Joan Blondell, in one of her books, claimed to have kept a copy of this film in her personal collection, so she could bring it out and screen it for friends at parties. This copy cannot be located.

A studio record of the original negative states, "Junked 12/27/48". Warner Bros. destroyed a number of its negatives during the late forties and fifties due to nitrocellulose decomposition.

About 220 production stills from this film have survived in the collection of the George Eastman House in Rochester, New York.

Around 20 minutes of stock footage taken in Atlantic City for use in this film was discovered by John Leifert in the mid-1990s. The footage includes areal scenes, establishing shots of Atlantic City Pier, and staged scenes of employees of the Honeywell Rubber Corporation arriving at the hotel. It's unclear if any of this raw footage was used in the final film.

In the original senario, Elmer the Goat was a sheep.



No copies of this film can be found. Please check your attic.

The film was released in Spain under the title Que semana!, and it was playing in theaters in that country as late as 1942.

The Production Code Authority refused to certify a reissue of the film in 1936 due to objectionable content.


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