In late 1929 W. C. Fields, then working in New York, tried to exercise the motion picture rights to his old stage sketch "The Family Ford", only to find that it had already been filmed as a
Vitaphone short. Fields, determined that such unauthorized use would not happen again, arranged with nearby movie producer
Lou Brock to make a talking picture of "An Episode on the Links." Brock was releasing his films through RKO, assuring national exposure for Fields. Most of the cast members were stage actors who made occasional films, except Fields and
Shirley Grey who pursued full-time film careers in Hollywood. Vaudeville dancer Allan Wood, one of Fields's stooges on stage, played the hapless caddy. Today's viewers may be interested in seeing the first film appearance of
Harriet MacGibbon, then a 24-year-old stage actress who achieved TV fame three decades later, as the long-suffering "Mrs. Drysdale" on
The Beverly Hillbillies. In the Fields short, she's the haughty young lady on the links, walking her dog. The golf sketch only lasted 10 to 12 minutes on stage, and involved only four people (Fields, the girl, the caddy, and the showgirl with the dog). Other scenes had to be added to bring the film up to a length of two reels (20 minutes). These additional scenes were staged on a hotel-lobby set, where other cast members interacted with Fields. ==Reception==