Bunny Yeager(1929-2014)
- Camera and Electrical Department
- Actress
- Producer
Buxom and beautiful blonde bombshell Bunny Yeager always aspired to be
a pin-up model. She was born Linnea Eleanor Yeager on March 13, 1929 in
Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania. Her father Raymond Conrad Yeager worked in
an office for the telephone company and later was an electrical
engineer for Westinghouse Electric while her mother Linnea was a
stay-at-home housewife. Bunny grew up in the small rural town of
Pitcairn, Pennsylvania. The Yeager family moved to Miami, Florida right
before Bunny's senior year in high school. She attended Miami Edison
High School in Miami and began participating in numerous beauty
pageants in her late teens (she was crowned Miami Sports Queen in 1949
by Joe DiMaggio). She took a
fashion modeling course at Coronet Modeling School and Agency and soon
became a hugely popular glamor model in Miami who was featured in
countless swimsuit magazines.
In the early 1950s Bunny decided to switch gears and become a glamor photographer. She was named the Prettiest Photographer in the World by "US Camera" magazine in August 1953. She took pictures of lovely model Maria Stinger; one of these pictures was published as the cover photo for the March 1954 issue of the men's magazine "Eye." Bunny discovered legendary pin-up queen Bettie Page in 1954. Her photo of Page posing in nothing but a fur-trimmed Santa hat was published as the centerfold in the January 1955 special holiday issue of "Playboy." This photo, along with other pictures of Bettie taken by Bunny, played a key role in establishing Page's iconic status. Other notable models Yeager has discovered are "Playboy" Playmate L.A. Winters and Carol Jean Lauritzen. Her photographs were featured in a huge array of men's magazines throughout the years. Moreover, Bunny also published over 20 books on photography.
Among the indelible images Bunny turned out are that of Ursula Andress coming out of the ocean water in a revealing bikini for the James Bond movie Dr. No (1962). Bunny got in front of the camera on occasion as well: She appeared in a few films by noted Florida exploitation producer/director Barry Mahon and has a small role as Swedish masseuse Bunny Fjord in the Frank Sinatra detective picture Lady in Cement (1968).
Yeager died of congestive heart failure at age 85 on May 25, 2014 in North Miami, Florida.
In the early 1950s Bunny decided to switch gears and become a glamor photographer. She was named the Prettiest Photographer in the World by "US Camera" magazine in August 1953. She took pictures of lovely model Maria Stinger; one of these pictures was published as the cover photo for the March 1954 issue of the men's magazine "Eye." Bunny discovered legendary pin-up queen Bettie Page in 1954. Her photo of Page posing in nothing but a fur-trimmed Santa hat was published as the centerfold in the January 1955 special holiday issue of "Playboy." This photo, along with other pictures of Bettie taken by Bunny, played a key role in establishing Page's iconic status. Other notable models Yeager has discovered are "Playboy" Playmate L.A. Winters and Carol Jean Lauritzen. Her photographs were featured in a huge array of men's magazines throughout the years. Moreover, Bunny also published over 20 books on photography.
Among the indelible images Bunny turned out are that of Ursula Andress coming out of the ocean water in a revealing bikini for the James Bond movie Dr. No (1962). Bunny got in front of the camera on occasion as well: She appeared in a few films by noted Florida exploitation producer/director Barry Mahon and has a small role as Swedish masseuse Bunny Fjord in the Frank Sinatra detective picture Lady in Cement (1968).
Yeager died of congestive heart failure at age 85 on May 25, 2014 in North Miami, Florida.