Arthur Q. Bryan didn't voice Elmer in this short, as Elmer did not have any dialogue. Mel Blanc provided the weeping and bawling heard at the end.
Animation of Elmer Fudd crying at the end of the short is recycled animation from Old King Cole crying at the end of "The Merry Old Soul".
Elmer's home has all the very latest furnishings, carefully drawn in perfect detail by the animators. Cartoon shorts were shown on cinemas at the time and were designed to appeal to adult and juvenile audiences alike.
This short marks the first time where Elmer's character design has been finalized; which is using the design basis as in "A Wild Hare" released earlier in the year, minus the red nose. However, this design was not yet finalized among the Warners directors until "The Hare-Brained Hypnotist" (1942), as from "Wabbit Twouble" (1941) to "Fresh Hare" (1942), Elmer was temporarily redesigned by Bob Clampett to look chubby.