Filmed late in 1946 to January 1947, but not released until June 1949.
At the beginning of a scene set at an art exhibition by Shawn (Broderick Crawford), Franz Waxman's score uses a theme from "Pictures at an Exhibition," by the Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky.
At the time she made this, Viveca Lindfors had only recently been imported from Sweden, where she had already appeared in about a dozen films. She was clearly being promoted as a potential rival to her popular fellow Swede, Ingrid Bergman.
Originally planned as Lindfors' American film debut, its release was delayed so long she was no longer under contract at Warner Bros. when it came out.
This film's earliest documented telecast took place in Tucson Thursday 20 September 1956 on KDWI (Channel 9); it first aired in Los Angeles Sunday 28 October 1956 on KTLA (Channel 5), in Salt Lake City Friday 9 November 1956 on KUTV (Channel 2), in San Francisco Thursday 13 November 1956 on KRON (Channel 4), in Washington DC Saturday 1 December 1956 on WTTG (Channel 5), in Phoenix Tuesday 11 December 1956 on KPHO (Channel 5), in Portland OR Thursday 20 December 1956 on KLOR (Channel 12), in Boston Wednesday 30 January 1957 on WBZ (Channel 4), and in Sacramento CA Wednesday 14 February 1957 on KCRA (Channel 3).