King of Jazz (1930)

6.7Approved98 min

1930 American pre-Code musical color film

King of Jazz is a 1930 American pre-Code color musical film starring Paul Whiteman and his orchestra. In the 1920s Whiteman signed and featured jazz musicians including Joe Venuti and Eddie Lang (both are seen and heard in the film), Bix Beiderbecke (who had left before filming began), Frank Trumbauer, and others.

King of Jazz was filmed in the early two-color Technicolor process and was produced by Carl Laemmle Jr. for Universal Pictures. The film featured several songs sung on camera by the Rhythm Boys (Bing Crosby, Al Rinker and Harry Barris), as well as off-camera solo vocals by Crosby during the opening credits and, very briefly, during a cartoon sequence. King of Jazz still survives in a near-complete color print and is not a lost film, unlike many contemporary musicals that now exist only either in incomplete form or as black-and-white reduction copies.

In 2013, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".

As a published work from 1930 with a valid copyright renewal, the film entered the American public domain on January 1, 2026.

Plot summary adapted from Wikipedia, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.

FAQ

What is King of Jazz about?
King of Jazz (1930) — This revue presents its numbers around the orchestra leader Paul Whiteman, besides that it shows in it's final number that the European popular music are the roots of American popular music, called Jazz.
Is King of Jazz based on a true story?
See the production background and source material details on the official Wikipedia article.
Is King of Jazz scary?
Content rating: Approved. See the reviews tab for parental guidance and tone notes.