January 24, 1950 / Aquarius / Age 76
Gennifer Flowers is an American-born Penthouse model, former State of Arkansas employee, author, singer, actress, TV journalist, and MILF nude model. She was born on January 24, 1950 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States.
Gennifer Flowers stepped into the Penthouse spotlight in December 1992 as a featured model at 42. With her statuesque 34-24-35 figure, seductive blue eyes, honey blond hair, and natural breasts, Gennifer radiates seasoned glamour — bold, self-possessed, and irresistibly captivating.
Gennifer Flowers has the kind of notoriety that belongs to a very particular American spotlight: part glamour, part scandal, part political theater, and impossible to separate from the early 1990s media machine. She was not a conventional adult-magazine figure. Her presence carried the voltage of controversy — a woman suddenly placed at the center of a presidential campaign, where beauty, accusation, ambition, and television spectacle all collided in public view.
What makes Gennifer compelling is the way she turned exposure into authorship. During Bill Clinton's 1992 presidential campaign, she publicly claimed a long extramarital relationship with him, then intensified the story by playing recorded phone conversations at a press conference after Clinton denied the relationship on 60 Minutes. Clinton later testified under oath in 1998 that he had a sexual encounter with Flowers, though he disputed the broader version of events. The scandal made her a national name and placed her in the uncomfortable but powerful role of a woman insisting on her own version of the story.
As a Penthouse Pornstar for December 1992, Gennifer Flowers represented something different from the magazine's usual fantasy: the eroticization of scandal itself. Her memoir, Gennifer Flowers: Passion and Betrayal, extended her public narrative, while her later defamation lawsuit against Clinton aides kept her connected to the long afterlife of that political moment. Beyond politics, she appeared in Dream On, Play It to the Bone, and WrestleMania XIV, and later operated a cabaret in New Orleans before moving through theater work and Las Vegas life.
What gives Gennifer her lasting pull is not simply the Clinton connection, but the way she became a symbol of a changing media age. She lived at the intersection of politics, sex, celebrity, and confession, at a time when private scandal was becoming prime-time entertainment. Some Penthouse figures are remembered for screen careers or centerfold beauty. Gennifer Flowers is remembered for something more combustible: the moment when desire, denial, and national ambition all met under the same harsh light.