comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1922-01-21 · page 13 of 36

Judge — January 21, 1922 — page 13: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — January 21, 1922 — page 13: Judge, 1922-01-21

What you’re looking at

# Page 11: Judge Magazine Entertainment Section This page is a **celebrity profile spread** featuring prominent **silent film actresses** of the era. Rather than satire, it's primarily promotional content showcasing: - **Alice Brady**: Noted as successful in both stage and film, popular with female and male audiences - **Betty Blythe**: Promoted for an upcoming role as the Queen of Sheba in a Rex Beach production - **Lillian Gish**: Highlighted as the star of D.W. Griffith's production "Orphans of the Storm" (presented as a new title for the older play "The Two Orphans") The humorous note is the pun about "Castle in America" (likely referencing something contemporary—possibly a person named Castle or a venue, context unclear). This appears to be **entertainment journalism rather than political satire**—typical of Judge's mixed content format during the silent film era, when movie stars were major cultural celebrities worthy of magazine coverage.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.

Alice Brady, 19 successful on both » ‘ stage and screen; a favorite with her own sex as well as with the weaker one. Photo by MANDEVILLE Betty Blythe, the beautiful Queen of Sheba, who is to be seen in the near future in a Rex Beach production. Photo by Ika L. Hitt There may or may not be castles in Spain, but there is at least one Castle in America, which is no dream, and yet a very dream of dreams Lillian Gish, the star Orphan in the big Griffith production, “Or- phans of the Storm,” a new title for an old fav- orite, “The Two Orphans.” Photo by Ika 1. Hut Photo by ABBE. n comicbooks.com