The 1939 Wizard of Oz was always in color. The Kansas scenes were purposely filmed with sepia tones.
There was a 1925 version that was filmed in black & white & remained B&W.
Well, the original movie came out in 1939, but I don't believe it was ever in full color for the whole movie. In the beginning it starts out in black and white, until Dorothy arrives in the Land of Oz, and then it returns to black and white after she "leaves" Oz.
1938. (The way the question is worded makes me wonder if you've fallen into a common, but mistaken, belief. The Kansas sequences were indeed shot in black and white and later converted into sepiatone, but they were actually among the last sequences shot. The producers could have shot the entire film in color if they had wanted to; the monochrome Kansas sequences were a deliberate decision.)
The Wizard of Oz was released in color in 1939.
"The Wizard of Oz" (1939) has always been in color. It was designed to be sepia toned in the Kansas scenes and in color for the OZ scenes.
The wizard of Oz was in color. At the end of the movie you can see the logo for technicolor. The first movie viewed with color was in 1934. Wizard of Oz was made in 1939.
The film was originally and purposely filmed in black and white and COLOR.
1940
1939
Frank Morgan, AKA the Wizard of Oz.
ScareCrow Diploma fromThe Wizard of OZ-replicaBy GO TO OZ☆
Frank Morgan
Lahr (Bert) the cowardly lion in wizard of oz
The Emerald City.
The first color film to come out was the Wizard of Oz which debuted in 1938.
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum was published in 1900.
The colour of the Lion in the Wizard of Oz is brown.
brown
The original Wizard of Oz was released in 1939.
The original Wizard of Oz was released in 1939.
ruby red
Yes.
In "The Wizard of Oz," the Munchkins' favorite color is blue. This is why their houses and clothing are predominantly blue in the movie.
kansas
wizard of oz
In the fields of poppies