Bold Venture playing Latin dancer along with Kathy Kelly and Lisa Gaye in "Bold Venture" on channel 9, program #1003, August, 1959.Peter Gunn playing "Midge" in episode: "Scuba" (episode # 1.21) 16 February 1959.Highway Patrol playing "Woman" in episode: "Coptor Cave-In" (episode # 18) February 1959.Markham playing "Valerie" in episode: "The Glass Diamond" (episode 1.8) June 1959.Alfred Hitchcock Presents playing "The Other Woman" in episode: "The Pearl Necklace" (episode # 6.29).Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea playing "Mermaid" in episode: "The Mermaid" (episode # 3.19) 29 January 1967."Stanley Siegel Show" Herself discussing belly dancing 1981.DeathĮmpey died on August 19, 2008, in Los Angeles in her 76th year from complications following surgery for cancer. She married Joseph Webber in 1955 (the marriage was divorced in 1986), from which came a son named John (born 1956). In her final years she was a librarian and archivist for a law firm in Santa Monica. For several years Empey led and co-ordinated these outdoor shows with up to forty performers taking part. Empey's dancing shows were sensual but they didn’t pander to a male audience, women and children often attending the performances. Empey founded Perfumes of Araby, one of the first Middle-Eastern dance companies in the United States. Reddit Facebook Twitter VK Pinterest Tumblr /r/nudists. She occasionally performed this dance accompanied by some of her better students to the accompaniment of Middle-Eastern music in public places in and around Los Angeles. Diane Webber on the cover of Popular Nudism magazines 1st issue.
Middle-Eastern danceįrom 1969 to 1980 Empey's professional career was as a bellydancing instructor at the now defunct Everywoman's Village in Van Nuys, California.
In 1965 she traveled to Sioux City to give evidence at the request of a United States District Attorney in a court-room trial involving the sending of allegedly obscene nudist magazines into the State of Iowa, but instead of proving the prosecution's case, in the witness box she made a spirited defense of the principles of the lifestyle. Japanese release of Seiji Hiraoka & His Quartet album Bedtime Music. She also appeared on the cover-art of several pop-music vinyl record albums, including Les Baxter's Jewels of the Sea, Sea of Dreams by Nelson Riddle, Marty Paich's Jazz For Relaxation, Chile con Cugie by Xavier Cugat, the Luxuriously Slow Moods of The Cesana Strings album "Sheer Ecstasy", and the R.C.A. In the 1960s as a part of the counter-culture sweeping the United States she became involved with the Nudist movement, and with her husband appeared in numerous nudist magazines advocating the benefits of the lifestyle, such as Naked & Together: The Wonderful Webbers by June Lange (1967). The photo-shoot for the 1956 publication being shot by Russ Meyer. Under the name Marguerite Empey she was Playboy magazine's Playmate of the Month in May 1955 and in February 1956. As the decade progressed she modeled for many professional photographers, including Peter Gowland, Bunny Yeager and Keith Bernard.
In the early 1950s she found employment as a chorus girl at Bimbo's 365 Club in San Francisco, whilst developing her professional modelling career.
As a child she received ballet lessons from Russian ballerina Maria Bekefi. She received her formal education at the Hollywood High School. What we do know is you’ll be seeing more of these covers from us.Born in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, U.S., the daughter of Marguerite (née Andrus), a Hollywood actress and former 'Miss Long Beach' beauty contest winner, and Arthur Guy Empey. We’re too young here to know for sure, so you’ll just have to ask your grandma about that. Though the international nudist movement still exists, it is possibly less accepted than fifty years ago. Also putting in an appearance is Virginia Gordon, another Playboy model, seen on the cover of Paradise. The Nudist Idea and American Nudist Leader, both below, feature covers with Diane Webber, aka Marguerite Empey, a former Playboy centerfold who remains one of the most renowned nude models of all time. Nudist magazines proliferated throughout the 50s and 60s, and remained popular into the 1970s. At least you knew better than to invite them on your next nude biking trip. If someone raised their eyebrows at your Campus Jaybird, it just proved they weren’t ready to be free, man. International nudist magazines promoted group nakedness as fun, healthy, and innocent-and even an unavoidable next step in human social evolution. Don’t look too closely or you might spot your grandmother.