
After five millennia of civilization, everyone is craving a break, and Friday night finds the town flocking to the hottest new disco. The Commodores are set to perform—if Floyd arrives with his instruments—while Nicole hopes to launch a disco‑star career. Friends compete in a dance contest and aim to add excitement to a fifth‑anniversary celebration.
Does Thank God It’s Friday have end credit scenes?
No!
Thank God It’s Friday does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.
Explore the complete cast of Thank God It’s Friday, including both lead and supporting actors. Learn who plays each character, discover their past roles and achievements, and find out what makes this ensemble cast stand out in the world of film and television.

Jeff Goldblum
Toni Di Marco

Donna Summer
Nicole Sims

Debra Winger
Jennifer

Paul Jabara
Carl

Mews Small
Jackie

Luce Rains
Swinger in Phone Booth

John Friedrich
Ken

Chick Vennera
Marv Gomez

Hilary Beane
Shirley

Chuck Sacci
Gus

Judith Brown
Badmouth in Bar

Mark Lonow
Dave

Lionel Richie
Self

Terri Nunn
Jeannie

Sandra Will
Miss Negative

Robin Menken
Maddy

Raymond Vitte
Bobby Speed

DeWayne Jessie
Floyd

Andrea Howard
Sue
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Challenge your knowledge of Thank God It’s Friday with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.
Which character insists that her husband take her to the disco?
Sue
Jennifer
Frannie
Nicole
Show hint
Read the complete plot summary of Thank God It’s Friday, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.
Thank God It’s Friday unfolds inside a single, vibrant Friday at the fictional Los Angeles disco The Zoo, where a kaleidoscope of patrons and staff weave together in a night of music, flirtation, misunderstandings, and small triumphs.
Sue [Andrea Howard] insists that her uptight husband Dave [Mark Lonow] take her to the club, kicking off a night where plans collide with impulse. On a bet with Bobby, [Raymond Vitte] as Bobby, [Jeff Goldblum] tries to charm Sue, nudging the evening into a tangle of schemes and glittering distractions. Dave gets dosed and transformed in front of the crowd, a humiliation engineered by Jackie [Mews Small], and the incident leaves him scrambling to salvage dignity while the night chugs along. Meanwhile, Carl [Paul Jabara] and Ken [John Friedrich] keep striking out in their repeated attempts to meet women, each setback pushing them to improvise in a place where rumors, neon, and music drown out rejection.
Frannie [Valerie Landsburg] and Jeannie [Terri Nunn] pull Marv Gomez [Chick Vennera] into their plan to crash the disco after several failed entry attempts, turning Marv into a reluctant ally in their playful, competitive world. Jennifer [Debra Winger] tries to meet a guy, but Maddy [Robin Menken] vetoes every prospect, playing the role of gatekeeper as the night swirls around them. Nicole [Donna Summer] keeps trying to slip into the DJ booth, hoping Bobby Speed [Raymond Vitte] will give her single the ignition it needs, while Gus [Chuck Sacci], a rough-edged garbage collector, recoils at the dating service’s match—especially when the partner is prim, college-educated, and taller than he is. Floyd [DeWayne Jessie] endures police stops, suspected of stealing The Commodores’ instruments, a rumor that travels through the crowd as the music roars on. Amid all this, Marv Gomez teaches the stiff Ken how to loosen up on the dance floor, a small victory in a night full of near-misses.
Maddy ditches Jennifer to join a hot tub party, mingling with the same sleazy guys who pursued Jennifer earlier, while Gus and Shirley [Hilary Beane] decide to give the flirtation another go. Carl finally meets a girl, only to be trapped in a stairway before they can leave together, a hiccup that heightens the sense that every romantic advance is precarious in a room full of lights and bass. Floyd makes it to the club in time for The Commodores to perform, but the moment before they go on, Nicole seizes the stage with a bold performance of “Last Dance,” a moment that electrifies the room and cements her moment of triumph. Frannie, after maneuvering Marv’s dance partner into a locked stairway, enters the dance contest with Marv, while Carl and Marv’s partner share a charge as the stairwell becomes a backstage meeting place.
As the night unfolds, Jennifer and Ken share a romantic dance, and so do Nicole and Bobby Speed, their chemistry sparkling even amid the chaos. Dave descends, and Sue ditches Tony; Tony’s parked car, battered by all the close calls and collisions of the evening, finally falls apart in the parking lot. The dance contest crowns Marv and Frannie as winners, a buoyant close to a night that kept circling back to the hope that a perfect song or a perfect line might finally land. Deciding that the KISS concert is > “kid stuff,” Frannie and Jeannie—now self-proclaimed disco queens—tag along with Marv to another disco, chasing a 1:00 a.m. dance contest that feels like the last spark of a long, dazzling night.
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