- Joey is an understudy in three different plays. The lead actor from each play, cannot go on, Joey has to figure a way to be in all three plays when they're all on at the same time, in different locations.
- When Joey is going to an audition and is only cast as understudy, he is very disappointed at first. But, since it is flu season, the actual actor gets sick and Joey gets his chance to play Richard III on stage. Since Joey liked being an understudy, he also gets to be an understudy in two other plays. Unfortunately, the two other actors also get sick. Now, Joey has got to be in three different plays at the same time, without knowing any lines or choreography of any of the plays. When an apartment is for rent in the apartment complex, Joey and Michael don't want Gina to know about it, because they fear she wants to move in there.—Anonymous
- Michael and Joey make Alex realize the apartment for rent in their building may in no case go to dragon Gina; they hide the notice and hold the sighting for visitors the next day, when Gina has a hairdressers convention. Alas, she's still there because a flu epidemic caused a cancellation, so Alex must sell it why the boys divert Gina with her favorite pass-time: meddling with Michael, who pretend he has girl problems and wants her advice; that went well, till Howard breaks his deal with Joey -who promised him another pizza and Die Hard(er) evening together- by spilling the beans to Gina, in his eyes 'too beautiful', who is disappointed they went to such length to keep her out, while in fact... Meanwhile Joey gets himself in a professional mess: after Michael made him see being understudy for the title part in Shakespeare's Richard III is an opportunity to be discovered, like Lou Gehrig once, he accepted two other understudy-ships, but because of the same flu all three must be filled that same evening. Bobby advices to do two whose times -for his part- aren't incompatible, for the third he must convince the sick gay actor Tim to go on, which Michael's Lou Gehrig story achieves; alas, Joey not only had a hard time remembering the three parts' lines, he also forgot...—KGF Vissers
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