Bessie Smith had a hit on the song in 1925 and Handy himself asked Bessie Smith to appear in the movie. Handy co-authored the film and was the musical director. The film was a dramatization of the song, a woman left alone by her roving man. It features a band that including James P. Johnson on piano, Thomas Morris and Joe Smith on cornet, as well as the Hall Johnson Choir with some thrilling harmonies at the end.
The film has an all African-American cast. Bessie Smith co-stars with the dancer and actor Jimmy Mordecai as the boyfriend and Isabel Washington Powell as the other woman.
It was filmed in June of 1929 on Astoria, Long Island. The film is 16 minutes long. It is available on videotape.
1939 film
In 1939, Raoul Walsh directed "St. Louis Blues," a musical, set on a Mississippi River showboat. Although the plot was not related to the song, the St. Louis Blues was sung as one of the numbers. Artists included jazz singer Maxine Sullivan and composer/singer/actor Hoagy Carmichael.
1941 short
In 1941, Alvino Rey and his orchestra, featuring the King Sisters, presented a three-minute interpretation of the St. Louis Blues.
The Greater St. Louis area, which includes counties in the states of Missouri and Illinois, is the 18th largest in the United States, with a total population of 2,698,672 as of the 2000 census.
Apotheosis of SaintLouis, a bronze statue of the city's namesake on horseback, was widely used as a symbol of the city before construction of the Arch.
Louis County (1,016,235), the independent City of St. Louis (350,705), the Missouri counties of Saint Charles (320,734), Jefferson (210,397), Franklin (98,234), Lincoln (45,618) and Warren (27,809), and the Illinois counties of Madison (264,350), Saint Clair (259,132), Clinton (36,065), Monroe (30,491) and Jersey (22,320).
The 1912 publication of his "Memphis Blues" sheet music introduced his style of 12-bar blues to many households, and was credited as the inspiration for the invention of the foxtrot dance step by Vernon and Irene Castle, a New York-based dance team.
Bessie Smith's January 14, 1925 Columbia Records recording of "St. LouisBlues" with Louis Armstrong is considered by many to be one of the finest recordings of the 1920s.
So successful was Handy's "St. LouisBlues" that in 1929, he and director Kenneth W. Adams collaborated on a RCA motion picture project of the same name which was to be shown before the main attraction.