Bob Hope is an out of work writer who stays home and plays house husband while his wife goes to work for her former fiancé and Hope's publisher who is still carrying a torch for her.
The film represented Paramount Pictures' attempt to capitalize on the overwhelmingly positive response to the Oscar-winning song, "Thanks for the Memory,"[1] as performed by Hope and Ross in The Big Broadcast of 1938, released by the studio earlier the same year.[2] The film plot, based on a 1930 stage play Up Pops the Devil by Frances Goodrich and Albert Hackett[3][4] (previously filmed by Paramount in 1931, with Norman Foster and Carole Lombard) deals with an out-of-work writer who stays home and plays house husband while his wife goes to work for her former fiancé.[5]
The film features another popular song, "Two Sleepy People", which is again performed by Bob Hope and Shirley Ross and is often regarded as the companion to its predecessor, "Thanks for the Memory".