► Jeannie Bell with the old-school / retro titties that caught HFunk's eye - he cannot lie ...

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend
http://www.aznude.com/view/celeb/j/jeanniebell.html







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http://aawomeninbe.blogspot.ca/2011/04/jeanne-bell-1943-present.html

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean_Bell

http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0068270/








Jean Bell (born Annie Lee Morgan on November 23, 1944 in St. Louis, Missouri) was one of the first of Playboy magazine's African-American Playmates of the Month.


Bell grew up in Houston, Texas, along with three younger sisters and attended Texas Southern University, majoring in business administration. Jean was the first African American woman to participate in the Miss Texas Pageant, which is part of the Miss Universe competition. She aspired to professional bowling or acting.[1]

When she appeared in the October 1969 issue of Playboy, Bell was only the second African-American woman to grace the centerfold (the first was Jennifer Jackson, in March 1965). Her centerfold was photographed by Don Klumpp. A few months later, Bell became the first black person to appear on the magazine's cover. Darine Stern, who is often erroneously credited with this distinction, was actually the first black woman to appear on the cover of Playboy on her own, in the October 1971 issue. Bell was featured with four other playmates in the January 1970 cover of the magazine.

After Bell's appearance in Playboy, she enjoyed a brief acting career, working on such films as Mean Streets and The Klansman (for some roles she was credited as Jeanne Bell). Her most notable role was the title character in 1975's T.N.T. Jackson.

Bell dated Richard Burton and helped him quit drinking and as a result was credited with getting him back together with Elizabeth Taylor afterwards. An Earl Wilson column in September 1975 revealed Bell's three-month friendship with the actor. She visited Burton at his villa in Céligny, Switzerland, during her effort to help him "dry out". With his assistance Bell acquired a place of her own in Geneva, Switzerland. Around that time, Bell worked at Splendors Gentlemens club in Houston and went by "Bunny". [2]

Bell posed nude again for Playboy in the December 1979 pictorial "Playmates Forever!"





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Films






Television





In Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill movies, Vivica A. Fox's character uses the alias "Jeannie Bell", a reference to Jean Bell.


 
Ahhhh memories.....buuuut since she's 72 now.......those sweet little tits probably look like a pair of yams pointing at her toes...:rolleyes:






No shame in HFunk's game /

Titties will forever be unlame /

They may no longer look the same /

But I can't lie, I'd still aim /

To tittyfuck & ensure I came /


GMilf status ... oh shit, what am I sayin'?




:roflmao::roflmao2::roflmao3:
 
Centerfold.jpg

Miss October 1969: Jean Bell
2nd Black Playmate

Birthdate:
November 23, 1944
Birthplace:
St. Louis, Missouri
Height:
5' 4"
Weight:
117 lbs
Measurements:
34C-23-36


Bio:
Jean Bell was no stranger to paving the way for young, African-American women in the Sixties when Playboy called her with great news—she had been voted our Miss October 1969. “I was the first black woman to enter the Miss Texas Pageant as part of the Miss Universe Contest after I competed in the Miss Houston contest” proudly states the all-natural beauty. “I saw an ad for the Miss Houston contest in the paper. I'll try most anything once, so I called to apply. I didn't tell them on the phone that I was black—but they found out soon enough at the audition. The woman in charge did a kind of double take—because, until then, it was an all-white contest—but nobody said anything. I came in only fourth, but I did better in the Miss Texas contest after that—I got third in that one.” Winning third place was fruitful for the black-haired pageant contender. She won a scholarship to a modeling school in Houston and began her life as a fulltime model who didn’t have time to worry discrimination or racial barriers—she has goals to accomplish. “I'm not very involved with politics or civil rights. I just try to get along,” says our busty Playmate of the Month who was overwhelmed with joy when she got the call from Playboy. “Modeling is a free and interesting life, because you never know where or for whom you’ll be working next. It can be pretty demanding, though. I'd like to get into TV commercials next.” With aspirations to act in Hollywood after becoming the first black woman to grace the cover of Playboy’s January 1970 magazine alongside models Lorrie Menconi, Kathy MacDonald, Shay Knuth and Leslie Bianchini, Jean starred in the movies like Mean Streets and T.N.T. Jackson. Most notably, she acted on several television shows from Starsky and Hutch and Sanford and Son to Baretta and The Beverly Hillbillies, but now it’s time for her to set her focus elsewhere. “I want to marry the right man. Like the Dylan song says, 'Love is all there is'; if somebody could make people learn that, the world might be a better place in which to live,” explains our Miss October 1969 who says her ideal date would include her favorite pastime. “I guess it’s silly, but I’m a fanatic about bowling. For a while, I considered trying to become a professional bowler; but, unfortunately, I’m not quite good enough.” Whether she’s taking breaking down racial barriers or bowling a nearly perfect game, when Playmate Jean Bell puts her mind to something, nothing and no one can stop her.



Lone Star Standout


Best of the 60s

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Black is Beautiful
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Bunnies of 1970s
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From a Playboy standpoint, I thought she was a good change up from Jennifer Jackson as the second Black Playmate.. Jennifer was tall, thin and fair skinned, while Jean was shorter and darker with a different look.
 
Beautiful, nice to see somethin different around these parts.


Bio:
Jean Bell was no stranger to paving the way for young, African-American women in the Sixties when Playboy called her with great news—she had been voted our Miss October 1969. “I was the first black woman to enter the Miss Texas Pageant as part of the Miss Universe Contest after I competed in the Miss Houston contest” proudly states the all-natural beauty. “I saw an ad for the Miss Houston contest in the paper. I'll try most anything once, so I called to apply. I didn't tell them on the phone that I was black—but they found out soon enough at the audition. The woman in charge did a kind of double take—because, until then, it was an all-white contest—but nobody said anything. I came in only fourth, but I did better in the Miss Texas contest after that—I got third in that one.” Winning third place was fruitful for the black-haired pageant contender. She won a scholarship to a modeling school in Houston and began her life as a fulltime model who didn’t have time to worry discrimination or racial barriers—she has goals to accomplish. “I'm not very involved with politics or civil rights. I just try to get along,” says our busty Playmate of the Month who was overwhelmed with joy when she got the call from Playboy. “Modeling is a free and interesting life, because you never know where or for whom you’ll be working next. It can be pretty demanding, though. I'd like to get into TV commercials next.” With aspirations to act in Hollywood after becoming the first black woman to grace the cover of Playboy’s January 1970 magazine alongside models Lorrie Menconi, Kathy MacDonald, Shay Knuth and Leslie Bianchini, Jean starred in the movies like Mean Streets and T.N.T. Jackson. Most notably, she acted on several television shows from Starsky and Hutch and Sanford and Son to Baretta and The Beverly Hillbillies, but now it’s time for her to set her focus elsewhere. “I want to marry the right man. Like the Dylan song says, 'Love is all there is'; if somebody could make people learn that, the world might be a better place in which to live,” explains our Miss October 1969 who says her ideal date would include her favorite pastime. “I guess it’s silly, but I’m a fanatic about bowling. For a while, I considered trying to become a professional bowler; but, unfortunately, I’m not quite good enough.” Whether she’s taking breaking down racial barriers or bowling a nearly perfect game, when Playmate Jean Bell puts her mind to something, nothing and no one can stop her.

:smh::angry::smh:
 
TNT Jackson is in the top 5 of worst movies ever made. Just watched the last half by accident and discovered the only redeeming quality: Ms.Bell’s tittays. Bumping to show the youngsters how they looked in their prime
 
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