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Twenty-two years ago, Memphis event coordinator Elizabeth Sullivan was in what she calls "a really bad car accident. I crushed my eye socket on my right side. Broke a few fingers. I was like Humpty Dumpty, they had to put me back together again. Need a break? That was not the end of her health woes. Faced with so much trauma, some people might give up. But Sullivan not only fought, she flourished. She is blind in her right eye, but to look at her, you wouldn't know — nor would you suspect she needed so many surgeries, so much physical therapy, so much healing.
That "bikini body shape" is displayed across several pages in the April issue of the Sweden edition of Playboy. Through the years, many Memphis-area women have appeared in Playboy and its arguably less respectable competitor magazines. At least four Memphis women have been "Playmates," the name given to those models who appear, unclothed, in the magazine's center pictorial, which includes the famous "centerfold," a page that folds out into a pinup-style poster.
Some of these women were written about in The Commercial Appeal, in stories that, like the pictorials but with less revealing pictures , essentially promoted their beauty. But Sullivan — a model, event coordinator, social media marketer and motivational speaker — insists her new Playmate status is less a tribute to her appearance than an affirmation of the hard work, purposeful stubbornness and positive attitude that enabled her to not just recover but thrive after the automobile accident that almost ended her life.
Or, as Sullivan wrote on Instagram account: "I choose to not let my pain and struggle make me a victim. Another passenger in the car was cheerleader Sasha Heathcoat, 18, Sullivan's best friend, who was killed. Sullivan's facial injuries were so extensive "I literally couldn't even smile," she said. But rather than despairing, she persevered. After receiving initial treatment at Regional Medical Center at Memphis, she underwent many types of surgery plastic, reconstructive and extensive physical therapy, and eventually returned to college, with plans to be an attorney, like her father, Cyburn Sullivan III.