
Glee
Over the last three seasons of Glee, Mr. Schuester (Matthew Morrison) has given more than a few weird homework assignments to the members of New Directions (see also: funk and disco weeks). But his final note on the whiteboard for the graduating seniors — "goodbye" — was a fitting, and slightly, OK, super tear-inducing challenge.
The Fox musical's long-awaited graduation episode was the perfect mix of the kids' past, present and future with dash of Glee's signature stretch of believability for good measure. The first half of the episode included many nods to...
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Cory Monteith
For a while it seemed as though Glee would suffer a mass cast exodus as graduating seniors Rachel, Finn and Kurt headed off to pursue theater-arts studies in the Big Apple. But now Fox has announced that the series will juggle both NYC and Ohio-set story lines, with Sarah Jessica Parker and Kate Hudson signing on as New York-based mentors. (I'm hearing the New York sets will be built in Hollywood so the cast will continue working together.) With nearly everyone expected back and no summer concert tour planned during their hiatus, for the first time in years the Glee cast has a couple of free months before heading back to work. Here's how they plan to spend the summer.
Cory Monteith (Finn): "I'm going to do an independent film...
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Glee
They may just be coming off a huge Nationals victory, but the New Directions' happy times are about to come to an end, at least momentarily, on Glee.
"I started crying by the fourth page," Jenna Ushkowitz says. "I know that we'll see the choir room, but it's definitely going to be a different vibe, a different energy so it's sort of the end of an era...
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Naya Rivera, Lea Michele
Keep the Kleenex nearby, gleeks. Tuesday's new episode of Glee is the start of the long goodbye for McKinley's seniors.
With just weeks until graduation, everyone's got the future on their minds. Rachel (Lea Michele) and Finn (Cory Monteith) may have decided to make New York their next step, but there's a lot more uncertainty for the rest of the gang. Take Kurt (Chris Colfer) and Blaine (Darren Criss), who have yet to discuss the idea of a long-distance relationship, and Quinn (Dianna Agron), whose paralysis may or may not be permanent. Some of the adults aren't exactly prepared to let go either.
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Glee
Not since last summer, when Ryan Murphy said that Rachel, Finn and Kurt would be graduating on Glee and leaving the show (and then quickly took it all back), has the fate of a Glee cast member been so hotly followed.
So when the Fox musical returned from a two-month hiatus Tuesday, it wasted no time in revealing what happened to Quinn...
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Dianna Agron
For a while there, it seemed as though Quinn Fabray was set for life. The popular McKinley High senior had made peace with the adoption of her baby daughter, gotten accepted to Yale, returned to the cheerleading squad and serenaded all the schoolboys she'd loved before.
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Matt Bomer
"I've waited five years for this."
Chill, Gleeks! It hasn't been that long since Glee's winter season finale -- which saw Rachel (Lea Michele) and Finn (Cory Monteith) ready to walk down the aisle and Quinn (Dianna Agron) about to get hit by a truck -- it just feels that way. (The above quote, by the way, is a line spoken by Puck. Of course.)
Glee spoiler photos: Get a first look at what's ahead!
The good news is Glee returns with eight new episodes beginning Tuesday, April 10 at 8/7c on Fox. As the seniors of New Directions inch closer to graduation (hello, senior ditch day!), the club will also welcome Blaine's older brother Cooper...
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Dianna Agron
Heaven or New Haven? Where is Quinn Fabray (Dianna Agron) headed?
That's gotta be the burning question on the mind of Gleeks everywhere following Tuesday's winter finale. At the end of the episode, she was hit by a vehicle while rushing to Rachel and Finn's wedding. (And that's why you don't text and drive, kids!)
What do you think will happen to...
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Glee
On Tuesday's episode of Glee, Mr. Schue's whiteboard lesson du jour was WWMJD, or "What would Michael Jackson do?" And while there was no shortage of attention paid to the King of Pop — the gang sang no less than 9 numbers, which seems like a record -- the episode's real theme was all about what lies ahead for Glee's graduating class. The G-word has been a scary one for many of the show's fans ever since series boss Ryan Murphy first revealed — and then retracted — the idea that McKinley High seniors might not be...
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Glee
The thunder's just stopped rumbling, but a storm's still a-brewin' in a chilly parking garage just outside the Paramount Studio gates on a gusty Hollywood night. Inside, oblivious drivers exiting for the evening pass choreographer Zach Woodlee putting the warmly bundled-up Glee kids through a rigorous routine. Having only just been introduced to their complicated dance moves, the physically drained troupe will be in costume and before cameras in less than an hour shooting their big "Bad" production number — the crown jewel in a tribute episode to the King of Pop, Michael Jackson, that airs on Tuesday, January 31.
As the deafening prerecorded track plays "I'm bad, I'm bad/Come on/You know it," Woodlee, a recognizable face himself as one of the judges on Oxygen's The Glee Project, shouts his marching orders: "Walk, walk. Swipe, swipe, punch. Now swing! Ladies, you have to start backing up against the wall like you're scared." Woodlee separates Lea Michele (Rachel), Naya Rivera (Santana), Dianna Agron (Quinn), Heather Morris (Brittany) and Jenna Ushkowitz (Tina) from the boys in a dance-off pitting the New Directions against the Warblers. "I promise you this will work. Well... maybe."
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