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1911
MOTION PICTURE STORY MAGAZINE


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
- Title changed to Motion Picture Magazine in March 1914.
- 'Published monthly, it provided movie fans with short story adaptations of recent fims along with publicity photos and 'behind the scenes' profiles of popular movie personalities, commentary about the topics of the day, and a sort of personalized 'ask the Editor' feature.'
1911-1980
PHOTOPLAY


- The magazine that represents the Golden Age of the Hollywood studio system during the 1930s and '40s.
- First issue was published in Chicago.
- In 1915 James R. Quirk became editor and he gave to Photoplay the form and format of a 'fan magazine': glamorous coverage of the movie world.
- Merged with Movie Mirror in 1941.
- Merged with TV-Radio Mirror in 1977.
- After it ceased publication, in 1980, its staff were moved to US magazine.
1912
MOTION PICTURE ALBUM


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
1913
MOVIE PICTORIAL


- Early American 'fan Magazine' .
- Large format, lavishly illustrated movie weekly.
1913
MOVING PICTURE STORIES


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
- 'Devoted to photoplays and players'.
1914
MOTION PICTURE


- The first 'fan magazine' ever.
- Launched in 1911 by Eugene V. Brewster and was called The Motion Picture Story Magazine.
- Later (March or April 1914) was renamed to Motion Picture Magazine.
- Combined with Hollywood Magazine in April 1941.
- Last issue in 1977!
1915
FILM PLAYERS HERALD AND MOVIE PICTORIAL


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1915
MOTION PICTURE MAIL


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
- A weekly Supplement to The Daily Mail newspaper.
1915
MOTION PICTURE TIMES


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
1915
MOVIE MAGAZINE


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1915
PHOTOPLAY REVIEW


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1915
PHOTOPLAY VOGUE


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
- From Buffalo.
- Changed name to Photoplay Topics in 1915.
1915
WEEKLY MOVIE RECORD


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1915
WHO`S WHO IN MOVING PICTURES


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1915
WID`S FILMS AND FILM FOLK


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
- Was called Wid's Film and Film Folk from 1915 to 1916, then Wid's Independent Review of Feature Films from 1916 to 1918; Wid's Daily from 1918 to 1921; and Film Daily from 1922 to 1970.
- Weekly from 1915 to May 2, 1918. Daily from May 8, 1918 to Dec. 31, 1921 (89 issues this period.)
1915-1915
MOTION PICTURE SUPPLEMENT


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
- Title changed to Motion Picture Classic in December 1915.
1915-1915
PICTURE-PLAY WEEKLY


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
- Title changed to Picture-Play Magazine in October 3, 1915. Again title changed to Picture Play in March 1927 and to Charm in March 1941.
1915-1927
PICTURE-PLAY


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
- Started as Picture-Play Weekly in April 10, 1915.
- Title changed to Picture Play in May 1927 and to Charm in March 1941.
1915-1931
MOTION PICTURE CLASSIC


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
- Started as Motion Picture Supplement in September 1915 (to November 1915).
- Took the name Motion Picture Classic in December 1915 (to April 1922).
- Title changed to 'Classic' in September 1922 (to January 1924).
- Was called 'Classic Pictorial of Screen and Stage' from February to August 1924.
- Then again Motion Picture Classic.
- Absorbed Shadowland in November 1923.
- Became Movie Classic in 1931.
1915-1942
FILM FUN


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
- - An amalgamation of three non-movie titles.
1916
FEATURE MOVIE MAGAZINE


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1916
PHOTOPLAY WEEKLY MIRROR


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1916-1921
PHOTO-PLAY JOURNAL


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
- It carried fiction in its earlier years, principally novelizations of film scripts.
- Publisher: Philadelphia, PA
- Editor: Ed Roberts
1917
PHOTO-PLAY WORLD


- Early American 'fan Magazine' .
- Publisher: The Downs Publishing Co., Philadelphia, PA.
1918
CALIFORNIA | THE


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1919-1923
SHADOWLAND

The Magazine Of Magazines | Expressing The Arts | Classic | Motion Picture Classic | Classic Pictorial Of Screen And Stage
- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
- Some non-movie content.
- Absorbed by MOTION PICTURE CLASSIC in November 1923.
1920-1971
SCREENLAND


- Early American 'fan Magazine' .
- Changed name to 'Screenland plus TV-Land' with the September 1952 issue.
- Merged with Silver Screen in 1971.
1920s
CINEMA ART


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1920s
CINEMA ART (NY)


1921
FILMPLAY JOURNAL


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1921
HOLLYWOOD INFORMER


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1921
MOVIE MELODY MAGAZINE


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1921
MOVIE WEEKLY


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
- Weekly.
1921
PANTOMIME


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
1921
PHOTO DRAMA


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1921
SCREENLAND SEATTLE


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1922
MOTION PICTURE REVIEW


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1924
HOLLYWOOD 1924


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1924
MOVIE ADVENTURES


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
- Title changed to Movie Thrillers in January 1925. Again title changed to Movie Magazine in September 1925 and again to Pictures in May 1926.
1924
MOVIE MONTHLY


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
1925
HOLLYWOOD LIFE (20s)


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1925
MOTION PICTURE MONTHLY


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1925
MOVIE DIGEST


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1925-1928
SO THIS IS PARIS


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
- Title changed to 'So This is Paris and Hollywood' in October 1925,
- to 'Paris and Hollywood' in April 1926 (or in January 1927),
- to 'Paris and Hollywood Screen Secrets' in 1927 (or 1928),
- to 'Screen Secrets' in April 1928,
- to ' Screen Play Secrets' in April 1930,
- and finally to 'Screen Play' in October 1931.
1925-1937
SCREEN PLAY


