This was the first Andy Panda cartoon to be released through United Artists.
Most circuses at the time has their own band and bandmaster, as shown here, who provided the musical punctuation for the acts.
The representations of the circus and its acts shown here, though shown with a touch of humor, are fairly accurate of the era. Sadly, the Hartford circus fire, which had happened only three years prior in 1944, would change how circuses were set up, with the old big top eventually being phased out in favor of safer indoor arenas.
The dancing pink elephants, the subject of many a drunken tale, were likely a nod to two of rival studio Disney's animated offerings, Fantasia (1940) and Dumbo (1941).
With the rights to this cartoon reverting back to Universal, the television prints strangely tack on a 1933 B&W Universal logo with the biplane flying around the globe. After that a Universal-International Andy Panda title card from the 1950's re-issue appears.