Brideless Groom was filmed on March 11–14, 1947. The plot theme of
Brideless Groom is not unique, having been used in (among others) the
Buster Keaton comedy
Seven Chances (1925), which would be remade more than seven decades later as
The Bachelor (1999). Writer
Clyde Bruckman was also partially responsible for
Seven Chances.
Brideless Groom would be
recycled in the second half of the Stooge short
Husbands Beware (1956). The film features longtime Stooges supporting player
Emil Sitka's best-remembered line "Hold hands, you lovebirds!" (the line is actually engraved on Sitka's headstone). The shot where Sitka has a birdcage smashed on his head was worked into the film
Pulp Fiction (1994) when
Eric Stoltz is watching television. The version of "
Voices of Spring" during Shemp and Miss Dinkelmeyer's singing lesson was sung by frequent Stooge co-star
Christine McIntyre, who appears in this short as Miss Hopkins. This version of "Voices of Spring", along with McIntyre herself, were previously used in the Stooges'
Micro-Phonies (1945).
Shemp's injury Brideless Groom features a sequence with Christine McIntyre who portrays Miss Hopkins, a woman whom Shemp actively pursues for his wife. Unfortunately, she mistakes him for her cousin Basil. After learning her mistake, she takes it out on poor Shemp by slapping him silly, then finally punching him through her door. During the filming of the scene, when McIntyre threw her punch, she leaned too far into it and hit Shemp for real, ultimately breaking his nose. This mistake was left in the film, and when watched in slow motion, Shemp can be seen falling down and opening his mouth like he was yelling in pain after the punch. Director
Edward Bernds remembered getting McIntyre to give Shemp the blows: ==Copyright status==