One of the "75 Most Wanted" films listed by the British Film Institute as "Missing, believed lost".
Has the distinction of being the first British film directed by a woman.
Director Dinah Shurey launched a libel action against Film Weekly magazine, after the famously blunt and outspoken critic Nerina Shute wrote an article called "Can Women Direct Films?" in which she attacked Shurey. The case came to trial in February 1930 and the jury settled in favour of Shurey, awarding £500 damages and costs against Film Weekly.