Oui

Oui December 1983 Magazine Back Issue

Digital PDF Download — Oui Vintage Collector's Edition

Oui December 1983 magazine back issue cover
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Oui  — Magazine Back Issue
December 1983
UPC 0709893540612
Vol. 12  Issue 12
Year 1983
Format Digital PDF
Delivery Instant Download
Rating 4/5 (1 review)
  • Covergirl Nancy Photographed by Nat Fish
  • Nude! Nude! Jamie Lee Curtis and her big hooters!
  • Down and dirty on New Year's Eve!
  • Boom-Boom girls of Manila!
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Table of Contents
2 LETTERS
8 OPENERS
Jamie Lee Curtis bare...Ruski bears...Baring it all with Apology...
16 ROOM WITH A VIEW
Pictorial by Karl Gadja
24 THE NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY
National Lampoon veteran Chris Miller transports us back to the 1960s for a high school New Year's Eve party where more comes down than just the ball.
Fiction by Chris Miller.
26 SWEET RETREAT
Pictorial by Nat Fish
32 KIDS WHO KILL
OUI investigates the startling and disturbing trend of minors with a sparkle in their eyes and murder in their hearts. Article by Larry Garrison
35 WOMEN FOR HIRE
She'll clean your house, do the dishes and then hop into the sack with you. It's the latest rage in Los Angeles and it may be coming to your town sooner than you think. Article by Norman Winski
Photos by Karl Gadja
42 DEAD ON TARGET
Pictorial by Bruce Kennedy
50 CARNAL KNOWLEDGE
Instead of banging around car showrooms, lend an ear to our automotive expert, who clues OUI readers in on the sleekest and sexiest car investments for 1984.
Article by Dell Robertson
54 RON SMITH'S CELEBRITY SEX QUOTE QUIZ
56 LOOK WHAT OUI FOUND
Centerfold pictorial by Dennis Silverstein
66 MAY PANG AND JOHN LENNON
The murdered ex-Beatle's lover and author of Loving John tells OUI what life with Lennon really was like.
Article by Ron Smith
68 SATIN DOLL
Pictorial by Ed Seeman
77 OUI VIEWS
Strutting with Jackson Browne and the Stray Cats...Getting into Bondage, 007 style...Girls on film and other hot views...
82 STAR QUALITY
Pictorial by Steven Hicks
90 SPORTS
Gerry Cooney—What's the story? By Barry Janoff
92 TRAVEL
OUI's guide to ski-hopping the snow bunny trail.
By Michael Herman and J. Robyn Allen
94 WEIRD REELS
Blood and guts on the little screen. By Michael Kaplan
96 MUSIC
Can Steve Hackett hack it? By Ron Smith
118 THE BOOM BOOM GIRLS OF MANILA
Our correspondent went to Manila and returned with some interesting views on free—or sometimes inexpensive—love abroad.
Article by Burt Erlin
98 FIRST PERSON
Harvey Tingle is back, and he's not batting 1,000! By Christopher Policano
Features in This Issue
  • Covergirl Nancy Photographed by Nat Fish
  • Nude! Nude! Jamie Lee Curtis and her big hooters!
  • Down and dirty on New Year's Eve!
  • Boom-Boom girls of Manila!
About Oui
Oui was a men's adult pornographic magazine published in the United States and featuring explicit nude photographs of models, with full page pin-ups, centerfolds, interviews and other articles, and cartoons. Oui ceased publication in 2007. ("Oui" is French for "yes".) Oui was originally published in France under the name Lui by Daniel Filipacchi (first French issue November 1963), as a French equivalent of Playboy. In 1972, Playboy Enterprises purchased the rights for a U.S. edition, changing the name to Oui, and the first issue was published in October of that year. Jon Carroll, formerly assistant editor at Rolling Stone magazine and editor of Rags and later editor of The Village Voice, was selected as the first editor. Arthur Kretchmer, the editor of Playboy, however, had a role in ensuring that editorial choices would be in line with Hugh Hefner's vision. The intention was to differentiate the audience in mass-market men's magazines, in an attempt to answer the challenge brought by Penthouse and Hustler, with its more explicit photography, and therefore compete on multiple fronts. At first Playboy considered a direct response by following Penthouse in a nudity escalation, but Playboy management was hesitant to alter the magazine's philosophy, based on a more 'mature' and 'sophisticated' audience (one-third of Playboy's readership at that time was estimated to be over 35). Instead, a