April 25, 1958 / Taurus / Age 67
Laura Storm is an American-born Penthouse model, actress, and painter, born on April 25, 1958 in Novato, California, United States.
Laura Storm was crowned Penthouse Pet of the Month in February 1978, stepping into the spotlight at just 19 years old. With her statuesque 37-24-36 figure, seductive blue eyes, rich brown hair, and natural breasts, Laura balances youthful curiosity with a growing confidence, creating an allure that feels both innocent and daring.
Laura Storm arrives in Penthouse with a kind of intensity that makes ordinary glamour feel almost beside the point. She is not simply beautiful; she is emotionally charged, intellectually alive, and impossible to imagine living at half-speed. There is something cinematic about her from the start — not only because she dreams in images, but because she seems to experience everything with dramatic depth. She gives the impression of a woman who does not drift through life. She plunges into it.
What makes Laura especially compelling is the way art and appetite seem to feed each other in her. An amateur painter, an actress, and a devoted film lover, she is drawn to the darker, more daring edges of creative life, fascinated by writers such as Jean Genet and William Burroughs and by films like Mean Streets and Privilege. That restless imagination is not ornamental. It shapes her whole presence. She may appear shy to some, but beneath that reserve lies a woman of formidable emotional force — possessive in love, fiercely giving, and unafraid of the strength of her own desires. Even her romantic ideal has atmosphere: a foggy beach at night, the world hidden away, intimacy made private and absolute.
That sensibility gave her February 1978 Penthouse pictorial its unusual character. Photographed by Earl Miller, Laura Storm was not a passive subject arranged into a fantasy, but an active collaborator who took part in choosing locations, props, and poses. Acting, for her, was never meant to be the final destination but a step toward directing, part of a larger ambition to work in motion pictures with real purpose. She wanted not just to appear in stories, but eventually to shape them. That hunger for authorship deepened everything about her Penthouse image. She was not there merely to be seen. She was already learning how to control what was seen, and why.
That is what gives Laura Storm her lasting fascination. She is emotional but not fragile, sensual but never vacant, romantic but far too intelligent to be reduced to a type. She dreams vividly, loves intensely, and carries herself with the conviction of a woman who intends to leave a lasting impression. In Penthouse, she becomes more than a February presence. She becomes a portrait of emotional electricity — beautiful, ambitious, and very much aware of her own power.