Lost for many decades since its original release, a copy of this film was discovered in April 2003 in Haarlem (The Netherlands) in a private collection. It was restored by the Nederlands Film Museum and the Hagheflim Conservation and was screened in 2005, complete with English dialogue screens in place of the original Dutch, at the Cannes film festival. It made its television debut on May 21, 2006, on Turner Classic Movies as part of a nine-film tribute to Rudolph Valentino.
Gloria Swanson noted in her memoirs that she hoped this film, lost at the time, would one day resurface. She singled out a dance scene with Rudolph Valentino as one of the best scenes in her career; the sequence does not appear in the surviving version of the film.
In all the publicity materials for this film, Valentino's Christian name is always spelt "Rodolph".
Italian censorship visa # 19552 delivered on 1924.