Beverly Wills, who plays Joan Davis as a child, is Davis' daughter, according to the opening credits. Her singing sounds dubbed by her mother.
Jack Haley's and Margaret Hamilton's second screen appearance together, following The Wizard of Oz (1939).
Jack Haley was a popular comic star, particularly in vaudeville, and is best known to movie fans as the Tin Man in The Wizard of Oz (1939).
According to a Hollywood Reporter news item, the musical number "Life Is Just a Bowl of Cherries" was filmed using a mirror trick devised by choreographer Ernst Matray in which six dancers appear as a chorus of sixty and two cherry trees look like an entire orchard. Another news item in Hollywood Reporter adds that the musical numbers were shot with three cameras, a technique which enabled the cameramen to film matte shots simultaneously with the various angles of the production numbers, thus saving time and negative film stock.
The working title of this film was "George White's Scandals of 1945."