Harold Lloyd was fast becoming cinema's most prolific comedian, and his star power was rising to new heights in 1919. The studio he was contracted to, Pathe Exchange, wanted to capitalize on his escalating popularity by making longer movies than his normal one-reeler 12-minute shorts. The company signed Lloyd to a nine-movie deal for expanded 30-minute films. His first two-reeler was November 1919's "Bumping Into Broadway."
When seeing "Broadway," a viewer might think the movie is two separate one-reelers placed back-to-back. The first half deals with Lloyd trying to evade paying the $3.75 a month in rent by attempting to escape the cluthes of the landlord's enforcer. The second part deals with his trying to sell his play to a theater manger, only to end up in an illegal gambling house, where he breaks the bank by his successful bets on the roulette wheel. But a Keystone-like squad of police raids the place just as he's pocketing the dough.
"Bumping on Broadway" co-stars Lloyd's regular female sidekick, Bebe Daniels. The actress reached out to Cecil B. DeMille to seek out the possibilities of expanding her acting talents towards more dramatic roles. The famous director did hire her for his 'Male And Female' production as well as a number of movies for Paramount Pictures. "Broadway" was her second to last film with Lloyd after appearing with him in over 150 films.