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Sue Sylvester character First appearance ' Last appearance ' Created by Portrayed by Information Occupation TV news personality Principal Vice President of the United States Family Doris Sylvester (mother) Jean Sylvester (sister, deceased) Children Robin Sylvester (daughter) Susan Sylvester is a of the series,. Known as Sue Sylvester, the character is portrayed by actress, and appears in Glee from its, first broadcast on May 19, 2009, through the show's, first broadcast on March 25, 2015.

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Sue was developed by Glee creators, and. For the show's first four seasons, Sue is the track-suit wearing coach of the William McKinley High School, and a ruthless bully to both students and faculty members alike. Because her cheerleading squad competes with the for the school's limited funding, she is often at odds with the club and more particularly its director. Sue is the main antagonist throughout the series' run. In the show's, Sue is made the school's new principal, though she is ultimately fired late in the show's. Due to Lynch's initial limited availability, Sue was originally set to be a recurring character while Lynch was working on a for the (ABC).

When that pilot fell through, Sue became a starring role. The character has been acclaimed by critics. Mary McNamara for the has written that 'Lynch alone makes Glee worth watching', while 's Ken Tucker has called Sue 'the greatest -musical villain to ever co-star in a TV series'. In recognition of her portrayal of Sue, Lynch won an and a. Jane Lynch ( pictured) plays Sue Throughout the of Glee, Sue makes numerous attempts at sabotaging the William McKinley High School, New Directions. She enlists members of her cheerleading squad, the Cheerios, to bring the club down from the inside, and conspires to lure away its star member,.

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Sue is appointed co-director of the club by , but soon scales back her involvement when her attempts to turn the club members against director fail. Hoping to ruin the club's chances of winning at the Sectionals competition, Sue gives New Directions' to the directors of their rival glee clubs. Despite having to devise a new setlist at the last moment, New Directions win by unanimous decision and Sue is suspended by Figgins.

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She blackmails him into allowing her back, and is selected as a judge for the show choir Regionals competition. Sue is ridiculed by the other judges for her lack of fame and underdog status, allowing her to empathize with the glee club members. She votes for New Directions to win, and although they place last, she blackmails Figgins into allowing them another year to compete. Sue's personal life is also explored over the course of the season.

She has a commentary feature on the local television news, 'Sue's Corner', which she uses to editorialize on issues such as littering and support for. She falls in love with news anchor (Bill A. Jones), but their burgeoning relationship comes to an abrupt end when she discovers he is sleeping with his co-anchor, Andrea Carmichael (Earlene Davis). In the episode ', Sue allows (Lauren Potter), a with, to join the Cheerios.

Will is suspicious of her motives, increasingly so when Sue donates money to the school to fund three new ramps for students with disabilities. It is revealed that Sue's older sister Jean (Robin Trocki) also has Down syndrome, and lives in a residential care facility. Sue becomes a minor celebrity when invites her to remake the video to ', after a of Sue to the track achieves internet notoriety.

She donates her share of the profits to her sister's care home. Season 2 At the onset of the, Sue has formed a truce with Will, and together they conspire against the school's new football coach,. When Will comes to regret his actions and apologizes, Sue renews their enmity. She is appointed acting principal after having Figgins infected with the flu, but although the school board is so impressed with her performance they make her position permanent, she resigns when they refuse to uphold her expulsion of , a bully who had threatened to kill glee club member. After Sue learns that Rod and Andrea have become engaged, she announces her intention to marry herself. Her estranged mother Doris , a recently retired, visits in an attempt to make amends for her absentee parenting, but is continuously critical of her daughter, to the point that Sue disinvites her during her wedding ceremony. Doris leaves, and Sue and Jean comfort each other.

