A print of this film survives at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC, according to Joel Lobenthal, author of 2005's biography, :Tallulah! The Life and Times of a Leading Lady".
Tallulah Bankhead got this role by winning a magazine contest when she was 15. She submitted her photo to Picture Play, which was conducting a contest and awarding a trip to New York plus a movie part to 12 winners based on their photographs. However, she forgot to send in her name or address with the picture. Bankhead learned that she was one of the winners while browsing the magazine at her local drugstore. Her photo in the magazine was captioned "Who is She?", urging the mystery girl to contact the paper at once. Her uncle, Congressman William Bankhead, sent in a letter to the magazine with her duplicate photo. Arriving in New York, Bankhead was paid $75 for three weeks' work. She stayed in New York and pursued an acting career.
When she arrived in New York to make this film, Tallulah Bankhead was only 15. She moved into the Algonquin Hotel, a hotspot for the artistic and literary elite of the era, which introduced her to drugs and sex, which became a major part of her life. She quickly charmed her way into the famed Algonquin Round Table of the hotel bar. She was dubbed one of the "Four Riders of the Algonquin", consisting of Bankhead, Estelle Winwood, Eva Le Gallienne, and Blyth Daly. Three of the four were non-heterosexual: Bankhead and Daly were bisexuals, and Le Gallienne was a lesbian. Bankhead's father had warned her to avoid alcohol and men when she got to New York; Bankhead later quipped "He didn't say anything about women and cocaine." The Algonquin's wild parties introduced Bankhead to cocaine and marijuana, of which she later remarked "Cocaine isn't habit-forming and I know because I've been taking it for years."