For the week of 3/2/46, Betty Hutton's jovial, racing rendition of "Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief" (music by Hoagy Carmichael, lyrics by Paul Francis Webster), via Capitol Records, sprinted to first place on the "Billboard" singles chart. Carmichael produced two best-selling takes on this number, one side in 1945 for the short-lived ARA label (1944-46), plus a second waxing in 1946 on Decca.
More than 700 photographs of the real Stork Club at 3 East 53rd St., Manhattan, New York City, were taken to help the set designers .
The movie, included as a character Sherman Billingsley the owner of the real Stork Club. During the movie, he talks to Danny, Judy's fiancé, telling him that his wife and two daughters were the only women in his life. This is contradictory to the real life Sherman, who had a longtime affair with Ethel Merman.
The $1,000,000 Pop's offers to Judy in his will in 1945 would be the equivalent of $14.2 million in 2018 dollars.
"Daddy O", an upbeat number performed by Betty Hutton was cut from this film but resurfaced in 1948 when recorded by Dinah Shore as the "B" side to her mega-hit "Buttons and Bows".