The gazebo where Cora finds Jonathan, is later redressed and reused as the gazebo on Bo Peep's estate in the Season Four episode "White Out." The same prop/set is used for the gazebo where Ingrid meets the Duke of Weselton in the Season Four episode "The Snow Queen." A new roof was added for this episode.
"Bleeding Through" is the eighteenth episode of Season Three of ABC's Once Upon a Time. It was written by Jane Espenson and Daniel T. Thomsen and directed by Romeo Tirone. It is the sixty-second episode of the series overall, and premiered on April 20, 2014.
The scene where Rumplestiltskin teaches young Cora to spin straw into gold is an homage to the famous clay sculpting scene between Patrick Swayze and Demi Moore in the 1990 romantic fantasy thriller Ghost.
Coincidentally, Whoopi Goldberg, who voices Mrs. Rabbit on Once Upon a Time in Wonderland, co-stars in that movie.
"The Miller's Daughter" is the sixteenth episode of Season Two of ABC's Once Upon a Time. It was written by Jane Espenson and directed by Ralph Hemecker. It is the thirty-eighth episode overall, and premiered on March 10, 2013.
"Queen of Hearts" is the ninth episode of Season Two of ABC's Once Upon a Time. It was written by Edward Kitsis & Adam Horowitz and directed by Ralph Hemecker. It is the thirty-first episode of the series overall, and premiered on December 2, 2012.
"Queen of Hearts" reveals the identity of the Queen of Hearts. Lana Parrilla, however, had known about her identity since the filming of "Hat Trick," which had an effect on her performance.
"Queen of Hearts" is the ninth episode of Season Two of ABC's Once Upon a Time. It was written by Edward Kitsis & Adam Horowitz and directed by Ralph Hemecker. It is the thirty-first episode of the series overall, and premiered on December 2, 2012.
In Sisters, as Cora is saying her goodbyes, she tells Zelena that "we never even got to say hello." This line was pitched to the writing team by Adam Horowitz.
In The Miller’s Daughter, Rumpelstiltskin says that Cora's name "sounds like something breaking". Fittingly enough, Cora's name is a reference to the Latin word for "heart".