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No Sex Please, We're Skittish is the premiere of Season 11 of Frasier.

Synopsis[]

Roz's return to KACL rattles Frasier, who's re-involved with Julia; Niles' fatherhood plans get an unexpected setback he determines to remedy with an unorthodox virility enhancer.

Plot[]

Roz hates her new job at KPXY so much that she abandons it after one day. She walks back into KACL and disposes of Frasier’s new, wheelchair-bound producer. After recovering from the initial shock of seeing Roz back, Frasier demands to know her reasons for returning, but without success. He consults Niles, firmly convinced that Roz has feelings for him, and is also concerned because he (Frasier) and Julia (Felicity Huffman) are on the verge of taking their relationship to the next level. Niles, however, is having problems of his own. He and Daphne have decided to try for a baby, when it is revealed that Niles once made a contribution to a sperm bank during college. With Daphne worried that Niles may already have a child, Niles goes to the sperm bank to make enquiries only to be told that his sample was discarded due to low motility. Niles then starts taking all measures in order to improve motility. He eventually decides to tell Daphne and the two anticipate a difficult time conceiving, but in the end the worrying was for nothing as it turns out that Daphne is already pregnant.

Cast[]

Main cast[]

Special guest star[]

Supporting cast[]

  • Tom McGowan as Kenny Daly
  • Nancy Becker-Kennedy as Dana
  • Debra Monk as Nurse Karen
  • Reichen Lenmkhul as Impossibly handsome man

Trivia[]

  • Niles and Daphne find out that they're pregnant in this episode. In reality, Jane Leeves was indeed pregnant with her second child during this season.
  • The "soothing" DVD that Niles chooses at Frasier's is The Mikado (1939).
  • Frasier mentions taking Julia to Chez Henri, however in a previous episode Frasier and his entire family were barred from the restaurant.
ALLUSIONS
  • The title is from the London West End play "No Sex Please, We're British" written by Alistair Foot and Anthony Marriott in 1971. Though it was dismissed by the critics, it still ran for almost ten years.
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