Sue grows disillusioned with cheerleading, and in an effort to recapture her love for it, plans to fire cheerleader from a cannon during the team's next competitive routine. Brittany and her friends and ultimately quit the squad, which loses at Regionals after having won the national title for six straight years. Sue is named Loser of the Year in a televised interview with, and has her budget slashed. Depressed, Sue stages a fake suicide, and as she hoped would happen, is convinced to temporarily join the glee club to lift her spirits, though she really wants to bring down the club from within. When her attempts to do so fail, Sue decides to become the coach of Aural Intensity, one of New Directions' Regionals competitors, and deliberately injures their director in order to get the job. Sue is furious when her club loses to New Directions, and punches the announcer in the face. More intent than ever on destroying the glee club, Sue forms a 'League of Doom', which consists of former glee club director , the coach of rival glee club Vocal Adrenaline, , and Will's ex-wife.

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Their first mission, to ruin a New Directions benefit, fails when Sandy is won over by a performance from and donates the full amount needed. Devastated by Jean's death from pneumonia, Sue turns to Terri, who has the glee club's plane tickets for Nationals changed from New York to. She also removes Becky from the Cheerios, because she reminds her of her sister. Kurt and his stepbrother help Sue to clean out Jean's things, and she accepts their offer to have New Directions perform at the funeral, as she is afraid no one else will come.

At the well-attended funeral service, an emotional Sue is unable to continue reading her after a few sentences, and Will reads the remainder for her. Touched by his support, Sue tells Will he is a good friend and she will no longer go after the glee club.

She will instead be running for the on a platform of lowering health care costs, as her sister had faced significantly higher bills in her last few years. She then apologizes to Becky, reinstates her as a member of the Cheerios, and tells her she will be captain of the squad next year.

As a final act of reconciliation, Sue asks for and receives a hug from Becky. Season 3 At the start of the, Sue's campaign for Congress is not going well. She decides to pledge to get rid of all arts programs in schools, music and theater especially, until all students are reading at or above grade level. Will's attempt to embarrass Sue and highlight the value of the arts by her backfires, and Sue's poll numbers rise. She also goes back on her promise to leave the glee club alone by having her new cheerleading co-captains, Becky and Santana, sabotage the club's recruitment drive. She rails against the school musical, and succeeds in having its funding rescinded.

This angers Kurt's father, , who arranges for local businesses to sponsor the musical, and he enters the congressional race as a write-in candidate to defeat her. Sue runs a negative campaign, airing political ads containing false statements about Burt's personal life through her political ads. One of the other candidates in the race discovers that Santana is a lesbian, and uses this to attack Sue on the issue of 'family values' for appointing her a cheerleading captain, and to imply that Sue herself is a lesbian. Santana is devastated, as she has not yet come out as a lesbian. Sue attempts to combat the implications by starting a relationship one of her former bed partners, Ohio State football recruiter Cooter Menkins, who had recently been dating Coach Beiste. Being seen in public with Cooter does not help her in the voting, however; she comes in third, and Burt wins. In the episode ', Sue reveals she is pregnant, shocking everyone.

Her child is revealed by doctors to be a girl, but they mention that there were abnormalities on the scan. Sue mentions to Becky that she will have a child just like her, hinting that the baby may have Down's Syndrome. She shows unusual compassion, telling Will she will help him win nationals, letting Quinn rejoin the Cheerios, and is visibly upset at Karofsky's suicide attempt.

Season 4 In the first episode of the, ', Sue, now a mother, introduces her newborn child named Robin to. Sue then calls Kitty, a new cheerleader into her office to take Robin from her. Sue has a storyline with 's character, when she doesn't want him to audition for the role of Rizzo on the school's musical,. Also, when insults Robin, calling her 'retarded', they start a strong rivalry. Sue 'proposes' to Finn that if New Directions lose sectionals, the glee club would end. They lose and Sue uses the choir room for the Cheerios practices when the weather is cold.

