February 10, 1951 / Aquarius / Age 75
Susan Waide is an American-born Penthouse model, born on February 10, 1951 in Santa Monica, California, United States.
Susan Waide was crowned Penthouse Pet of the Month in December 1975, stepping into the spotlight at 24 years old. With her statuesque 36-24-35 figure, seductive blue eyes, honey blond hair, and natural breasts, Susan combines maturity and spontaneity, creating a presence that feels both bold and inviting.
Some women try to manufacture allure. Susan Waide made a point of rejecting that idea entirely. As Penthouse Pet of the Month for December 1975, she presented herself not as some polished fantasy built in a studio, but as a woman whose sensuality came naturally - easy, unforced, and rooted in the sunlit freedom of her California upbringing. That natural quality gave her glamour its special charge. Susan did not seem artificial or heavily composed. She felt warm, spontaneous, and entirely believable, which in many ways is far more seductive. Her beauty suggested open air, ocean light, and the kind of confidence that comes from being comfortable in her own skin.
That ease carried into the way she spoke about love, desire, and femininity. A sensitive twenty-one-year-old Cancer, Susan embodied the laid-back California spirit with a romantic streak just beneath the surface. For her, atmosphere mattered: a clean white beach, the sun setting over the ocean, and the presence of a man she truly cared for could transform attraction into something almost intoxicating. Yet for all her free-spirited energy, she was not careless about intimacy. She believed caring was the foundation of everything, that love worked best when respect, affection, and emotional comfort flowed both ways. Only then, in her view, could passion become fully alive. She admired gentleness, patience, and romance - soft music, flowers, and the old-fashioned gestures that made desire feel deeper rather than merely immediate.
What makes Susan Waide especially memorable is how naturally she balanced sensuality with perspective. By the time of her Penthouse appearance, she was working in Manhattan, carrying her California ease into a faster, more demanding world without losing the softness that defined her. She spoke with real curiosity about the future, wanting to travel more, perhaps return to Europe, and keep experimenting with life rather than letting it narrow around routine. She also had clear opinions about women and ambition, insisting that business opportunities and rewards should be equal for men and women, while also holding firmly to her belief that femininity should never be sacrificed. Whether one agreed with her or not, Susan spoke plainly and with conviction, and that directness became part of her charm.
That is why Susan Waide remains more than a beautiful closing note to a Penthouse year. She represented a kind of glamour that felt human, thoughtful, and relaxed enough to breathe. Some women are remembered for polish. Susan is remembered for something better: the rare ability to make natural sensuality feel unforgettable.