Sharon discovers the girls' scheme and decides to trick them instead. ![]() Florence (Cromwell) Bill and Mary's maid, begins to suspect that something is awry. Susan and Bill cross paths a couple more times over the next few days. The real Sharon detests baseball, and is confused when Bill drops by her workplace the next day and mentions how much fun they had. ![]() Susan, disguised as Sharon, "accidentally" bumps into Bill at a bar called the Press Box and watches a few innings of a baseball game with him. She is convinced by the girls to fly to Tampa to help them by posing as Sharon and going on a few dates just to get things started. She is married and still living in California. Nikki and Mary trick their parents into meeting each other by sending Sharon flowers that are supposedly from Bill, but they do not just fall madly in love with each other as the girls had hoped, so they contact Sharon's twin sister, Susan Carey (née Evers). ![]() To stop Nikki from moving to New York City and to see their parents happily married, the girls scheme to set them up. Mary's father, Bill Grand, has been widowed for four years. While in summer school, Nikki makes enemies with Jessica Dintruff (Tannen) but befriends Mary Grand. Her daughter, Nikki, is not happy about their impending move to New York City and Sharon's decision to send her to an all-girls school in the fall. Sharon Ferris (née McKendrick) is divorced and living as a single mother in Tampa, Florida. The film takes place twenty-five years after the original film. It was a success for the Disney Channel and it later spawned two more made-for-television sequels, both produced in 1989. The film focuses on Sharon's daughter, Nikki, who tries to hook her mother up with her best friend Mary's father, portrayed by Tom Skerritt. She continues to portray Susan and Sharon, the twins who were separated at age one, met up twelve years later at summer camp, switched places and went on to reunite their divorced parents. Hayley Mills is the only actress that returned from the original film. It premiered on the Disney Channel on Jas a part of the channel’s “Premiere Films” banner. The Parent Trap II is a 1986 American made-for-television comedy film and a sequel to Disney's 1961 film The Parent Trap (which was based on the 1949 book Lisa and Lottie by Erich Kästner) and the second installment in The Parent Trap series.
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