Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Two of these songs are new covers of songs that have previously appeared on Glee: the original song "Loser like Me" performed by Darren Criss, Kevin McHale, Chord Overstreet and Jenna Ushkowitz; and a new version of Journey's "Don't Stop Believin' " that features Lea Michele, Morrison, Criss, Chris Colfer, McHale and Ushkowitz.
Glee is a musical comedy-drama television series that aired on Fox in the United States for six seasons from 2009 to 2015. It focuses on the high school glee club New Directions competing in the show choir competition circuit, while its members deal with relationships, sexuality and social issues.
The glee club is down to ten members and needs to recruit, so director Will Schuester assigns them a project to get new singers. Cheerleading coach Sue Sylvester runs for congress on a platform of cutting the arts in schools, and directs new cheerleading co-captains Santana and Becky (Lauren Potter) to sabotage the pianos being used in the glee club project.
For his part, McHale, who played New Directions singer Artie, lamented that the episode was his "actual breaking point." He apologized to anyone on set while he filmed the living nativity scene.
Neither Lauren nor Puck win the race for prom queen and king, [14] but they remain a couple; they fly with the rest of New Directions to the nationals competition in New York City, where the glee club comes in twelfth out of fifty teams. [15] This defeat leads Lauren to quit the glee club at the beginning of the third season and break up with Puck.
Will welcomes back New Directions members from both past and present who have reunited for this day and announces that New Directions will no longer be the only glee club choir at McKinley High, as he is re-creating the Troubletones and creating both a new all-boys group and a junior varsity glee club, but Will is not to be the coach of any ...
Glee introduced the world to quite a talented group of actors when musical comedy-drama debuted on Fox in 2009. It was Ryan Murphy's third series, following teen drama Popular and dark medical ...
The site's critics consensus reads, "The band plays on in a truncated final season that is a little daffier and overstuffed than where Glee began, but some disciplined storytelling and sweetly rendered character arcs harmonizes one grande finale that will hearten the New Directions' faithful."