Dwight Hooker

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dwight Hooker is an American photographer and architect. He is best known for the long-running photography which he produced for the US magazine Playboy. He has been described as one of the masters of "the sensual and the erotic", along with photographers Helmut Newton and J. Frederick Smith.[1][2] One of his photographs became the basis of Lenna, the standard test image for image processing algorithms (such as compression and denoising) and related scientific publications.[3][4]

Career milestones

Hooker photographed the centerfold featuring Lena Söderberg for the best-selling edition of the magazine. That November 1972 edition issue of Playboy sold 7,161,561 copies.[5] A cropped image from that pictorial, known as Lenna, became the standard test image for image processing algorithms (such as compression and denoising) and related scientific publications.[3][4]

Hooker originated and provided the photographs for the magazine's commercial campaign "What sort of a man reads Playboy?",[6] which became an example of sociodemographic segmentation for advertising campaigns.[7] It featured young, educated and urban men who had money and were not averse to spending it and took pleasure as a duty.[8][9][10] The campaign, with its use of undressed men and women, was ruled by the US Supreme Court to be "not obscene", although the court decision did call it "offensive".[11]

Other milestones in Hooker's career include photographing the twins Madeleine and Mary Collinson (the first twin Playmates on Playboy, for cover and centerfold of the October 1970 issue), Marilyn Cole (the first Playmate to pose for a full frontal nude centerfold and the first Briton to hold the title of Playmate of the Year), Jayne Marie Mansfield (daughter of Jayne Mansfield), Candy Loving (the 25th Anniversary Playmate), Monica Tidwell (the first Playmate to be younger than Playboy), Nancy Cameron (the 20th Anniversary Playmate and the only Playmate to have a back and front double-sided centerfold[12]), Marilyn Lange (both her Playmate of the Month and Playmate of the Year layouts for May 1974 and June 1975 issues respectively) and Jill De Vries (the first Playmate with signed centerfold). He also photographed Playmate and Playboy bunny Barbi Benton (actress and singer who was Hugh Hefner's girlfriend[13]) and Emmy and Golden Globe award-winning actor Alan Alda.

Life

Hooker mentored other Playboy photographers including Stephen Wayda.[14] He shot the cover for the first paperback edition of Playboy's Book of Forbidden Words (1974), with model Mercy Rooney.[15] He is reported to have the record number of rejections for a Playboy photographer when Hugh Hefner, the publisher, rejected 500 of Hooker's photographs for a centerfold.[16][17]

Hooker retired to Sundance, Utah[14] to work as an architect. He was a regular at the Sundance Film Festival.[18]

Playboy work

Playboy centerfolds

  • Shay Knuth: September 1969
  • Jennifer Liano: May 1970
  • Mary and Madeleine Collinson: October 1970
  • Avis Miller: November 1970
  • Carol Imhof: December 1970
  • Crystal K. Smith: September 1971
  • Danielle de Vabre: November 1971
  • Ellen Michaels: March 1972
  • Deanna Baker: May 1972
  • Lenna Sjööblom (also known as Lena Söderberg): November 1972
  • Marilyn Cole: June 1973 (Playmate of Year, with Richard Fegley, Larry Dale Gordon and Alexas Urba)
  • Monica Tidwell: November 1973
  • Nancy Cameron: January 1974
  • Marilyn Lange: May 1974
  • Jean Manson: August 1974
  • Marilyn Lange: June 1975 (Playmate of Year)
  • Lillian Müller: August 1975
  • Jill De Vries: October 1975
  • Laura Lyons: February 1976
  • Kathy Morrison: May 1978
  • Candy Loving: January 1979
  • Louann Fernald: June 1979

Playboy covers

  • Barbara Klein: July 1969
  • Shay Knuth: September 1969
  • Jean Bell, Lorrie Menconi, Kathy MacDonald, Shay Knuth, Leslie Bianchini: January 1970 (with Don Klumpp, Bill Figge, David Chan, Mario Casilli)
  • Norma Bauer: February 1970
  • Barbi Benton: March 1970
  • Phyllis Babila: May 1970
  • Mary and Madeleine Collinson: October 1970
  • Crystal Smith: November 1970
  • Mary and Madeleine Collinson, Jennifer Liano, Debbie Ellison, Sharon Clark: January 1971 (with Pompeo Posar, Bill Figge and Edward DeLong)
  • Christy Miller: August 1971
  • Crystal Smith: September 1971
  • Debbie Hanlon: November 1971
  • Rosie Holotik: April 1972
  • Crystal Smith: September 1972
  • Mercy Rooney: March 1973
  • Marilyn Cole: June 1973
  • Karen Christy: February 1974
  • Ester Cordet, Bebe Buell, Marilyn Lange, Francine Parks, Nancy Cameron and Kristine Hanson: January 1975 (with Richard Fegley, Mario Casilli, David Chan)
  • Marilyn Lange: June 1975
  • Jill De Vries: February 1976
  • Lisa Sohm: April 1977

