Lenny Burtman

From wipipedia.org
Jump to: navigation, search


Leonard "Lenny" Burtman (1921-1994) was a fetish photographer.

Lenny was born in Nebraska in 1921 and lived in California between 1941 and 1950. During this time he worked in the electronics industry and trained at California Institute of Technology. In 1949 he encountered problems with the legal authorities concerning the transportation of false securities, after which he moved to New York in 1950, to start a new career.

On arrival in New York, he started to work as a professional photographer. It is believed that, amongst others, Lenny Burtman may have worked as a photographer for Irving Klaw in the early 1950s.

The experience he gained led him to starting his own fetish publishing company in 1954.

His business partner from 1954 to 1970 was Benedict "Ben" Himmel, who had worked at sometime as a union organiser and also in a variety of businesses in New York. From 1939 to 1951 he worked as a partner to his father in "a number of bar operations". It is unclear how they met. Himmel was involved in the financing and distribution of products, whilst Lenny was the creative force behind the business.

Burtman's enterprises were larger than any of his predecessers, including Irving Klaw. Burtman was the first to employ a professional, nationwide distribution network, unlike Guyette, Klaw and Coutts. In the history of the American Fetish style, there is probably no early figure better suited for an interesting film or non-fiction narrative. His products from an early stage included fetish magazines, photo sets & films plus correspondence & contact services. Published by various Burtman companies, the following magazines were produced: - Exotica - 1954 , Exotique - 1955 - 1959, New Exotique - 1959, Masque - 1960 - 1961.

During this period , single issue topical publications, such as Bizarre Desires (1959), were also published. In 1964 he first published "Bizarre Life" magazine.

Burtman offered photo sets of Bettie Page, photos of women wearing rubber and leather on the cover of "Bizarre Life", 1966, Meg Miles on the cover of "Satan in High Heels" 1960, and one of the most famous dominatrixes of all time, Monique Von Cleef in 1965! By 1966 , the professional dominatrix in New York was well connected in "bizarre" social circles.

Costumes used in Lenny Burtman's photos were often supplied in the 1950s by Charles Guyette and during the 1960s and 1970s by, among others, the British company Anello & Davide, whose fetish boots were amongst costumes used in the 1960`s British TV series, "The Avengers".

From 1964 to 1971, "Bizarre Life", was the main Burtman publication . Lenny distributed his material either through a network of professional distributors or the post. this brought Lenny under the purview of postal law, used so effectively by the authorities against Irving Klaw and Charles Guyette.

In the mid 1960s Burtman and Himmel encountered financial problems. These problems were alleviated by Rueben Sturman, a contemporary giant in erotica publishing and distribution. This eventually changed the nature of Lenny's business and magazines, as Sturman became Burtman's main distributor. Prior to Sturman's involvement, Lenny, like John Coutts before him, had sourced his own multiple distributors, which gave him complete creative control of the content of his magazines. After Sturman's involvement, Lenny appeared to have less business flexibility and the content of his products appears to be more uniform.

At various stages of his publishing career, Lenny also employed the services of seminal B&D artists such as Bill Ward and Gene Bilbrew. In the 1960s, Lenny married Jutka Goz (a former Miss Hungary), who later became Mistress Jennifer Jordan. In the 1970s & 1980s, when he had moved back to California, he published various products under the title of Eros Gold Stripe Publishing. Most of the Eros-Gold Stripe magazines featured Jennifer Jordan and Kim Christie.

Lenny was also instrumental in launching the career of Mistress Antoinette of Versatile Fashions.


This page uses content from SM-201; the original article can be viewed here.
Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Tools