Screenland

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Screenland an entity of type: Thing

Screenland was a monthly U.S. magazine about movies, published between September 1920 and June 1971, when it merged with Silver Screen. In the September 1952 issue, the name changed to Screenland plus TV-Land. In was established in Los Angeles, California, with as the editor in 1922. Frederick James Smith became the editor in 1923 when it moved to Cooperstown, New York. One magazine-collector site credits, without attribution, one Paul Hunter, "with rescuing Screenland magazine for John Cuneo back in 1932." rdf:langString
rdf:langString Screenland
rdf:langString Screenland
xsd:integer 27277938
xsd:integer 959866264
rdf:langString Henry Publishing
xsd:integer 1971
xsd:integer 1920
rdf:langString Joan Blondell on July 1939 cover
rdf:langString Joan Blondell Screenland magazine.jpg
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Screenland
rdf:langString Screenland was a monthly U.S. magazine about movies, published between September 1920 and June 1971, when it merged with Silver Screen. In the September 1952 issue, the name changed to Screenland plus TV-Land. In was established in Los Angeles, California, with as the editor in 1922. Frederick James Smith became the editor in 1923 when it moved to Cooperstown, New York. One magazine-collector site credits, without attribution, one Paul Hunter, "with rescuing Screenland magazine for John Cuneo back in 1932." In October 1952, Ned Pines' Standard Magazines, an imprint of Pines Publications, purchased Silver Screen and Screenland from the Henry Publishing company. Pines announced in June 1954 that he was suspending publication with the August 1954 issue, citing production and distribution costs. The magazine continued publication through 1971, however. In 1923 the magazine reported a love affair between Evelyn Brent and Douglas Fairbanks, resulting in legal threats, and a retraction.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4693
rdf:langString Joan Blondellon July 1939 cover

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