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Hugh Hefner Archive

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:NA Estimated At:25,000.00 - 35,000.00 USD
Hugh Hefner Archive

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Auction Date:2020 Dec 09 @ 18:00 (UTC-05:00 : EST/CDT)
Location:15th Floor WeWork, Boston, Massachusetts, 02108, United States
ALS - Autograph Letter Signed
ANS - Autograph Note Signed
AQS - Autograph Quotation Signed
AMQS - Autograph Musical Quotation Signed
DS - Document Signed
FDC - First Day Cover
Inscribed - “Personalized”
ISP - Inscribed Signed Photograph
LS - Letter Signed
SP - Signed Photograph
TLS - Typed Letter Signed
Lifetime collection of Jane Borson Sellers, a close friend and former high school classmate of Hugh Hefner, which contains over 60 years of personal correspondence and approximately 700 pages of letters, original sketches, books, invitations, and various ephemera related to Hefner and the world’s most storied men’s magazine. Sellers and Hefner met in the summer of 1942 between their sophomore and junior years at Chicago’s Steinmetz High School. When Sellers and her family moved to California in 1943, Hefner began a correspondence that would last their entire lives. Sellers later noted: ‘At 16, I knew he was destined to do amazing things, so I saved every scrap of paper he ever sent or gave me.’

Leading the lot is an issue of Playboy #1, HMH Publishing Co., December 1953 (CGC 3.5), featuring Marilyn Monroe on the front cover, which is signed in black felt tip, “Hugh Hefner,” who adds a small self-portrait ‘Goo Heffer’ profile sketch; Hefner has also added his signature and a sketch (a pipe-smoking bunny) on the inside to page three. Encapsulated and graded by CGC, which uniquely states that the magazine derives “From the Collection of Jane Sellers.” The CGC grading also indicates that this issue is an exceedingly rare “Page 3 Copy, White Pages,” which means that page 3 of this edition is numbered and that it features pristine interior page color; it’s estimated that a mere 5% of the existing No. 1 issues of Playboy are of this ‘Page 3’ variant. The Playboy includes an ANS from Hefner, “To Janie—with love, Hef,” penned in black felt tip on a sheet of his personal Playboy stationery, as well as a note from Hefner’s assistant Peter Glassberg. We can safely surmise that this ‘Page 3 Copy’ Playboy, Issue No. 1, is unquestionably the only one of its kind to feature two Hefner signatures and two original sketches, one being his ultra rare ‘Goo Heffer’ self-portrait.

The Playboy is accompanied by a signed 2017 letter of provenance from Sellers, who affirms: “I, Jane Borson Sellers, have given this first issue of Playboy magazine, signed twice by Hugh Hefner with small cartoons, to my son...I am the wife of Eldon Sellers, who gave Playboy Magazine its name. I was a high school classmate and lifelong friend of Hef’s. I received the issue from Eldon. I mailed it to Hef about ten years ago for a signature. He signed the cover as well as page 3. He included a small cartoon in both places. He also included a small personal note written on a sheet of Playboy notepad.”

The significance of the CGC #1 Playboy cannot be overstated. The issue’s original owner, Eldon Sellers, a close friend of Hefner who helped find investors for the nascent HMH Publishing Corporation, came up with the magazine’s now iconic name, Playboy, after the magazine’s original moniker of Stag Party was opposed by the publisher of a men's adventure magazine called Stag. In a generous showing of good will, Eldon gifted the magazine to his ex-wife, Sellers, who then forwarded it to her old friend for an autograph. The returned Playboy, which features not one but two signatures with sketches—an unheard of example given Hefner’s signing history—easily qualifies this magazine as absolutely one-of-a-kind!

Also of particular interest is a six-page TLS signed “Hef” and “H,” with an added self-portrait sketch, dated October 20, 1992. After writing about a recent trip to Chicago to attend the documentary Hugh Hefner: Once Upon a Time, Hefner adds a lengthy postscript in which he quotes directly from his high school journal, expressing to Sellers his true feelings about their relationship, as well as how a particular romantic defeat helped him form a new identity. In part: “I thought I was still in the running where Betty was concerned until you girls decided to go on a hayride and I wasn’t invited. You invited Jim and Betty invited Bob, and I was devastated...After the hayride, I never again allowed myself to hope that Betty might really care for me as a boyfriend, although I continued to care a great deal about her. It was then that I reinvented myself, changing my name from Hugh to Hef, changing my wardrobe, calling girls ‘Slug,’ and using expressions like ‘Jeeps Creeps!’”

Additional highlights include:

A twice-signed 1943 ‘Silver Streak’ yearbook from Steinmetz High School in Chicago, signed on the inside front cover in ink, “All I gotta say is you’re tops & hurry up home—Hugh Hefner,” and then again on the inside back cover, “Dear Janie: I wrote in front but decided to add this here. I still say hurry home, cause you know how I love ya, Hugh,” who adds a caricature sketch of Borson and writes “This is you!”

A 1944 ‘Silver Streak’ yearbook from Steinmetz High School, which contains 30 printed sketches by Hefner, who was the cartoonist for the yearbook. Additionally, Hefner’s senior picture is on pg. 146, and he can also be seen as a member of the Student Council and as a member of the creative writing group, As We Like It.

A collection of 25 original mailing envelopes from Hefner to “Janie Borson,” postmarked between 1943 and 1946, which includes 20 that are addressed in Hefner’s own hand, with Hefner incorporating his signature, “Pvt. H. Hefner” or “Pvt. Hugh Hefner,” into the return address field of 19 examples, with several directed from Camp Hood, Camp Gruber, Camp Adair, Camp Pickett, Fort George G. Meade, and other U.S. Army training facilities.

