- Father Conlin cancels their church reservation because the happy couple missed most of his marriage counseling sessions. Jack panics, Jill calls it an opportunity to look for a creative alternative; they make lists and have a common winner: sailing on the Bahamas; then Jack remembers her ma will have a fit if it's not a Catholic church, but ma's episcopal contact already overruled the parish priest... Audrey is nearly out of her Svengali savings, so she tries Barto's suggestion to give private dance lessons to rich Jewish families' boys preparing for a bar mitzvah; her nerdy first teenager client Adam Fickman is at an age when any female body her age looks irresistible, but although smart and sensitive never had any success with girls; she finds it hard to handle his hormones, eager showing her off to his peers and freaks out after a single hand-move on her rear, but father Andy Fickman implores her to help make Adam reconsider having no bar mitzvah at all and Barto makes clear no 13 year -old can be expected to remain a rational gentleman facing such temptation barely at arms-length, so they become 'just' friends. Emily surprises Barto by asking him to go ice-skating, and being about to start med studies herself, at NYU. When she gives notice, the managers not only have to look for a replacement, Mikey believes he can go out with her again, and invokes the Code of Dating they wrote in sixth grade to defend his first claim, Barto says adult relationships are beyond the high school code, but Emily has the last word regardless of their bickering. In the end Jack and Jill realize a marriage requires both partners to compromise, not always him letting her have her way as for any aspect of the interior of what was his flat, and they finally decide where to wed.—KGF Vissers
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