[3][4][5] It was part of The General Motors Hour,[6] a loosely scheduled occasional series which presented various types of one-off local productions.
[10] Brian Wright, who appeared in the show, had written the radio serial Hop Harrigan which had starred Bruce Stewart a number of years earlier.
[12] Gwen Plumb wrote in her memoirs that a brown horse was used and the crew covered it in Johnson's Baby Powder to make it look ghostly.
[20] According to Filmink magazine, the production is "not flawless – James and Teale both have these terrible beards, which should not have been allowed on air, and the accents distract.
But generally, the acting is strong (particularly James, John Gray and Ben Gabriel as townsfolk) and the story is extremely compelling.