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Penned by one of the underpaid ink-slingers who toiled silently on the corner of Dayton and Rodeo Drive, is the skinny on that unique magazine published in Beverly Hills, California between the years 1929 through 1949, Rob Wagner's Script (the namesake is pictured above). It was an exceptional magazine that took courageous stands on a number of moral issues, such as the wartime incarceration of Japanese-Americans. As a product of Los Angeles it not only addressed a good many issues involving Hollywood but also published the writings of Walt Disney, Dalton Trumbo, Ray Bradbury and Charlie Chaplin. From a graphic stand-point it was, perhaps, a bit envious of the New Yorker, but "Script" also laid claim to a number of fine cartoonists; Leo Politi (1908 – 1996) worked for a time as the magazine's Art Director. In the late Forties Salvador Dali contributed cover illustrations. We recommend that you read the attached article and suggest that you surf over to Wikipedia for additional history concerning this magazine.


     


<em>Rob Wagner's Script</em> (Rob Wagner's Script, 1946)

<em>Rob Wagner's Script</em> (Rob Wagner's Script, 1946)

<em>Rob Wagner's Script</em> (Rob Wagner's Script, 1946)

<em>Rob Wagner's Script</em> (Rob Wagner's Script, 1946)

<em>Rob Wagner's Script</em> (Rob Wagner's Script, 1946)

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