Gaumont British, capitalising on the success of Evergreen (1934), issued double-sided lobby cards advertising further Jessie Matthews vehicles - First a Girl (1935) and "Modern Masquerade" - on the same card, with the latter eventually released as It's Love Again.
British comedian Terry-Thomas has an early turn as a dancing extra.
Composer Sam Coslow, who was under contract to Paramount, was loaned out to Gaumont for this film, marking the first time a composer was borrowed by another studio. Paramount made a profit on the deal as Gaumont paid substantially more than Coslow's salary. This was common with actors and sometimes directors during the studio era.
Pre WWII Britain was the time of the Raj and all things Indian were in vogue, as can be glimpsed in the over-the-top party scene.
The wild shooting scene might have been an inspiration for the fencing fiasco duel in the James Bond film "Die Another Day."