
The Playboy Mansion played a starring role in Hef’s mystique
LOS ANGELES — Apart from the White House, there’s probably not a more storied home in the world than the Playboy Mansion.
Its sprawling grounds have played host to countless parties and social events, as well as Playboy founder Hugh Hefner’s offices, bedroom, movie theatre, staff quarters, library and personal archives. A zoo’s worth of animals lived in the backyard, including flamingos, peacocks, parrots and monkeys. And then there was the Grotto: the steamy, cave-like pool that hosted many debauched escapades over the years.
But Hefner’s death on Wednesday at age 91 heralds the end of the Playboy Mansion era, and will return the property to a similar state it was in when it was built nearly a century ago.
Hefner bought the Holmby Hills estate in 1971 and simultaneously made it into the epicenter of his Playboy brand and one of the most famous homes in the world.