- The continuation of Screen Play Secrets.
- Merged with SCREEN BOOK in 1937 (which became Screen Life in 1940).
1926
CINELANDIA

Publicada En Hollywood
- Published in Hollywood but in the Spanish language for Latin American countries and for Hispanic film fans in America.
1926
CINEMA REVIEW


1927-1941
PICTURE PLAY


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
- Started as Picture-Play Weekly in April 10, 1915.
- Title changed to Picture-Play Magazine in October 3, 1915.
- Was called STREET AND SMITH'S PICTURE PLAY from 1931 to 1938.
- Title changed to Charm in March 1941.
1928-1940
SCREEN BOOK


- Incorporating SCREEN PLAY since 1937.
- Title changed to Screen Life in 1940.
- Published in Louisville, Kentucky by "Fawcett Publications, Inc.".
1929
NEW MOVIE


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1929
PASSING SHOW OF TODAY


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1929-1948
SCREEN ROMANCES


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
- Changed name to SCREEN STORIES in 1948.
1929?-1943
HOLLYWOOD

A Fawcett Publication
- Incorporated by MOTION PICTURE in 1943.
1930
CINEMA (1930)


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1930
SILVER SCREEN

Reflecting The Magic Of Hollywood
- Early American 'fan Magazine' .
- Combined with Screenland since 1971.
- Published by "J. Fred Henry Publications", later by "Affiliated Magazines" and later by "Popular Library".
- (Bi-)Monthly.
1930
TALKING SCREEN


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1930-1985
MODERN SCREEN


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
- Articles, pictorials and interviews with movie stars.
- Photoplay magazine's main competition.
1931
MOVIE CLASSIC


- Early American 'fan Magazine' .
- Combined with Screen Star Stories.
1931
MOVIE MIRROR


- Early American 'fan Magazine' .
- Merged with Photoplay in 1941.
1931
SCREEN ROMANCES ALBUM


- Early American 'fan Magazine'.
1931-1978(?)
SCREEN ALBUM


- Early American 'fan Magazine' .
- Was called 'SCREEN AND TV ALBUM' since 1967.
1932
SCREEN WEEKLY


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1933
SHADOPLAY


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1934
GOLDEN SCREEN


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1934
POPULAR SCREEN


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1934
SCREEN STAR STORIES


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
- Combined with Movie Classic.
1936-1951
SCREEN GUIDE


- Changed name to Screen and Television Guide in 1948.
- Ansorbed by Motion Picture in 1951.
1937
CINEMA ARTS


- Early American trade journal (created by movie distributors and exhibitors to promote new releases).
- Only 4 issues were published.
1937
MOVIE LIFE


- Early American 'fan Magazine' .
- Changed name to TONI HOLT'S MOVIE LIFE in 1979.
- Published by "Ideal Publishing Corp." (other fan magazines by the same publisher: MODERN MOVIES and MOVIE STARS.)
1937
MOVIE STORY


- Started as ROMANTIC MOVIE STORIES .
- Published in Louisville, Kentucky by "Fawcett Publications, Inc.".
- Absorbed by MOTION PICTURE in 1951.
1937
MOVIES (Ideal)


1938
MOVIEPIX


- Early American 'fan Magazine' (targeting the general public and used as a vehicle for the movie stars of the era).
1940-1941
SCREEN LIFE (FAWCETT)


- A continuation of SCREEN BOOK (1928-1940).
- Published in Louisville, Kentucky by "Fawcett Publications, Inc.".
- Incorporated by MOTION PICTURE in 1941.
- Not to confuse this title with the same name Screen Life from 20th Century Books.
1941
MOVIE STARS


- Was called MOVIE STARS PARADE from 1941 to 1958.
- Changed to "Movie Stars T V Close-Ups", and finally to "Movie Stars".
1941-1942
COWBOY MOVIE THRILLERS


- Early American 'movie pulp' (fiction magazine based on either movie screenplay or movie theme).
- Only 4 issues were published.
1942-1950?
BEST SCREEN STORIES | THE


1942?
LIFE STORY (Dell)


- Various magazines from Dell with the same tag line: "Life Story".
1943
MOVIELAND


1944-1978
SCREEN STARS


- Published by "Interstate Publishing", later by "Margood Publishing" and then by "Official Magazine Corp.".
- Combined With TV & Records Stars.
1948-1979
SCREEN STORIES


- Was called SCREEN ROMANCES before 1948.
1953-1953
ELSA MAXWELL`S CAFE SOCIETY


- Only one issue was published.
- Elsa Maxwell was a well known gossip columnist.
1953-1958
SCREEN LIFE (Skye)


- Published by 20th Century Books and later by Skye Publishing.
- Not to confuse this title with the same name Screen Life from Fawcett Publications.
- Merged with Movie Fan in January 1955.
1958-1960
CELEBRITY (Fawcett)


- Only three issues were published.
1960?
MOVIE-TV TATTLER


1960s
CELEBRITY HAIRDOS


- Published in the 60s.
1960s
SCREEN LIFE


1960s?
TV PHOTO STORY


1969
RONA BARRETT`S HOLLYWOOD


- Rona Barrett was the most known gossip/entertainment reporter back in the 1970's and 80s.
- Her magazines featured the celebrities of that era.
1972
RONA BARRETT`S GOSSIP


- Changed name to just 'Gossip' in 1980.
- Rona Barrett was the most known gossip/entertainment reporter back in the 1970's and 80s.
- Her magazines featured the celebrities of that era.
1977
BIJOU

The Magazine Of The Movies
1980s
HOLLYWOOD KIDS | THE


- Gossip about celebrities.
- Distributed free in Los Angeles and San Francisco.
- Written by John Nichols and Lance (the Hollywood kids).
1988
FAME (80s)


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