Judge, 1930-06-21 · page 35 of 36
Judge — June 21, 1930 — page 35: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1930-06-21. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
CENSORED— The Private Life of The Movies By Pare Lorentz and Morris L. Ernst Publishers: Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith (THE PRIVATE LIFE OF THE MOVIES Here is an uproarious scenario, with photographs, of the real show A —<S ee (MORRIS ERNST & PARE LO 3 Do You Know -- |—Why Greta Garbo couldn't drop her ring? 2—Just where a kiss is forbidden? 3—Why Mary Pickford had to change her lines? 4—Why Emil Jannings had to walk, not run? 5—Why Ruth Chatterton couldn't wear long underwear? 6—Why Will Hays makes $250,000 a year? 7—Why twelve women get paid for sitting in a Hollywood Office? 8—Who actually reads all scenarios before the producers? 9—Why every movie you see is censored three times? 10—What feature movies have been sup- pressed? In what states? Clip the coupon and read the answers. RENTZ | inside the movie factory. Actual words and pictures cut from famous movies are included in this explana- tion of what Harry Elmer Barnes has termed "the biggest racket in America." Movie censorship has been going on for years. Here is the first real story of these rack- eteers, written by Pare Lorentz, movie critic for Judge, and Morris L. Ernst, lawyer, brilliant defender of liberal opinion. Here are the actual private lives of the censors, along with a complete summary of their secret reports. Here is the first story of the club the club- woman swings in the dark. The se- cret rackets of the movies are in "Censored." Here is a book to read before you see your next movie—you will know who cut what. It is the best movie comedy of the year. You will understand why sex, and all life in the movies is reduced to baby talk. You pay indirectly the censors’ salaries— why not see the show? Order a copy of "Censored" from your bookstore or mail the coupon direct for a postpaid ticket to this national farce. Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith 139 E. 46th Street New York City Gentlemen: | am enclosing $2.75 for a copy of "Censored." Enclosed find for......copies of "Censored." comicbooks.com