Pulp Fiction, 1922 · page 123 of 126
Photoplay Magazine Cover — page 123: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis This is an **advertisement page** (page 123 from Photoplay Magazine's advertising section) promoting *The Red Book Magazine*'s April issue. The ad features a dramatic black-and-white photograph of a woman's face with tears streaming down her cheeks. The headline reads "She Wept Her Way To Film Fame." The text describes a tearful contest in Movieland and credits author Rupert Hughes with writing "the first authoritative account of life as it is really lived in Hollywood." The featured article is titled "Souls for Sale." The ad promotes The Red Book Magazine as available everywhere for 25 cents. The page is primarily advertising rather than editorial content.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
PHOTOPLAY MAGAZINE—ADVERTISING SECTION 123 SheWept HerWay To Film Fame T was such a contest as Movieland had never seen before—a contest of tears. And Remember Steddon won. Under the biting raillery and lashing invective of the famous director the soul of this country girl spilled out of her eyes and a wonderful actress came into being. Thus are made the stars that twinkle in the celluloid sky. Remember’s story, as told by Rupert Hughes, best known of American authors, is the first authoritative account of life as it is really lived in Hollywood. That is why it is the most discussed novel in this country today. Its significant title is ‘‘Souls for Sale,"' and you will find it in the April issue of THE RED BOOK MAGAZINE On Sale Everywhere Price 25 cents o Wes you writs to advertisers please mention PHOTOILAY MAGAZINE, (COMMUC lOOOlKS Com