December 6, 1952 / Sagittarius / Age 73
Dominique Maure is a Canadian-born Penthouse model, glamour model, adult model, and professional racer, born on December 6, 1952 in Toronto, Canada. Throughout her modeling career, she has also appeared under the names Dotti Meyer, each marking a distinct chapter in her evolving on-camera persona.
Dominique Maure was crowned Penthouse Pet of the Month in June 1977 before rising to the coveted title of Pet of the Year 1978, stepping into the spotlight at 24 years old. With her statuesque 38-24-37 figure, soulful hazel eyes, rich brown hair, and prominent natural breasts, Dominique combines maturity and spontaneity, creating a presence that feels both bold and inviting.
Dominique Maure was never content to be just a centerfold—she wanted motion, noise, and danger in the air. She was photographed by Bob Guccione.
Tall, striking, and fearless, Dominique made an unexpected pivot when she traded studio lights for the roar of engines. After discovering that professional driving wasn’t her calling, she found something better: the world of auto racing itself. The speed, the discipline, and the ever-present risk ignited a new passion, and Dominique became the public face of the Penthouse Racing Team—promoting cars and drivers at Grand Prix tracks around the world.
Her first major assignment, the Long Beach Grand Prix, pulled her deep into racing culture. She learned the rituals, the superstitions, and the quiet intensity before the green flag drops. Walking pit row, she became a familiar presence—part confidante, part big sister—earning respect from drivers and crews who quickly saw past the glamour.
Smart, grounded, and business-minded, Dominique invested wisely and carried the full support of her family and husband, refusing to be defined—or diminished—by her title. In a sport often suspicious of outsiders, she became “one of the boys,” valued not for spectacle but for understanding.
For Penthouse magazine, Dominique Maure represents a rare ideal: a woman who took beauty into unexpected territory and proved that confidence travels just as well at 150 miles per hour.