The above issue of the venerable National Police Gazette from July 1969 stars German bombshell Elke Sommer, who is described as “Hollywood’s No.1 Nudie.” In the interview, Sommer reveals that when she paints on a hilltop outside her Beverly Hills house she does so naked. The reason? “It’s the best way to get a tan all over.” She also states that she thinks film nudity is fine as long as it isn’t done for purely erotic purposes.
Very interesting, considering she had already posed—purely erotically in our opinion—for Playboy magazine, and would appear nude in men’s magazines several more times. The photos in panel two (at top) are from Sommer’s 1963 war drama The Victors, and as happened often in those days, even though she did not appear completely nude in the finished film, she performed the scenes that way. Which of course means the excised frames ended up in various people’s pockets, and soon became public. Whether this was an accident or a publicity technique is impossible to say, but we suspect the latter.
In any case, it’s clear Gazette editors had an uncensored shot. Back then they had to cover Sommer’s naughty bits, but we don’t, and you can see the uncovered version, along with another image from the same scene, just below. Elsewhere in this issue you get Aristotle Onassis, Jake LaMotta, Denny McLain, the hidden sex problems of American husbands, and more.