Playmate pictorials

Books

Christina series

A book series on imaginary heiress Christina van Bell by Blakely St. James, a pseudonym for multiple authors including Robin Leonard, Charles Platt, Ted Gottfried, William E Butterworth, and Hart Williams. Hooker provided the photographs used on the front and back covers. The model for all the books is Jill De Vries.

  • Christina's Quest, Playboy Press, 1976, ISBN 0-87216-885-9
  • Christina's Desire, Playboy Press, 1978
  • Christina's Rapture, Playboy Press, 1978
  • Christina's Ecstasy, Playboy Paperbacks, 1980, ISBN 0-86721-018-4
  • Christina's Sins, Playboy Press, 1980, ISBN 0-87216-729-1
  • Christina Enchanted, 1980
  • Christina's Promise, 1980
  • A Kiss for Christina, Playboy Press, 1981
  • Christina's Escape, Playboy Paperbacks, 1981, ISBN 0-87216-820-4
  • Christina's Obsession, Playboy Paperbacks, 1981, ISBN 0-87216-853-0
  • Christina in Love, Playboy Paperbacks, 1981, ISBN 0-87216-925-1
  • Christina's Bliss, Playboy Paperbacks, 1981
  • Christina's Bliss, 1981
  • Christina's Hunger, 1981
  • Christina's Delight, 1982
  • Christina's Awakening, 1983
  • Christina's Favorite, 1983
  • Christina's Paradise, 1983
  • Christina's Confessions, 1983

Other books

  • The Playboy Photographer 2, Playboy Press, 1975
  • Sexy Ladies, Playboy Press, 1977 (with Helmut Newton, Jeanloup Sieff, Sam Notabartolo, and others)

External links

References

  1. A. D. Coleman and Sheer Grantz, The Photography A-V program directory, Photography Media Institute, 1980, ISBN 978-0-936524-00-9
  2. Sean Callahan, Photographing sensuality, J. Frederick Smith, p. 45, Crowell, 1975, ISBN 978-0-690-00781-7
  3. 3.0 3.1 Jon Tarrant, Understanding Digital Cameras: Getting the Best Image from Capture to Output, p. 41, Focal Press, 2007, ISBN 978-0-240-52024-7
  4. 4.0 4.1 Juergen Seitz, Digital watermarking for digital media, p. 9, Idea Group Inc (IGI), 2005, ISBN 978-1-59140-518-4
  5. Geek Love, the Lenna Story, Photoshop News, Adobe
  6. "Home lessons", New York Post, June 4, 2010
  7. Martin F. Kaplan and Steven Schwartz, Human judgment and decision processes in applied settings, p. 233, Academic Press, 1977, ISBN 978-0-12-397240-8
  8. Steven Cohan, Masked men: masculinity and the movies in the fifties, p. 270, Indiana University Press, 1997, ISBN 978-0-253-21127-9
  9. Gary Cross, Men to Boys: The Making of Modern Immaturity, p. 73, Columbia University Press, 2010, ISBN 978-0-231-14431-5
  10. Robin Tolmach Lakoff and Raquel L. Scherr, Face value, the politics of beauty, p. 227, Routledge, 1984, ISBN 978-0-7100-9742-2
  11. United States Supreme Court reports, Volume 100, p. 282, Lawyers Co-operative Pub. Co., 1977
  12. 20th Anniversary Playmate, Timeline
  13. Hef's Special Ladies on Playboy.com
  14. 14.0 14.1 Abbey Hood, "Behind the lens of a Playboy photographer", Beverly Hills Courier
  15. Robert A. Wilson (editor), Playboy's Book of Forbidden Words, Playboy Press, 1974
  16. Russell Miller, Bunny: The real story of Playboy, p. 11, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1985, ISBN 978-0-03-063748-3
  17. Gene N. Landrum, Entrepreneurial Genius: The Power of Passion, p. 161, Brendan Kelly Publishing Inc., 2004, ISBN 978-1-895997-23-1
  18. Lory Smith, Party in a Box: Story of the Sundance Film Festival, p. 41, Gibbs M. Smith Inc, December 1998, ISBN 0-87905-861-7
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.