Initial "the" and "a" and "an" are ignored, and entries for "real people" are listed by last name. How to Use this page: This is a one-page list of ALL the checklists in the database in alphabetical order. Non-smoking home.Jeff Allender's House of Checklists! All Lists They have been stored away in a plastic protective sleeve away from light. Playboy Issue July 1988 - Cindy Crawford Playboy Issue March 1979 - Cheerleaders too hot for the NFL Playboy Issue February 1979 - The Girls of Las Vegas All Magazines are in great condition. Although she resigned from fulfilling the duties of a current Miss America, Williams was allowed to keep the bejeweled crown and scholarship money and is officially recognized by the Miss America Organization as "Miss America 1984" Charles is recognized as "Miss America 1984-b". She eventually dropped the suit a year later, explaining that she wanted to put the scandal behind her and move on. On September 7, 1984, Williams filed a $500 million lawsuit against Chiapel and Guccione. The title subsequently went to the first runner-up, Suzette Charles, also an African American. After days of media frenzy and sponsors threatening to pull out of the upcoming 1985 pageant, Williams felt pressured by Miss America Pageant officials to resign, and did so in a press conference on July 23, 1984. According to the PBS documentary Miss America, Williams' issue of Penthouse would ultimately bring Guccione a $14 million windfall. The cover featured a photograph of a smiling Vanessa Williams with 88-year-old George Burns and the headline, Miss America, Oh, God, She's Nude! Guccione paid Chiapel for the rights to the photos without Williams' consent. We were also mindful that she was the first black Miss America." Days later, Bob Guccione, the publisher of Penthouse, announced that his magazine would publish the photos in their September 1984 15th anniversary issue, which was the same issue that featured nude photographs of Traci Lords, later found to have been only 15 years old at the time. But they clearly weren't authorized and because they would be the source of considerable embarrassment to her, we decided not to publish them. There was never any question of our interest in the photos. Later, Hefner would explain why in People Weekly, "Vanessa Williams is a beautiful woman. Hugh Hefner, the publisher of Playboy, was initially offered the photos, but turned them down. He photographed Williams and another woman in several nude poses. According to Williams, Chiapel advised her that he wanted to try a "new concept of silhouettes with two models". The genesis of the black-and-white photos dated back to 1982 (the year before she won the Miss America Pageant), when she worked as an assistant and makeup artist for Mount Kisco, New York photographer Tom Chiapel. Williams believed the photographs were private and had been destroyed she claims she never signed a release permitting the photos to be used. Ten months into her reign as Miss America, she received an anonymous phone call stating that nude photos of her taken before her pageant days had surfaced. For the first time in pageant history, a reigning Miss America was the target of death threats and hate mail. Williams' reign as Miss America was not without its challenges and controversies. To win a "prelim" in both is a strong precursor to success in the finals.) She was crowned Miss America 1984 on September 17, 1983, becoming the first African American to win the title. Prior to the final night of competition, Williams won both Preliminary competitions – Talent and Swimsuit – earlier in the week (note: each day's Preliminary competitions have winners announced therefore there can be as many as six "Prelim" winners three each for Talent and Swimsuit. After winning the Miss Syracuse title, Williams won the Miss New York crown in 1983, and went to compete for the Miss America title at the national pageant in Atlantic City. (Wikipedia) Williams competed in the Miss Syracuse (University) beauty pageant when a campus musical she was in was canceled in 1983. Background information about the controversial photos of Vanessa Williams published in Penthouse Magazine in September 1984 15th Anniversary Issue.
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