Original novel The film was based on the novel of the same name by Frances Walton, which was published in 1935. The novel was loosely based on the 1929
Women's Air Derby, the first official women-only air race in the United States held during the 1929
National Air Races. A total of 19 pilots took off from
Santa Monica, California on August 18, 1929 (another left the next day) with 15 pilots continuing to
Cleveland, Ohio, landing nine days later. The
New York Times called the novel "well written and swift paced".
Development Film rights were bought by
Warner Bros. who assigned
Kay Francis to star. It was the last Warner Bros. contract film for Kay Francis. The film represented the culmination of her longstanding feud with the studio bosses. Once an A-list star, Francis was frustrated with the roles Warner Bros. had given her in the late 1930s. The studio considered her "box office poison" and wanted to end her contract but Francis refused, touching off an embarrassing effort to force the star out, even making her act as a prompter for other actors and assigning her to
B-list fare such as
Women in the Wind. In July 1938 writers were told to rewrite the film to incorporate a round-the-world race to exploit the recent achievements of
Howard Hughes. "It is expected that the film will end her career at Warners in a blaze of glory", wrote the
Los Angeles Times. At one stage the film was going to be retitled
Dublin By Mistake to cash in on the
Douglas Corrigan flight. The movie was going to have an all-female cast but then it was decided not to.
William Gargan played the male lead. (It was the eighth time Gargan played an aviator in his career.)
Shooting Filming started 2 September 1938. The film did mark an early role for later star, Eve Arden, albeit one that she thought was ludicrous when effects turned her crash landing into an "atom bomb" going off. The fiery crash scene set off guffaws from the test audience who saw her emerge from the blazing wreck with hardly a smudge on her cheek. Fortunately, the final release has a more conventional crash scene with Ms. Arden's character badly injured and carried off on a stretcher. A number of scenes utilized footage from record-breaking round-the-world and transatlantic flights. ==Reception==