Original sketches by Hefner when he was in high school, accomplished in pencil on a brown 10 x 10 album sleeve. The sketches show Hefner and Borson singing on the right side, with Hefner adding, “HH & JB, singing (JB),” and two boys with a microphone on the left. In the upper right corner, Hefner has added: “(It stinks)–HH.”

A TLS signed “Hef,” one page, 5.5 x 8.5, personal letterhead, December 5, 1988: “Dear Janie, I thought you might enjoy this special 35th Anniversary issue of Playboy. See you on New year’s Eve.” The referenced 35th Anniversary Issue of Playboy is included.

A TLS signed “Hef” with added self-portrait sketch, one page, 8.5 x 11, personal letterhead, December 26, 2002, in full: “Here it is—a belated Christmas present—Volume 8 of the Comic, as requested. I hope you have a wonderful holiday and a very special new year.” Included with the letter is a three-ring binder containing the referenced 59-page color comic, “Goo Heffer Joins the Army, Volume 8,” and a copy of an intimate 11-page letter from Hefner to Borson (“Dear Slug”), from February 4, 1944, in which Hefner shares his personal feelings about their relationship. The front of binder bears a plaque that reads: “Hef’s ‘School Daze,’ Vol. 8, Reproduction Gift from Hef.”

A first edition of Inside the Playboy Mansion, hardcover with dust jacket, published by the General Publishing Group in 1998, signed and inscribed on the first free end page in black felt tip, “To Janie—who was there in the beginning & shared the dreams! Love, Hugh Hefner,” who adds a sketch of a pipe-smoking bunny.

A first edition of The Playboy Book: Forty Years, hardcover with dust jacket, published by the General Publishing Group in 1994, signed and inscribed on the first free end page in black felt tip, “To Janie, Five decades of memories, with best wishes, Hugh Hefner.”

A first edition of Playboy Stories, hardcover with dust jacket, published by Dutton in 1994, signed and inscribed on the first free end page in black ink, “To Janie—with love, Hef & Kimber.”

A first edition of Hef’s Little Black Book, hardcover with slipcase, published by Harper Entertainment in 2004, signed and inscribed on the half-title page in black felt tip, “To Janie—with loving memories! Hugh Hefner.”

A first edition of The Art of Playboy, hardcover with dust jacket, published by Alfred van der Marck Edition in 1985, signed and inscribed on the first free end page in black felt tip, “To Janie—with loving memories of the past. Hugh Hefner, 12/25/85.” The book contains considerable dampstaining, which affects the close of the date and adds rippling to all pages.

‘Letters from the Innocent Playboy, 1943–1946,’ Vol. I of II, a spiral-bound booklet that contains over 100 pages of photocopied illustrations, envelopes, and letters from Hefner, with the illustrations carefully taped to pages by Sellers.

‘Letters from the Innocent Playboy, Part Two: 1944—Graduation, Loves, and the Army,’ Vol. II of II, a spiral-bound booklet that contains nearly 100 pages of photocopied letters, caricatures, and summaries.

A DVD-R of Hefner’s 1942 10-minute, black-and-white (with subtitles) horror movie entitled "Back from the Dead,” which stars Hefner, his best friend Jim Brophy, and the girl that Hefner loved early on, Betty ("Betts").

A group of eight DVDs, with titles as follows: “Reunion–6/7/1986,” “USC Honor–3/28/1996,” “Mable at the Party,” “Biography w/JS, 5-6-96,” “70th Birthday, 1996,” “CBS This Morning (2014),” “USA Film–1999,” and “Entertainment Tonight Weekend (2011).”

Three audio recordings featuring a teenage Hugh Hefner, with annotated labels and sleeves reading: "Figure it out for yourself, Some jerk I dunno, 4-1-43” and “Who cares?, Who Knows, 4-1-43,” contains a 16-year-old Hefner talking to Borson and then playing a song (Hefner mailed this to California where Janie and her family had moved because her father was assigned there for Army training during WW2); “Radio Script” on both sides, by "HJB" (a combination of Hefner’s name and that of his friend Jim Brophy) and “Hef & Broph,” August 20, 1943, which features a 17-year-old Hefner, known as ‘Goo Heffer,’ reading a script that includes a takeoff on ‘Bulldog Drummond’; and "Not much of anything, Nobody, 12-13-44,” which contains Hefner singing (very scratchy). Also included are two recordings by Borson and her husband Eldon Sellers from 1945 and 1946.

A huge three-ring binder marked as “Hef's Retyped Letters,” dated from 1943 to 2008, which contains 300 pages of typed letters from Hefner to Borson, who has neatly organized the letters into chronological order and has included contextual summaries of each.

A three-ring binder containing over 100 pages of copies of handwritten letters from Hefner when he was in the Army, 1944–1946.

A three-ring binder marked “Hef's Post-War Letters—copies,” dated between 1985 and 2010, which contains nearly 100 pages of letters, invitations, photos, and other items related to Hefner.

Other accompaniments: a Chicago-area real estate newspaper section, which lists the “Playboy Penthouse” for $1,350,000; a 2017 typed letter from Sellers to her son Rory regarding the sale of Playboy stock; a photo of a young Hefner and Borson; a Butterfields auction catalog for The Playboy Auction held in Los Angeles on June 23, 2002; the 40th Anniversary Issue of Playboy, Collector’s Edition, January 1994; two copies of the 50th Anniversary Issue of Playboy, Collector’s Edition, January 2004 (one sealed in its original wrapper); a CHS of Hugh Hefner: Once Upon a Time; a DVD of Hugh Hefner: Playboy, Activist, and Rebel; a 4-CD box set of Playboy’s 40th Anniversary: Four Decades of Jazz, 1953–1993; a Christmas card with facsimile autograph; and a Newsweek, Special Commemorative Edition honoring Hugh Hefner, December 2017. In overall fine condition.