separate publication, Oui, was introduced in order to pursue a younger readership, offering a combination of a "rambunctious editorial slant with uninhibited nudes pictured in the Penthouse mood." In the late seventies, Oui published some interesting articles, including "Is this the man who ate Michael Rockefeller?" (April 1977) by Lorne Blair (lately famous for the Ring of Fire documentaries), beginning with a photograph of a grinning New Guinea native, told by the intrepid anthropologist/reporter who journeyed to New Guinea, interviewed people who had known Michael Rockefeller, then ventured into the jungle and talked to members of the tribe from whom Rockefeller had bought native art artifacts, including totem poles. In the end, he found a man who claimed he had eaten the unfortunate collector. Oui also hosted several reportages about Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) activity, like the article "CIA vs. USA – The Agency's Plot to Take Over America" by Philip Agee, about an alleged Operation PBPrime, whose leaders were the top four men in the CIA and whose target was the control of the U.S. government. In a more humorous vein, Oui also published the essay "The 3 Most Important Things in Life" by Harlan Ellison in its November 1978 issue. The three things in question were sex, violence, and labor relations, each illustrated by anecdotes from Ellison's life. The sex anecdote involved a less-than-successful assignation with a young woman, the violence anecdote was about witnessing a murder in a movie theater during a screening of Save the Tiger, and the labor relations anecdote was Ellison's version of the story of his being fired after only one morning at The Walt Disney Company for jokingly suggesting the making of a pornographic cartoon using the primary Disney characters. The piece has since been republished in Ellison's Stalking the Nightmare and Edgeworks 1. Oui also published short fiction. A 1977 interview by Peter Manso of the then 29-year-old emerging actor Arnold Schwarzenegger on issues like sex, drugs, bodybuilding, and homosexuality produced some embarrassment 25 years later to candidate Schwarzenegger in the 2003 California gubernatorial campaign. During the 1970s, Oui printed a copy of Shere Hite's questionnaire about female sexuality that was used as the basis of The Hite Report. Replies were received from 253 of the magazine's women readers. Despite its popularity, Oui was unable to produce a profit. Furthermore, management realized that Oui was taking more readers from Playboy than from Penthouse. So, in June 1981 Playboy Enterprises, based in Chicago, ended its Oui experiment. The magazine was sold to Laurant Publishing Ltd. in New York; its new president and chief operating officer was Irwin E. Billman, former executive vice president and chief operating officer of the Penthouse Group. During the 1980s the magazine maintained its distinction from Playboy by publishing graphic nude pictures like its rivals Penthouse and Hustler. Initially, Laurant featured celebrity nudity in Oui, peaking in 1982 with pictorials of Phyllis Hyman, Linda Blair, Demi Moore, and Pia Zadora. In the same year the magazine bought the short story "Down Among the Dead Men" by science-fiction writers Gardner Dozois and Jack Dann. The editorial plan was to return the magazine to the "younger Playboy image" that it previously had. The 1990s found the magazine focusing on pop culture and youth-centered topics, with rock musician interviews and an increasingly large comics section that included R-rated versions of the X-rated Carnal Comics: True Stories of Adult Film Stars line, Rip Off Press's Demi the Demoness (later the first adults-only comic character to be adapted as a live action film), and a serialized version of Jay Allen Sanford's illustrated book Triple-X Cinema: A Cartoon History. The magazine subsequently experienced a significant decline in circulation. As had many of its competitors, Oui expanded its photo content to hardcore in the early 2000s, which included depictions of couples having sexual intercourse, including explicit penetration. Oui ceased publication in 2007.
Customer Reviews
4
★★★★☆
1 review — out of 5
Sergio Lima December 8, 2011 ★★★★☆
Happy
Great magazine.