’80s pop sensation Tiffany caused a storm after shedding her squeaky-clean image to pose for Playboy back in 2002.
Now, greater than 20 years on, the “I Think We’re Alone Now” crooner is recalling the headline-hitting shoot, saying she has no regrets.
“I adore it still,” the now 52-year-old gushed to Fox News concerning the naughty nude photos.
“I assumed it was an awesome thing I did. People were like, ‘She’s a one-hit wonder. She’s that little mall girl.’ And that completely blew their perception of who I used to be,” the singer explained.
Tiffany went on: “It was an honor [Playboy] asked me [to pose] and I used to be very completely satisfied with the shoot.”
She then noted how the crew made “feel amazing on set,” though she didn’t understand what “I used to be getting myself into.”
“But I showed up that day and there was nothing awkward about it… I saw the photos and so they looked beautiful,” she said.
The “Celebrity Fit Club” alum also revealed that she dieted before the photoshoot to be certain that she felt amazing in her own skin.
“I used to be in really fine condition,” she continued. “So I’ll all the time have a look at that have fondly.”
“And I feel it modified my audience of course,” Tiffany said, adding that she all the time had a female fan base.
Nonetheless, when her “Playboy” cover hit the bookshelves, her male fan base grew exponentially.
“They usually stayed. They might have just followed me due to Playboy. But I converted them to actual music fans,” she laughed.
Tiffany is back within the highlight “Ladies of the ’80s” stars icons Loni Anderson, Morgan Fairchild, Linda Gray, Donna Mills and Nicollette Sheridan.
The flick features the five women as they “reunite to share the highlight to shoot the ultimate Christmas episode of their long-running soap opera,” in response to the film’s synopsis.
“These are truly the women of the ‘80s,” Tiffany guffawed over the star-studded. “I grew up watching so a lot of them on TV, so it’s been lots of fun for me to do that.”
“There was just something special about that point,” she said. “There was more personal interaction. You’ll meet up with someone and hang around on the mall.”