Gwen Somers said the nudity didn't bother her because nudity is like therapy to her. She said, "It frees me. I'm so comfortable with it that, after a while, I feel as if I'm wearing clothes. As long as my body is clean and beautiful, and not icky or disgusting or anything like that, I feel tremendously peaceful."
Film debut and last role for Kimberly St. John.
First and only film directed and produced by Michael Roush.
When producer Bill Blum was working at Embassy Pictures in the late '90s, he knew a writer, Elizabeth Bergholz, who had knocked off the script for this film. It had been sitting around for a while without ever being produced. He gave the script to his friend Mike Roush because they had decided recently to start producing their own movies. Roush was really impressed by it so they optioned it and tried to get some of the major studios involved. But after no luck, they decided to make it themselves.
The original script took a dark turn after 50 pages and characters started dying from the wax Yvonne applied to them. Director Michael Roush didn't want to include death and killings in a comedy film, so he convinced the writer to change it so that people are saved from the zombie-like effects of the wax.