November 17, 1958 / Scorpio / Age 67
Diane Weber is an American-born Penthouse model, glamour and nude model, born on November 17, 1958 in Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States.
Diane Weber was crowned Penthouse Pet of the Month in August 1979, stepping into the spotlight at just 20 years old. With her statuesque 36-22-36 figure, soulful hazel eyes, rich brown hair, and natural breasts, Diane embodies a bright, rising sensuality — fresh-faced, confident, and full of magnetic charm.
Diane Weber entered Penthouse with the kind of energy that makes still photographs feel almost unfairly restrained. She had the glow of an all-American nineteen-year-old, but also the spark of someone who seemed determined to experience everything at full speed. There was nothing sleepy or passive about her appeal. She came across as a woman with her body in motion and her mind already racing ahead, eager for the next sensation, the next challenge, the next surprise. That gave her August 1979 appearance an irresistible lift.
What made Diane especially memorable was the sheer buoyancy of her personality. She had been voted best all-round girl by her high school graduating class, and the description fit in more ways than one. With a 36-22-36 figure and an effervescent temperament, she combined physical confidence with an appetite for life that extended far beyond appearances. Growing up with four older brothers had made her, by her own account, part tomboy and part vamp, always ready whether the moment called for flirting or fighting. That blend suited her perfectly. She loved pool, roller-skating, and swimming, and brought the same lively eagerness to everything else she touched.
That spirit translated beautifully into her Penthouse pictorial, photographed by John Copeland. Diane Weber did not seem content to be admired in a predictable way. She wanted excitement, spontaneity, and men who understood the value of surprise. Routine bored her, especially in romance, and she was drawn to funny, outrageous men who moved through life without inhibition. Yet there was more to her than restless flirtation. When she thought seriously about the future, music stirred her most deeply. She dreamed of becoming either a music critic or a disc jockey, drawn to singers whose lyrics felt deeply personal and whose performances could raise goose bumps, especially voices like Van Morrison and Linda Ronstadt. That detail gives her image an extra dimension: beneath the sparkle was a woman listening for something real.
That mix of high spirits and genuine feeling is what gives Diane Weber her lasting charm. She was not simply a bright young beauty passing through a late-summer issue. She represented a kind of youthful momentum that Penthouse captured especially well when it found the right woman for the moment. Diane had humor, nerve, curiosity, and enough emotional appetite to make ordinary life seem slightly too small for her. In Penthouse, she became more than an August Pet. She became a portrait of youth in full motion, eager to make one trip around the world feel like two.