[3] Among the figures present in the cast stand out Augusto Annibal, Yara Jordão, named at the time as the "queen of Copacabana" and the actor Darwin, known as an "imitator of women".
The newspaper A Rúa considered the production "very funny" and "a masterpiece",[5] however, in its September 11, 1923 issue, it criticized the promotional poster which, according to it, contained "a group of women in smaller costumes, almost naked, one of which lifts its legs over the head of a squatting man (..) who exclaims:-What a smell of Ba-Ta-Clan!.
[6] The periodical O Jornal, made two reviews, the first one issued on September 9, 1923, claimed to be the best release in the comedy genre produced in the country so far and that Augusto Annibal's performance was on a par with Charlie Chaplin's.
[7] In the second, Mendes Fradique wrote even though it was "far from satisfying the demands of the technical spectators", the talent of the cast was worth the ticket price.
Back in town, the girls decide that they are going to help him find a bride, they go to Darwin's house (a boy) who pretends to be a beautiful woman, they write to him that the wedding will only happen if he accepts it right away.