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Playboy founder Hugh Hefner dies aged 91

Playboy confirmed Hefner’s death on its official Twitter account.

MusiCares Person of the Year Gala 2012 - Arrivals - Los Angeles Hefner, pictured in 2012 Francis Specker Francis Specker

HUGH HEFNER, THE legendary founder of Playboy magazine, has died aged 91.

The magazine confirmed the news via its official Twitter account.

Hefner, who in 1953 founded a trailblazing brand that would help usher in the 20th century’s shifting attitude towards sexuality, died of natural causes in his Beverly Hills home – the famed Playboy Mansion – according to the statement from Playboy Enterprises.

The consummate playboy outlived both the sexual revolution he fought for but also some of the famous pin-ups to grace his groundbreaking magazine’s centrefold.

A self-proclaimed master of marketing, Hefner’s skill for self-promotion made it impossible to untangle his image from his empire.

“My father lived an exceptional and impactful life as a media and cultural pioneer and a leading voice behind some of the most significant social and cultural movements of our time in advocating free speech, civil rights and sexual freedom,” his son Cooper Hefner, Playboy Enterprise’s chief creative officer, said in a statement.

Hefner married university classmate Mildred Williams in 1949, a union that would last 10 years and produce two children, Christie and David.

“I tried the more traditional way of living life, but it really didn’t work for me,” he said.

After being struck by fears that he would end up following his parents’ conservative lifestyle, Hefner – who had worked in jobs ranging from assistant personnel manager to promotion copywriter at Esquire magazine – decided to take dramatic action and start his own magazine in 1953.

“When I saw that skirt lengths were going down instead of up and that, instead of a celebration after World War II, we were getting repression and conservatism, I knew that wasn’t progress,” he said.

Well past retirement age, Hefner continued to take an active role in the editorial side of his magazine, choosing covers and Playmates each month.

Late into his life he also frequented nightclubs and maintained a bevy of young girlfriends, a lifestyle – along with the occasional dose of Viagra – he credited with keeping him young both in and out of the bedroom.

In a 2003 interview with AFP, Hefner said he “would like to be remembered as somebody who had a positive impact on the changing social sexual values of his time”.

And I think that position is pretty well secured.

With reporting from AFP

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