200 a week! - for Bunnies

'Custom outfits and you'll earn far more than other girls': The Playboy Club Bunny recruitment brochures from the 1960s (12)

Charity work: Bunnies became the face of the Playboy empire and were sent out on charity missions, including visiting wounded veterans in the hospital

'Custom outfits and you'll earn far more than other girls': The Playboy Club Bunny recruitment brochures from the 1960s (13)

See the world: Playboy Clubs advertised that Bunnies would have a chance to travel to exotic locations like Atlanta, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Detroit and Phoenix. Clubs later opened in London, Tokyo and Macau

'Custom outfits and you'll earn far more than other girls': The Playboy Club Bunny recruitment brochures from the 1960s (14)

'Diverse backgrounds': Bunnies were 'models, coed, actresses, dancer, stewardesses and secretaries,' according to the brochure. The pamphlet underscored the limited professional opportunities that young women had in the 1960s

'Custom outfits and you'll earn far more than other girls': The Playboy Club Bunny recruitment brochures from the 1960s (15)

Taken care of: 'Bunny mothers' were hired at each club to look after he Bunny and fix their makeup, hair and costumes

'Custom outfits and you'll earn far more than other girls': The Playboy Club Bunny recruitment brochures from the 1960s (2024)
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