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Lime green k (talk | contribs) delinked fictional movie character from the actor who was part of The Three Stooges |
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Nigel suggests staging a lavish, Druid-themed [[glam rock]] show and asks Ian to order a [[Stonehenge]] [[trilithon]]. However, Nigel mislabels its dimensions, and the resulting prop is only {{convert|18|in|cm}} high rather than {{convert|18|ft|m}}, making the group a laughingstock. The group blames Ian, and when David suggests Jeanine should co-manage the group, Ian quits. The tour continues, rescheduled for much smaller venues, and Jeanine and David increasingly marginalize Nigel. At a gig at a [[United States Air Force]] base, Nigel is upset by an equipment malfunction and quits mid-performance. At their next gig, in an amphitheater at an amusement park where the band is billed below a puppet show, the band finds their repertoire is severely limited without Nigel. At Derek's suggestion, the band improvises an experimental "Jazz Odyssey," which is poorly received.
On the last day of the tour, David and Derek consider ending Spinal Tap and exploring other projects, such as a musical about [[Jack the Ripper]] called ''Saucy Jack''. Before they go on stage, Nigel arrives and tells them that Spinal Tap's song "Sex Farm" has become [[Big in Japan (phrase)|a major hit in Japan]] and that Ian wants to arrange a tour there. David bitterly refuses, but later, as Nigel watches the band performing from the wings, David relents and invites Nigel to join the band onstage, delighting the crowd but infuriating Jeanine. During the performance, Mick explodes on stage. Ian is rehired as the group's manager, and Spinal Tap (now with
==Cast==
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* [[Anjelica Huston]] as Polly Deutsch
* Donald Kendrick as A Background Vocalist
* [[Fred Willard]] as Air Force
* [[Wonderful Smith]] as The Janitor
* [[Robert Bauer (actor)|Robert Bauer]] as Moke, Spinal Tap's Roadie
* [[Fred Asparagus]] as
{{div col end}}
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