Carrie Enwright Nude

Carrie Enwright Nude




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Carrie Enwright Nude
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Playboy Playmate Of The Month July 1963
Los Angeles, California, United States


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AKA: Carrie Enwright
ICGID: CE-005ZC
Born: August 1943
Birthplace: United States of America
First Seen: 1963
Last Seen: 1963
Measurements: 39D-24-36
Body Type:
Height: 163 cm, 5 ft 4 in
Piercings:
Hair Colour: Brown
Ethnicity: Caucasian
Breasts: Large (Real)
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Activities: Glamour

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United States of America
, brown hair
, large natural breasts



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My favorite Playmates from the 1960s

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Pipe and PJs: The Sixties



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Carrie was Playmate of the Month for July 1963. Her pictorial was titled Summertime Idyl .
Carrie was born Aug. 24, 1943, in California.
I can’t find anything else about her.

The unexamined life is not worth living.

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I’d like to juxtapose the original text that accompanied Ms. Enwright’s Playboy gatefold appearance with some excerpts from a review of The Playmate Book (Taschen, 2006) by Joan Acocella, a writer whose work I like and find thought-provoking.
It’s my opinion that the prose and pictures, especially in the early years, treated the reader as a fellow experienced swinging single dude, talking man-to-man. We have talked before about how the pictures are composed to have an implicit male presence, like the reader is the model’s partner and has only just stepped out of frame, maybe to take the picture he’s looking at. Take the following as an example:

Picnic laid out with thermos and two cups. Hello.

A non-threatening introduction, yes, but pretty come-hither. Not exactly teddy bear fare — and neither is the pose particularly “cuddly.”
Somewhat disagree. I believe there was slightly more variety in the Sixties and Seventies than Ms. Acocella sugests, but I admit I am omitting the portion where she talks about some of the noteworthy veers from the norm (Joni Mattis, yay!) and I don’t want you to think she didn’t acknowledge that in her review. Please be aware that she did. Don’t want to look all biased.
Agree. Yes. 100%. That is its appeal, that the magazine attracts that dichotomy in American consumerism and in our own idea of beauty, sex, and ourselves.
Agree. This also undermines the beginning sentence with its teddy-bear going-for-innocent-investigative-interest suggestion, but I’m okay with undoing that assertion because I disagreed with it.
Ha! Somewhat agree. That Santa. He always knows. But this shoot and Cheryl Kubert are both good examples, just as recent citation on this journal, of gatefolds that featured a model mainly not smiling. Ms. Enwright even keeps her mouth closed.
Agree, but not sure that it matters.
Hell, yeah, lasagna and jazz! This girl is all kinds of easygoing and wonderful. Practical jokes, eh? such as what?
I have never done that nor even thought of it. Holy god, I can’t wait to do this. She is a comic genius and I am trying this, stickety-stat!

Bookworms are hottttt … even when they are only pretending for a photoshoot.

I don’t know why, but I feel like the editors forced her to say she read it all when maybe the truth was that she only started it. Just a feeling. I’m about to talk about why they might’ve done that in a second.
Again — wonderful taste. You find that so often in the Sixties write-ups, though, that the girls are prompted to talk about foodie foolery, jazz, politics, photography, and art. I’m not sure when that fizzled out, but it has. And I can totally admit that probably 30% of it was bullshit and only 7 out of 10 of these girls knew what they were talking about (if they even said it to begin with) or collected Bird and bebop on vinyl and the like, but I still feel good about the fact that it was important to the editorial staff for their vision of the ideal Playmate that these intriguing, intelligent statements seem true. Ms. Acocella addresses this:
Ha! and again, I have to say agree, not in that groovy archaic pursuits are strictly the male provenance of neato gay guys (I like any man that goes for records and cares about dorky esoterica) but, yeah, society-wide, that would be the humorous judgment in the sense of stereotyping.
You know. Like when Bart and Millhouse tried to be Playdudes. That was hilarious . All pimped out in smoking jackets up in the treehouse.
That is very sweet and touching. It is not full of trying-to-be-sexy artifice, nor is it overly cloying or disingenuous.

And who can improve on that desire? Well-wished, Ms. Enwright, and I hope she found her happiness. That’s not trite: it’s natural.
What Ms. Acocella observes in the unnaturally smooth, airbrushed featurelessness of the current crop of sexless-and-vaginally-shaved-for-maximum-Barbie-resemblance centerfolds mostly found on the newsstands today is resonantly true.
I guess what I’m saying is this: Yeah, there may have never really been a sophisticated scotch-sampling bachelor like the ones to whom Hef designed the magazine to appeal, and there may never have really been a girl next door with her clothes off that just happened to discourse freely on jazz LP’s and modern art while whipping up beef bourguignon in her skivvies, but isn’t the fantasy of that time period, quaint as it may seem now, so much more touching and oddly innocent than the weird highly-structured and false fantasy being sold today?


This entry was posted on June 21, 2010 at 3:06 pm and is filed under art , confession , Foodie foolery , Literashit , Model Citizens , movies , Music --- Too many notes. , photography , Pictures , Playboy , quotes , Self-audit , the Girls of Summer . You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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My father was an acolyte, I wish I had pictures of his “pad” to show you how not-kidding I am (my parents divorced when I was three, my sibs and I lived with Mom but we were required to spend the prescribed amount of time with Dad each month until we were old enough to escape). A narcissist alcoholic, he probably quit drinking because he realized he’d get laid more often as an AA sponsor. I haven’t seen the TV series Mad Men yet, because I’m afraid I’ll see my father in it (Dad was in advertising too).
Playboy was my father’s religion, his higher power. My brother and I separately vowed to be as unlike him as we could, and I guess we owe him for that.
And it’s wild because that fantasy, sexy-equals-materialism-driven life of which your father was an early swinging’-bachelor-pad acolyte (you sooo rightly cite Mad Men, haven’t seen it either but I feel like that is where it started, yes, Madison Ave and corporate ads and sponsorship, the selling of a “be cool” image?) was only the beginning of what we face today in forms that seem to get worse all the time. (am I being bleak)
Good on you and your brother for recognizing the hollowness of baloney dreams for sale even in their germinating infancy. But I’m sorry it was at the expense of a dad you were glad to get away from.
I am quite surprised. I was born in 1964. I just entered a name on google (Enwright) and this came up. It is just like time travel. Seems that most of the things were quite the same nearly half a century ago. Where is Enwright now?
She just released a tremendous book call “Upper Cut.” (Sept 2011)
Very smart lady and has a salon in Beverly Hills. Impressive list of clients. Uses the name Carrie White. Book is well worth the read.
I want to somehow go back to 1963 and visit this lovely dream creature in my mind, pick dandelions with her in her backyard and worship her soft, pretty foot bottoms! I would feel like I had just died and gone to heaven…
Am I the only one who sees that Carrie was a dead ringer for Laura Petrie ( Mary Tyler Moore’s character on the sixties show Dick Van Dyke ) plus , several of the pictures are of Carrie in capri slacks, a signature clothing item of Laura’
Hey, I think you have a point there, Emberato, hadn’t thought of that till now, but honestly I don’t think Mary Tyler Moore had melons quite like this girl.
Thanks DrCroland ,She is definitely 60’s fantasy fodder.
I was a bit shocked to see her senior picture in the ’61 Hollywood HS yearbook. She has blonde hair. And just as surprising, Carrie Enwright is apparently her real name. Almost all playmates from the 60’s used a pseudonym
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