Early to Bed is a 1933 British-German romantic comedy film directed by Ludwig Berger and starring Heather Angel, Fernand Gravey and Edmund Gwenn.
A young waiter and a manicurist share the same room without ever meeting – because she works in the day and he at night.
As was common at the time, the film was made as a multiple-language production with three separate versions modelled on the German original I by Day, You by Night.
Early to Bed was made at the Babelsberg Studio in Berlin, along with the French and German versions.
The casting of the comedian Sonnie Hale in a supporting role slanted the British version in a more humorous direction than its counterparts.