When New Directions discover that they won because the other club cheated, Sue gives them back the choir room. Sue is fired from the William McKinley High School in ', when Becky's gun is shot by accident, causing everyone to think that there's a school shooting. Sue says it was her gun and she misfired it while checking it, to protect Becky. Coach Roz replaces Sue as the cheerleader squad coach and takes her office. Sue later starts working as a personal trainer, and tries to get her back on McKinley's faculty, but she denies his offer by saying that getting fired was the best thing that could have ever happened to her, because now, as a trainer, people respect her, and also admits that does not miss the Cheerios at all. Season 5 In the episode ',' Sue has come back to McKinley High after Becky confessed to the shooting. Upon her return, Sue gets Principal Figgins fired by faking incriminating details about him.

He is demoted to janitor, while she takes his job as principal, where she constantly torments Figgins, and tells Will and Roz that she will keep the Cheerios and New Directions going if they win in their upcoming competitions. Following Finn's death in the episode ',' Sue orders the memorial in the school to be taken down, which angers Santana to the point where she confronts her and pushes her into a filing cabinet. She later reveals, after Santana apologizes to her, she is heartbroken Finn died believing she hated him, while she actually respected him and looked forward to having him as a colleague. In ' She experiences a hallucination in the choir room, later to be a gas leak. After fixing the pipe herself, she then becomes the school's permanent principal.

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In ', after New Directions comes in second in their Nationals competition, Sue fires Will and disbands the club, although she gets Will a job at Carmel High School as the new Coach for Vocal Adrenaline. Season 6 In ', Sue tries to attend Brittany and Santana's wedding only to be flatly refused for her treatment of everyone. Showing a softer side, Sue visits Santana's grandmother who doesn't believe in two women marrying and uses 'some reverse Suecology' to get the woman to see that no matter what she believes, family is most important. Sue is then allowed to attend the wedding and helps convince and to marry alongside Brittany and Santana, providing the rings for them when they don't have any. Sue later provides the two couples with their dream honeymoons, telling them that despite how she's treated them over the years, she's come to see them like her own kids. She got fired as principal in Rise and Fall of Sue Sylvester.

By 2020, Sue is Vice President of the United States and rededicates the McKinley High auditorium to be named in honor of Finn Hudson while apologizing for her previous poor perception of the glee club. McKinley High has now become a model of excellence and other schools are copying its format. New Directions members from years past and present unite for one last massive group song, with Sue and Becky (now working as Sue's bodyguard) joining the entire cast for one final bow. Development Casting and creation Sue is played by Jane Lynch. The character did not exist when the script for the Glee pilot was first submitted to Fox. In an interview with, Ryan Murphy said that Fox Entertainment president Kevin Reilly was responsible for her creation. 'On our first call, Kevin said, 'You need a villain, ' Murphy remembered.

'And I said, 'You know, you're right.' I knew exactly who she is. I said, 'Her name is Sue Sylvester. And she is the cheerleading coach. And she may be on horse estrogen. ' ' The casting notice described Sue as 'the anal, tightly wound, and ruthlessly ambitious leader of the Harrison High cheer leading squad.' At the time she was cast as Sue, Lynch was already committed to do a for.

The Glee role initially had her as a guest star, in the hope that she could become a regular in the future. When the ABC pilot fell through, Lynch became a series regular. Characterization Sue is initially presented as the glee club's 'arch-nemesis'.

Following the, Lynch said she is 'pure evil and doesn't hide it', explaining that she was created as a product of Murphy, Brennan and Falchuk's 'inner mean girl'. Lynch feels that Sue has the ability to be both 'horrible and really delightful at the same time', assessing that she continually speaks her mind as she enjoys appalling people with the things she says. She encapsulates Sue's world view as being about 'power and winning', stating that she will do anything to win. Sue's softer side manifests following the revelation that her sister has Down syndrome.

