A high-production feature,
The Kid From Spain was provided a million-dollar budget by producer
Samuel Goldwyn and engaged some of the finest artistic and technical talent available in Hollywood during the early 1930s. Eddie Cantor was ranked among the top box office stars in the US in 1933: in overseas popularity he out-performed
Greta Garbo and
Marlene Dietrich. Choreography was provided by
Busby Berkeley, and cameraman
Gregg Toland, who would film
Citizen Kane (1941) was cinematographer. Goldwyn, a notoriously "autocratic" producer, attempted to suppress any revisions to the story or script, treating director McCarey "brusquely" during filming. Cantor, in his 1957 autobiography
Take My Life, recalled how he and McCarey circumvented Goldwyn: "One afternoon we got to a scene that didn't play funny." Feigning illness, Cantor left the studio and absconded for the weekend to McCarey's beach house in Santa Barbara. There he and the director overhauled the scene. Cantor continues: "Monday we shot one of the best scenes of the picture. Goldwyn, seeing the
rushes, was amused and baffled. He couldn't figure out where the scene had come from." The cost of the film was reported by
Variety at $900,000 however, their review noted that it was said that the production budget had reached $1 million. Cantor was due to share in the gross of the film if the gross rental exceeded $600,000, despite the film's cost being higher. ==Promotion==