Charles Chaplin visited the set one day and was asked by assistant director Robert Florey to play a practical joke on Talmadge. The scene in question called for the actress to come down a dark street and ask a stranger for a match. When the actress saw it was Chaplin, she could scarcely keep from laughing before director Henry King could call 'cut.'. After lighting the cigarette, he tossed the match over his shoulder and kicked it in his characteristic fashion. The cameo was not publicized and because the kick part was cut, the bit went largely unnoticed. Chaplin was paid $7.50 by Florey for the scene in an elaborate ceremony.
In the original version, as documented by Photoplay Magazine in September 1928, Olga Baclanova and Howard Davies are credited as the Countess and the Count, but in the final version, and as seen in the surviving print at the Library of Congress, these roles are played by Gladys Brockwell and Nicholas Soussanin.
Talmadge and Roland were engaged in a love affair at the time of filming.
Talmadge's last silent film.