She is depicted as kind and loving towards Jean, though Lynch stated that exploration of Sue's humanity would be limited. Sue is an, but according to Murphy, does not want to be. He explained, 'She is saying to the world, 'Prove me wrong: If God is kindness and love, make me believe in God.' ' The second-season episode ' focuses on the characters' differing approaches to religion. Sue lobbies against the performance of spiritual songs in school, engaging in a philosophical argument on the matter with school guidance counselor , which Murphy describes as the scene he is 'most proud to have been involved with in his entire career.' On the fifth-season episode ', the reason behind Sue's track suit outfit was revealed. It was because she felt that she never received the respect she deserved as a teacher and even the then 'insulted' her and said that she was a cheerleading coach so she needed to 'try some pants' because she was wearing an office skirt and that she had long hair.

She said that the moment she put the track suit on, 'the world bowed before her' and that she 'had one made in every color'. Musical performances. Sue duets with her mother Doris (, pictured) during season two. Sue performs in several of the series' musical numbers. In the first-season episode ', she is given a dancing lesson by Will, to 's '. Her first vocal performance comes in the episode ', in which Sue enacts a frame-by-frame recreation of the music video for '.

The track features on the record, released to accompany the episode, and charted at number 106 on the. Sue duets with on her song ' in the episode '. This track was included on the, as well as the Glee: The Music, The Complete Season One, and Glee: The Music, The Complete Season One Collection.

Also released as a single available for, it charted both on the and internationally, peaking at number 89 in the US, 88 in Australia, 61 in Canada and 56 in the United Kingdom. During the second season, Sue duets with her mother Doris on ' from the 1953 musical. The song was suggested to Murphy by Burnett, who felt that the lyrics were suited to her character's storyline. Reception Critical response Sue was lauded as 'the greatest -musical villain to ever co-star in a TV series' by 's Ken Tucker. In an early review, Robert Lloyd of the criticized her domination of scenes and flat characterization, commenting: 'She's funny from line to line, but there is little to her besides tin-pot contrariness.'

In June 2010, named her one of the 100 Greatest Characters of the Last 20 Years. She is the 100th Most Memorable Female TV Character, according to. She was included in 's Top 50 Favorite Female TV Characters. Lynch's performance in the role has attracted critical acclaim. Following the pilot episode, Mary McNamara of the Los Angeles Times wrote that she alone makes the series worth watching. 's Eric Goldman later assessed that a comic actress such as Lynch is necessary to make the character loveable, given that her key traits include smugness, ignorance and casual racism.

The Los Angeles Times Shawna Malcom similarly praised Lynch's portrayal for keeping Sue from being 'an over-the-top disaster.' Raymund Flandez of suggested that the show would be less fun without Lynch's delivery. 's Brian Lowry was critical of Lynch in early episodes, deeming Glee 's adult cast 'over-the-top buffoons', and writing that she 'chews through her material so relentlessly as to be fitfully funny but usually just plain annoying.'

' Mike Hale wrote that she gives a 'one-note performance' in Glee, suggesting that she is miscast in the role, as 'her talent for playing repressed nut cases doesn’t extend to playing straightforward Nazis.' Accolades Lynch has won a number of awards for her portrayal of Sue. At the, she won the. The following year, she won at the, for her performance in the episode '. She received the at the, as well as the Actress Comedy Series accolade at the WIN Awards.

Lynch was part of the Glee cast ensemble given the at the. She was named Favorite Female TV Star (Comedy) at the Lesbian/Bi People's Choice Awards, run by the lesbian media website, and won the TV Performance of the Year: Musical or Comedy Award at the inaugural Dorian Awards, reflecting gay interest in the TV industry. The following year, Lynch tied in the same category with co-star. 2011 also saw Lynch named at the, and Favorite TV Comedy Actress Award at the. The role has earned Lynch nominations for several further awards. She was nominated for Best Supporting Actress in a Series, Miniseries, or Television Film at the, and for Best Supporting Actress in a Series, Miniseries, or Television Film at the. Also in 2010, Sue was nominated Choice TV: Villain at the, and Lynch was nominated for the Favorite TV Actress Award at the AfterEllen.com Visibility Awards.

