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Pulp Fiction, 1922 · page 6 of 126

Photoplay Magazine Cover — page 6: what you’re looking at

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Photoplay Magazine Cover — page 6: Pulp Fiction, 1922

What you’re looking at

# Contents Page from Photoplay Magazine This is a contents page (page 6) from what appears to be **Photoplay Magazine**, a motion picture publication. The left column lists article titles and page numbers covering film industry topics—including pieces on motion picture history, casting directors, beauty standards, and film business practices. The right side features a prominent advertisement titled "Who Is the Future Film Star?" announcing a "Screen Opportunity Contest" sponsored by Photoplay Magazine and Goldwyn Pictures Corporation, inviting young American women to submit photographs for a chance to enter the film industry. The page is formatted as a typical contents listing with organizational structure typical of early-20th-century magazine layouts.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

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

Contents—Continued The Romantic History of the Motion Picture Terry Ramsaye 32 The Second Instalment of This Absorbing Romance of the Photoplay’s Development. Alas, Poor Hamlet Robert E. Sherwood A Clever Satire on the Methods of Several Leading Producers. Great Excitement on a California Beach Comic Drawing. Would I Do It Over Again? “No,” answers Lillian Gish, Speaking of Her Struggle to Fame. The Still Hunt for New Faces Robert E. McIntyre The Casting Director for Goldwyn Pictures Corporation Narrates His Adventures In Seeking New Types. Who’s the Prettiest Girl in Your Town? Perhaps She Surpasses Any of the Contest Entrants Pictured in This Issue. Great Authors’ Ideals of Beauty A Symposium of Famous Writers’ Feminine Preferences, When Valentino Taught Me to Dance Mary Winship aed Corrects Some Faults, Commonly Seen on the Ballroom oor “Come on Over!” (Fictionized by Elizabeth Chisholm) Rupert Hughes Her Heart Was in America, and So She Came, Ten Years from Now—Edison Terry Ramsaye What the Inventor of the Motion Picture Thinks of Its Future. Petrova’s Page—One Night Stands The Feelings of This Celebrated Actress While on Tour Set Forth Vividly in This Letter to ‘‘Jeannette.”’ Bought and Paid For George Broadhurst The Famous Play Fietionized by William Almon Wolff. Rubye de Remer’s New Clothes, Designed by Le Bon “Ton with Patterns for You Carolyn Van Wyck The Star Gives Practical Advice as to Your Spring Outfit. Business Life in The Films Willard Huntington Wnght High Finance as It's Portrayed on the Screen. Plays and Players Cal. York Latest News of Film Folks. The Shadow Stage The Department of Practical Criticism. How To Do It Herbert Howe Wherein We May Study the Way to Stardom. Questions and Answers The Answer Man Solving the Million Dollar Mystery Dick Dorgan A Slang Review of Von Stroheim’s “*‘Masterpiece,”’ ‘Foolish Wives.” Drawings by the Author, The Winning Doubles Photographs of Those Who Took the Prizes in PHoropiay’s Contest. Why Do They Do It Popular Conception (Drawings) The Public’s Idea of a Star's Day and What It Really Is Like. Children and the Movies Dolly Spurr Ignorance Agnes Smith Rip Van Winkle, Jr. How Ray McKee Imitated Irving's Classic Hero. Fans I Have Known—II The Neglected Lover Robert E. Sherwood A Close-up of the Scenario Editor Rose Gleason Letters from Readers Miss Van Wyck Says 10 Years Ago Addresses a a3 leading motion picture studios will be found on page 116 Future Who Is the Film Star? Gee eee in America there is a Girl who is destined to make a name for herself in motion Pictures. Im some city or town or hamlet in this country, she is dreaming her dreams, hoping for the opportunity to realize them, A way has been provided for her to test her talents; her picture pos- sibilities, The chance that thou- sands of girls have been waiting for has come. It is The Screen Oppor- tunity Contest, sponsored by Protopcay Macazine and the Goldwyn Pictures Corporation, A practical, sane, and fair oppor- tunity for young American women to win success in the films, No promises of immediate stardom or megnificent salaries; simply a good chance to work for fame. Every girl who has longed to act before the camera, who feels she possesses film qualifications, should enter her photegraph. If she has ability, she will have ample opportunity to prove it. The world wants new screen faces. The screen must have them. Protor.ay and Goldwyn Pictures are cooperating to find these faces and to photograph them. It is the most unusual and far-reaching cn- terprise the screen has seen. Don't delay. Send in your photograph now, If you are one of these girls, send in your own likeness to the New Faces Editor, in care of this Maga- zinc. If you know one of them, secure her picture and send it in for her. Next month there will be the latest developments in the Screen Opportunity idea. Watch for them. EGomichbooks (E(0)