Edna May Oliver had been starring as Hildegarde Withers in RKO's popular mystery series since 1932. By 1936 she had left the studio for
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and was no longer available. She was replaced by RKO contractee Helen Broderick, a tart character actress known for sly remarks and snappy comebacks, which were hallmarks of the Withers series. Broderick played the role her own way, without imitating her predecessor. Edward Killy, a forthright assistant director who once told off a stubborn
Katharine Hepburn, and William Hamilton, the salty head of the studio's film editing department, were paired by the studio to co-direct a few features.
Film Daily gave them and their latest picture high marks: "Good melodrama that should find favor with mystery fans. Excellently acted and well directed. Miss Broderick gets her sly humor over in fine shape and keeps audience interest from flagging. Direction of Edward Killy and William Hamilton keeps the action moving and the curiosity aroused. Direction excellent, photography excellent."
Boxoffice Magazine wrote, "This one falls short of its predecessors in the department of wisecracking dialogue, but finished troupers like Gleason and Helen Broderick could make even the
Congressional Record funny and they get the utmost out of their opportunities."
Variety was more critical but gave Gleason and Broderick the benefit of the doubt: "On the surface it looks like too many cooks spoiled the picture. Four writers were concerned with the screenplay and two directors with the actual staging. It's a murder mystery that pulls its punches, showing how the fine comedy abilities of Helen Broderick and James Gleason can be thoroughly submerged by a poor script." RKO continued with the Hildegarde Withers series but not with Broderick, who moved on to other RKO productions. She was succeeded by
ZaSu Pitts. ==References==