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During the week of September 20, 1935, every one of Irving Berlin's songs featured in this film were played on the radio show "Your Hit Parade". The show featured the United States' 15 most popular songs for the week. Berlin's five songs from this film made him the very first composer to have five songs included in the program during one week.
Mark Sandrich, who directed five of the Fred Astaire-Ginger Rogers musicals, was a physicist before he got into filmmaking. He would devise blueprints for every scene so he would know exactly where to put the cameras and the actors.
The finale of "Top Hat, White Tie and Tails" production number with Fred Astaire miming his cane as a weapon "attacking" his supporting dancers, 13 canes were prepared for it. During shooting, Astaire, ever the unforgiving perfectionist, was continually breaking his canes in frustration at his mistakes, which concerned the crew that he was running out of them. As it turns out, the shooting of the scene was finished with the very last cane.
Erik Rhodes's Italian characterization so offended the Italian government - and dictator Benito Mussolini in particular - that the film was banned in Italy. The same fate had befallen The Gay Divorcee (1934) the year before.
Character Alberto Beddini's motto was originally, "For the men the sword, for the women the whip". The script was changed to "For the women the kiss, for the men the sword" after the censors objected.