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"The Substitute" is the seventh episode of the second season of the American television series Glee, and the twenty-ninth episode overall. It was written by Ian Brennan, directed by Ryan Murphy, and premiered on Fox on November 16, 2010.
Holly is a substitute teacher who makes her first appearance on Glee in the second season's seventh episode, "The Substitute". She is filling in at McKinley High School for the ailing Spanish teacher Will (Matthew Morrison), who is also director of the glee club, New Directions.
The second season of the musical comedy-drama television series Glee originally aired between September 21, 2010, and May 24, 2011, on Fox in the United States. The 22-episode season was produced by 20th Century Fox Television and Ryan Murphy Television, with executive producers Dante Di Loreto and series co-creators Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk, with the other series co-creator, Ian Brennan ...
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 ...
"Glee" alum Kevin McHale noted that rumors of the feud were "always blown out of proportion and not correct." “Glee”'s 'Frenemies' was an 'intentional' reference to Lea Michele and Naya Rivera ...
Cory Monteith became a TV star after being cast as Finn Hudson on Fox's Glee in 2009.He died just four years later — on July 13, 2013 — rocking his co-stars, including girlfriend Lea Michele ...
Newell was a runner-up in The Glee Project 's first season, and his prize was a two-episode arc on Glee. A possibility for his eventual character was described during a Project episode as "the lovechild of Kurt and Mercedes". [108] In addition to his second full appearance in "Nationals", he also appears briefly in the episode "Props".
Here, viewership increased from "The Substitute", which attained 1.06 million viewers and ranked seventh for the night and nineteenth for the week. [18] David Dale noted in The Sydney Morning Herald that Glee faced weaker competition than usual, as Network Ten was "the only commercial network showing new episodes of its top shows". [17]