Sally's "Brick wall, waterfall" routine was something Jenna Boyd was doing on the set between takes. The filmmakers liked it and worked it into the script twice.
Fred Wolf and David Spade originally wrote a skit in the 1990s for Saturday Night Live (1975) about a child star rampage, spoofing The Silence of the Lambs (1991), for when Macaulay Culkin hosted, but it was cut. The idea was later pitched for The WB, but they turned it down. It was eventually re-written and turned into this movie, originally written as a dark comedy with more references to drug use by child stars.
The crew built an actual treehouse in the backyard of the house used for the exterior scenes of the Finney's home. The real homeowners liked it so much, they requested that the producers leave it up after filming.
The rabbit incident is based on an often repeated twentieth century urban legend.
This movie is about a washed-up child star trying to revive his career. It features Emmanuel Lewis, Maureen McCormick, Mary McCormack, Danny Bonaduce, Dustin Diamond, Barry Williams, Corey Feldman, Butch Patrick, Erin Moran, Christopher Knight, Mike Lookinland, Adam Rich, Jeremy Miller, Leif Garrett, Ernest Thomas, Tony Dow, Haywood Nelson, Corey Haim, Barry Livingston, Todd Bridges, Fred Berry, Gary Coleman, Jay North, Sasha Mitchell, and Alyssa Milano, all former child actors. It also features two on-screen mothers of child actors: Marion Ross and Florence Henderson.
Andy Spade: The man walking past the Finney residence to whom George says, "Hi, Andy." He's David Spade's brother, and he was visiting the set that day.