Rodney, a young engineer, has found Helga hiding in his garage during a storm and is giving her shelter. (She's run away from her abusive uncle, but she hasn't told Rodney that yet.) She's never really left her backwoods home before, and his kindness helps release a merry spirit. William H. Daniels was Greta Garbo's favorite cinematographer, and he makes Clark Gable look great, too. This is one of the scenes from Garbo's 1930's movies where she laughed before Ninotchka in 1939 ("Garbo laughs!" is how MGM sold that later movie.) The screenplay, by Leon Gordon, Zelda Sears, Edith Fitzgerald and Wanda Tuchok, was ased on the 1912 novel by David Graham Phillips. Edited by Margaret Booth, produced and directed by Robert Z. Leonard for MGM, 1931, during the pre-Code Hollywood era. (Ad disclaimer: I don't own the copyrights to the film and do not know what ads they will run with it.)