[3] It was a spin-off from the radio series Life with the Lyons, and the screenplay, by Guest and Robert Dunbar, was based on previous episodes from the show.
[4] It was shot at Southall Studios in London with sets designed by the art director Wilfred Arnold.
I said 'Well you don’t have to leave it to me, the three people you’ve got, Bebe [Daniels], Ben [Lyons] and Vic Oliver know more about comedy than I’ll ever know.'
"[5] It was the second time Belinda Lee had worked for Val Guest, the first being her debut in The Runaway Bus.
"[5] The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "The script is compounded of the same well-worn jokes and situations, but has moments of authentic fun and keeps up a commendable pace.
... Amusing entertainment,"[9] Picturegoer wrote: "No sentiment, no tears, just high-speed domestic pandemonium, beating the laughs out of one gag and hurrying on to the next. ...
Bebe, Ben, Richard and Barbara have what it takes, plus the ability to project warm personalities.
There's real teamwork and an absence of that self-conscious, arch humour found in many British tea-time farces.