In 2011, she was nominated for the at the, and was also part of an ensemble nomination for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Comedy Series. Impact Lynch was selected as the 2010 principal honoree of in Hollywood. A of Lynch as Sue was created, featuring the character's trademark tracksuit and. At the August unveiling of the figure, Brennan commented that Sue would approve of being immortalized in such a manner. References. (director, writer), (writer), Ian Brennan (writer) (September 9, 2009).

^ (director, writer) (September 23, 2009). (director), (writer) (October 7, 2009). (director), (writer) (October 14, 2009). (director), (writer) (November 25, 2010). (director, writer) (December 9, 2009).

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(director), (writer) (May 4, 2010). (director), (writer) (September 21, 2010).

(director), (writer) (November 16, 2010). ^ Carol Banker (director), (writer) (November 23, 2010). Futterman, Erica (March 16, 2011). Retrieved March 24, 2011.

Stack, Tim (May 21, 2010). Retrieved September 4, 2011. The Futon Critic Staff (October 30, 2008).

Retrieved September 5, 2011. ^ Itzkoff, David (May 18, 2009). Retrieved May 31, 2009. Wieselman, Jarett (May 19, 2009). Retrieved June 1, 2009. ^ Spitznagel, Eric (September 4, 2009).

Retrieved September 5, 2009. ^ Mineo, Andrea (November 25, 2009). Retrieved 26 November 2009. ^ Martin, Denise (October 4, 2010). Retrieved October 5, 2010. Hefa, Kiran (November 11, 2009).

Retrieved December 6, 2009. April 14, 2010. Retrieved February 2, 2011. Retrieved September 6, 2010.

'Official Singles Chart for the week ending 8 May 2010'. Liverpool: UKChartsPlus (454): 1–4. Lusher, Tim (May 6, 2010). Retrieved May 12, 2010. Retrieved September 6, 2010.

Retrieved September 14, 2010. Retrieved January 29, 2011. Peak chart positions for 'Physical':. US:. May 22, 2010. Retrieved October 10, 2010.

Glee

Australia: (PDF). May 31, 2010. Retrieved October 7, 2010. May 22, 2010. Retrieved October 10, 2010. Archived from on July 22, 2012. Retrieved February 25, 2010.

Cheung, Nadine (November 19, 2010). Retrieved November 19, 2010. Bernhard, Lisa (November 8, 2010).

Retrieved November 16, 2010. Tucker, Ken (October 14, 2009). Retrieved October 27, 2009.

Lloyd, Robert (September 9, 2009). Retrieved September 11, 2009. Vary (June 1, 2010). Retrieved July 7, 2012. Potts, Kim (March 2, 2011). Retrieved July 16, 2012. February 27, 2012.

Archived from on January 16, 2013. Retrieved June 24, 2012. McNamara, Mary (May 19, 2009). Retrieved June 1, 2009.

Goldman, Eric (October 15, 2009). Retrieved October 27, 2009. Malcom, Shawna (October 8, 2009). Retrieved October 8, 2009.

Flandez, Raymund (October 15, 2009). Retrieved October 27, 2009. Lowry, Brian (May 14, 2009). Retrieved June 3, 2009.

Lowry, Brian (September 5, 2009). Retrieved September 6, 2009. Hale, Mike (September 24, 2009). Retrieved September 25, 2009. Retrieved December 17, 2009. O'Neil, Tom (July 15, 2010). Retrieved July 16, 2010.

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July 31, 2010. Retrieved August 1, 2010. Women's Image Network. January 18, 2011. Retrieved January 25, 2011. January 23, 2010. Meinhausplaner nutzer id serial numbers.

Retrieved January 24, 2010. AfterEllen.com Staff (January 20, 2010). Archived from on July 20, 2012. Retrieved January 20, 2010. Variety staff (January 21, 2010).

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Download Glee Season 4 Episode 13 Torrent

Archived from on July 17, 2012. Retrieved January 2, 2011. December 16, 2010. Retrieved December 16, 2010.

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