The images published by Playboy were part of a larger, darker narrative involving Eva’s mother, the photographer .
Eva Ionesco eventually transitioned from being a subject to a creator, becoming a successful actress and director. Her 2011 film, My Little Princess , is a dramatized account of her own childhood experiences, exploring the toxic relationship between a young model and her photographer mother.
The pictorial, often titled or referred to in relation to Eva’s birth year as "" (Class of 1965), featured the young model in a set of photographs taken by Jacques Bourboulon .
Today, the "hot" descriptor often found in search queries for this issue is largely replaced by terms like "controversial" or "disturbing" as society re-evaluates the era's lack of safeguards for children in the media.
From the age of four, Eva was used as a primary model for her mother's Gothic and sexually charged photography.
The October 1976 issue of remains one of the most controversial chapters in the history of international erotica. At the center of this storm was an 11-year-old girl named Eva Ionesco , whose pictorial in that issue sparked a debate over art, exploitation, and the boundaries of the "permissive" 1970s that continues today. The October 1976 Pictorial: "Classe del 1965"
Decades later, Eva sued her mother for the "theft of her childhood," eventually winning damages and the return of her childhood negatives in a French court. Legacy and Modern Reflection
The shoot took place on a terrace overlooking the sea, featuring Eva in various provocative, nude positions that were shocking even by the standards of the era's liberal European media.
The images published by Playboy were part of a larger, darker narrative involving Eva’s mother, the photographer .
Eva Ionesco eventually transitioned from being a subject to a creator, becoming a successful actress and director. Her 2011 film, My Little Princess , is a dramatized account of her own childhood experiences, exploring the toxic relationship between a young model and her photographer mother.
The pictorial, often titled or referred to in relation to Eva’s birth year as "" (Class of 1965), featured the young model in a set of photographs taken by Jacques Bourboulon .
Today, the "hot" descriptor often found in search queries for this issue is largely replaced by terms like "controversial" or "disturbing" as society re-evaluates the era's lack of safeguards for children in the media.
From the age of four, Eva was used as a primary model for her mother's Gothic and sexually charged photography.
The October 1976 issue of remains one of the most controversial chapters in the history of international erotica. At the center of this storm was an 11-year-old girl named Eva Ionesco , whose pictorial in that issue sparked a debate over art, exploitation, and the boundaries of the "permissive" 1970s that continues today. The October 1976 Pictorial: "Classe del 1965"
Decades later, Eva sued her mother for the "theft of her childhood," eventually winning damages and the return of her childhood negatives in a French court. Legacy and Modern Reflection
The shoot took place on a terrace overlooking the sea, featuring Eva in various provocative, nude positions that were shocking even by the standards of the era's liberal European media.