Lummox marked Westover’s return to acting after a several year hiatus; the terms of an agreement signed during proceedings of her divorce from
William S. Hart in 1922 explicitly prevented her from working in motion pictures in any capacity or associating herself with Hart’s name. However, Westover petitioned the court for the right to act under her maiden name, and she was allowed to return to work. In order to portray the heavyset servant, Westover ate fatty food, avoided exercise, and gained forty pounds. To help her appear to be a person who worked long hours of wearying labor the director gave her shoes soled with fifteen pounds of lead, and had her wear a dress with five pounds of lead weights in the collar, five pounds of lead in each of the sleeve cuffs, and ten pounds of weights in the hem of her skirt. Sound engineer
Ed Bernds did not have fond memories of Brenon: "So many of the silent film directors were phonies. I didn't think highly of Herbert Brenon, for instance. He was the old, imperious type of director. Lordly, demanding. There was a scene in
Lummox, where Winifred Westover was supposed to be betrayed by Ben Lyon, who has gotten her pregnant. He throws some money down and she takes the money and tears it up with her teeth. Well, Brenon demanded real money! And several takes. The poor propman was going around borrowing money from the crew. It was the Imperial syndrome of silent film directors." ==Reception==