Bill Zehme (October 28, 1958 – March 26, 2023) was an American author who was known for his writing on music and popular culture. He collaborated on books with such celebrities as Regis Philbin, Jay Leno, and Hugh Hefner. His articles appeared in Rolling Stone, Esquire, Playboy, and Vanity Fair.[1][2][3][4]
Zehme grew up in Chicago, attending Thornwood High School and graduating from Loyola University in 1980.[5]
Zehme's first book, written with Bonnie Schiffman, was 1991's The Rolling Stone Book of Comedy. Five years later, Zehme conducted the last major interview of Frank Sinatra’s life, publishing a piece in Esquire's March 1996 issue on Sinatra and the Rat Pack ("And Then There Was One").[6] This he extended to a full-length book, The Way You Wear Your Hat: Frank Sinatra and the Lost Art of Livin’ (1997).[7]
Zehme's other books include Intimate Strangers, Lost in the Funhouse, and Carson the Magnificent: An Intimate Portrait.[7]
Zehme appears alongside Playboy founder Hugh Hefner in a bonus feature interview accompanying the DVD collection Playboy After Dark (2006).[8]
(all works by Bill Zehme unless noted)