Mercury Records issued a 10-inch LP of the soundtrack, which would be the only contemporary soundtrack album released from a Betty Grable film.
Fimed between February and May 1954, this was Columbia's initial CinemaScope feature; release of the film was put on hold because the National Catholic Legion of Decency threatened to give it a "C" (for condemned) rating due to the narrative's suggestion that "Julie Lowndes" readily accepted a bigamous arrangement; after Columbia made some minor revisions to the film, it was awarded a "B" (objectionable in part) rating by the Legion.
Penultimate feature film of Betty Grable.
Because of the film's 1955 release date combined with Grable's birth year of early 1916, every critic seems to feel obligated to point out that Grable was 39 years old when she made this film; truth be told, she was born in December 1916, and was in the first season of her 37th year when she appeared before the cameras in the spring of 1954 filming this one; another example of "my mind's made up; don't confuse me with facts!'