Free Preview: Playmate of the Month April 1973 - Julie Woodson
Her friends all thought Julie Woodson was crazy to walk off the set of <i>Super Fly</i>. But the producers hadn't told her beforehand about the nude love scene she was supposed to play - and, for what she considered rip-off wages, it just wasn't worth it. So Julie - an accomplished model who works for the Eileen Ford agency and has appeared in various TV commercials - decided she could afford to wait a while longer for her first movie role. Now that she's seen <i>Super Fly</i>, she doesn't regret her move. "I hated it, except for Curtis Mayfield's music, which carried the whole thing. But most of the black movies coming out are just garbage - they're all about sex and drugs, they put down the blacks and exploit the actors. Until the money comes in for some <i>good</i> black movies - and until I can get some roles that call for acting instead of just looking good - I'll stay off the screen." The same qualities - a sense of direction and a bit of will power - that made Miss Woodson get up and split also helped her escape from her hometown of Hutchinson, Kansas. "If I'd stayed there," she allows, "I'd probably have a lot of children by now, and I'd probably be on welfare." But she left there at 12 and went to California with her father (her parents are divorced). While Julie earned a degree in business from San Diego City College, she worked as a stewardess for PSA, and after finishing school, she switched to TWA. That brought her to New York, where she began modeing for the Bl...
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