After Warner's success with On With The Show (1929), executives quickly made plans for more all talking, all color movies like this one, a "working girl makes good" fable about a waitress (Marilyn Miller) who, after being discovered on the job by theatrical agent Otis Hooper (T. Roy Barnes), uses her natural hoofing ability to work her way through the song-and-dance ranks and emerge triumphant on Broadway. The Jerome Kern song 'Look For The Silver Lining" appears here, long before before its renditions by Judy Garland (once, while playing Miller in Till The Clouds Roll By [1946]) became inexorably linked with the ill-fated child star. The original print was two-strip Technicolor, but, like many early color movies, only black and white prints remain. Fortuitously, however, when portions of the "Wild Rose" number were uncovered in the 1990s, they were restored into extant prints. Marilyn Miller's blonde joie de vivre in that number makes it easy to see why 20th cent executive Ben Lyon would later christen Norma Jeane after her as "Marilyn Monroe".

By Violet LeVoit