Untrue ... quickly coming to mind is the 1938 production of Robin Hood,
which was proceeded by any number of color films.  Few were lavish
musicals.  The first Technicolor movie was The Gulf Between, made in 1917,
followed a few years later  by The Toll of the sea starring Anna Mae Wong,
and soon thereafter by a Zane Gray western, Wanderer of the Wasteland.  In
1926 Douglas Fairbanks had a big ht (for Fairbanks), The Black Pirate, and
in 1928, using Technicolor's process 3, came The Viking. In 1930 Warner
brothers produced 15 movies using the Technicolor process, and let's not
forget the mid-thirties production, also by Warner Brothers, of  The
Mystery of The Wax Museum, and, of course, the first color animated cartoon
made by Disney in, I believe, 1932 (Becky Sharp also was released about
that time), soon followed by the animated Three Little Pigs.  And let's not
forget the famous Technicolor version of Fantasia in 1940.

As far as I can recall, there were very few musicals, lavish or otherwise,
produced before 1940.  The short film, La Cucaracha comes to mind as one,
and perhaps the Dancing Pirate was another.  Oh, of course there was The
Wizard of Oz (in what, 1939)?

Color has been around a long, long time (ninety years or so), although the
early years of color movies were shot on B&W film through color filters,
not thee type of color stock we've become familiar with.

Shel 


> [Original Message]
> From: frank theriault <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


> So you think.
>
> Until about the late 40's or 50's, other than lavish musicals, the
> world was entirely tones of grey.


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