According to JOAN CRAWFORD: THE ESSENTIAL BIOGRAPHY, Joan Crawford "wore her hair that color (blonde) because the actress who was originally to play the part of the mother, Marjorie Rambeau (who'd played her mother in Laughing Sinners (1931)) was a blonde. When Rambeau became ill, the part was recast with a brunette actress, Pauline Frederick, whom Joan greatly admired. Joan's scenes had already been shot, and the difference in hair color was not reason enough to reshoot them. Besides, there was no reason why a brunette mother couldn't have a blonde-haired daughter - or maybe she was just into peroxide."
According to a biography on Joan Crawford, when asked for her comments on this film many years after its release, she responded, "Forget This Modern Age."
Based on Mildred Cram's short story "Girls Together" that appeared in the February 1931 issue of COLLEGE HUMOR magazine.
This film was included on a list of boycotted films compiled by the Catholic Church of Detroit.