Penthouse magazine nude photo spreads3/15/2024 ![]() “So many people have gotten burned by those people that I think they’ll eventually get it in the end and die a slow, painful death.” ![]() “I just wanted to get on with my life,” she told People in 1989. ![]() Playboy, meanwhile, took the moral high ground: it had been offered the photos first, but turned them down partly in deference to Williams - and partly because, per TIME, “it does not use what Spokesman Dave Salyers calls lesbian material.” The pageant’s organizers were aghast at the images, which appeared in Penthouse’s September 1984 issue with the headline, “Miss America: Oh, God, She’s Nude!” The magazine’s publisher had little compunction about printing them over Williams’ objections. TIME reported that the photographer was paid more than Penthouse had ever paid for a photo spread before. The photographer had assured her at the time, she told People, that the photos were merely silhouettes, in which she’d be unidentifiable and that they would never leave the studio.īut they did leave the studio, partly because she was identifiable: photos of Miss America in compromising positions, some of them involving another nude woman, were worth their weight in gold. On this day, July 23, in 1984, then-21-year-old Williams handed over her crown - making her both the first black Miss America and the first to give up the title - after Penthouse announced that it would publish raunchy photos she had posed for two years earlier while working as a photographer’s assistant. It might have been the lowest point in her life, as she told People in 1984, but the scandal that led Vanessa Williams to resign her post as Miss America also set her up for one of the greatest comebacks in entertainment history. ![]()
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