Against the felt of a blackjack table, Corrina stands poised in the unmistakable Playboy Bunny uniform—strapless corset, crisp cuffs, bow tie, and tall ears—caught mid-deal at the Hefner–Playboy Park Lane club in London in 1978. Playing cards fan across the layout while the table text (“BLACK JACK PAYS 3 TO 2”) anchors the scene in casino ritual, where glamour and precision had to coexist. The camera’s straight-on angle turns her gaze into part of the performance, inviting the viewer into a carefully managed world of nightlife and spectacle.
Luxury here is more than décor; it’s a choreography of posture, costume, and service. The Bunny outfit, famously engineered to look effortless, demanded strict standards and a practiced composure that matched the club’s brand of exclusivity. In this moment, the job reads clearly: not only dealing cards, but embodying the club’s promise of sophistication, flirtation, and controlled intimacy.
For readers interested in 1970s London culture, Playboy Club history, and the fashion codes of late-20th-century leisure, this photo offers a vivid snapshot of how entertainment venues sold an entire lifestyle. It also hints at the hidden labor behind the shine—long shifts under bright lights, strict rules about appearance and behavior, and the constant balance between professionalism and allure. As a piece of retro nightlife photography, it captures an era when casinos, celebrity culture, and branded glamour converged at the table’s edge.
