A secondary orEnsemble Cast character gets the primary focus for an episode in an atypical fashion. This can be used to either give various cast members a rest, both for the actor and for the audience or to allow different episodes to be shot simultaneously to save on time or costs. It can also be used to explore the possibility of an expanded role for aRecurrer or secondary character, or toset up aSpin-Off.
Sometimes the limelight is given to a guest character of note, often a character so outrageous that he/she upstages the regulars, or a nobody with a touching, moving story. This is occasionally done in comedies where the focus is less on the regular characters usual antics and hijinks and more on the guest character. In such cases, the regular characters may be temporarily demoted toStraight Man status (The Soup Nazi from Seinfeld for example). In some cases, the regular characters are just present either to provide moral support or to be the recipients ofAn Aesop. Such episodes may be of theVery Special Episode variety and may focus on a serious issue facing the guest character.
While often times this trope only applies to secondary or background characters, in an ensemble cast with fairly equitable time sharing, any episode that shines the spotlight on one particular character can be considered a Limelight Episode even if that character is top billed.
Fanfics frequently do this as well, exploring minor characters to flesh out their backstory and their contribution to the overall story.
Expect the rest of the regular cast to chip in aMandatory Line at the very least, however. Often this might be a tradition for the series, highlighting a specific characterOnce a Season.
TheOne Piece manga features "mini-arcs" on the title pages of issues. These detail the fates of villains and minor characters. Only two of them have been animated: Buggy's search for his crew and body and Coby's and Helmeppo's marine training.
Gundam is infamous for this, with a cruel twist:a day in the limelight usually ends in your death. When a minor character suddenly gets a episode focused on him and characterization, s/he usually will not be alive by the end of the episode.
Mahou Sensei Negima has so manymain characters, it tends to have A Day in the Limelight chapters/episodes for them between (or even within) major story arcs.
Three of theSlayersSpecial novels (the prequel stories set before the main series) feature stand-alone stories centering aroundLina's bodyguardGourry, the princessAmelia, and the chimera Zelgadiss.
Yu-Gi-Oh!: Seto Kaiba got an entirearc (half a season) in the limelight- the Virtual Nightmare Arc that explored hisBackstory and featured a face-off with his step-father. Too bad itdidn't happen in the manga.
Common inYu-Gi-Oh! GX: In Season 1, Manjyome got his own episode and an abridgedHeroic Journey at the North School. Kaiser got his own episode (culminating in hisFreak-Out) in Season 2, and Sho stepped into the spotlight once in Season 3.
Sometimes,Tokyo Mew Mew padded out its episode count by recycling scripts for different characters. For example, Minto and Zakuro both gotTen-Minute Retirement episodes. It also occasionally had episodes more or less focused on relatively minor characters—such as Keiichiro andMasha.
Other episodes (and in the subsequent series2nd Gig) have spotlighted the members of the team who don't usually get it such as Saito and Pazu. Unfortunately, they never got around to fleshing out Borma.
The Idolm@ster - Each of the idols gets their own episode that focuses on them and their issues.
Naruto'sShikamaru became thede facto main character of the series for most of the Immortal's arc.
Lampshaded in the animeNaruto Shippuden with an aftershow omake where Shikamaru jokes that the show will be renamedShikamaru Shippuden.
Don't forget aboutAsuma Shippuden. He even made his own logo!
Urahara Kisuke fromBleach became the focus of a flashback arc set one hundred years prior to the series proper. Other characters prominently featured include: Yoruichi, Tessai, Aizen, Gin andThe Vizards.
Also, inBleach, around the time the vice captains were defending the towers, Ikkaku lampshades this. When a captain asks if he needs help, he says "No way! This is like the one time where the vice captains get the spotlight!"
In fact,Bleach the anime is very fond of this trope, having to produce so many fillers that do not hinder a wrong turn for a developing character's canon storyline. Ikkaku, Yumichika, Yachiru, Matsumoto, Don Kanoji, Kon, Ichigo's sisters, and Hitsuguya all have at least one episode dedicated to them in some way.
Suzumiya Haruhi's Yuki Nagato has her spotlight inThe Movie (which is based on the fourth book, "The Disappearance of Haruhi Suzumiya"). In fact, it's more of aHostile Show Takeover, evenafter that arc. Also, just as the fourth book could be considered Nagato's day in the limelight, the seventh book, "The Scheme of Haruhi Suzumiya", could be considered Mikuru's (as well as the earlier chapter "The Melancholy of Mikuru Asahina").
Matsuda and Mikami each get one of these inDeath Note. Matsuda's chapter/episode is even named after him.
WhenHayate the Combat Butler does these with recurring minor characters, the fact is usually stated enthusiastically by said characters. Sometimes with the main characters complaining that they've been pushed to the sidelines. Of course, this is a given since the series hasNo Fourth Wall.
TheFull Metal Panic!: The Second Raid OVA focuses on Tessa Testarossa, in a humorousDay in the Life story with no advancement of plot.
Gash Bell had these episodes from time to time, which usually began with Gash wondering what a particular demon was up to, and cut to said demon doing something interesting. Brago, Ted and Wonrei have had episodes centered around them in this fashion.
Very common inGodannar. There are 4 teams of pilots belonging to bases in other countries that occasionally show up to help Goh, Anna, and company. Each of those teams get at least an episode centered mostly around them. Most semi-major characters around the main base get an episode or two dedicated to them as well.
Knuckles and Rouge receive their own episodes early on inSonic X.
His and Her Circumstances has an episode near the end which focuses on Yukino's two little sisters, Tsukino and Kano, that takes a delightful turn away from the romantic melodrama toward a very light hearted comedy.
Pretty much the entire point of theChronicles sideseries of thePokémon anime.
Misty had amini-series in the Limelight in theTournament half of the Whirl Islands arc. Notable instances include Brock being aMoment Killer forMisty squeeingover aCorsola andAsh being designated as the "Minor FriendlyRival". A possible justification is that she would leave the show a little over a year later.
Prior to everyPokémon movie, a "Pikachu short" is shown, giving limelight to either Pikachu or the main cast's Pokémon as a whole. Episode 17 of the regular series did something similar.
About five episodes inBaccano! work as such (although, withthree plots going on, nobody gets the episodeentirely to themselves), usually indicated by the title with a general statement about the character in question. The most memorable of these episodes is probably "Ladd Russo likestalking a lot andkilling a lot"
Revolutionary Girl Utena had aseason of this, where pretty much every minor character gets their own episode, has their backstory explored, and then has that backstory exploited by the villains in an attempt to destroy Utena.
TheCowboy Bebop episode "Mushroom Samba" was this for Ed (and Ein). "My Funny Valentine" is Faye's episode. "Hard Luck Woman" is basically a Day in the Limelight for both of them - Spike and Jet only show up to get angry when the girls leave, get beat up by Ed's dad, andhide their sadness when they realize both girls have left the crew.
Very common inMonster. Perhaps at its most extreme with volumes 10-11 of the manga, where Tenma all-but-disappears and Wolfgang Grimmer acts as the main protagonist.
Digimon Adventure andAdventure 02 do this quite a bit. Generally in episodes where one of the Digimon evolves the episode centers around them and their human partner or if said partner finds a crest/Egg which generally goes hand in hand with the evolving bit. There are a lot of main characters which is probably why. Villains tend to get one if they're about to do aHeel Face Turn ie Gatomon inAdventure and Ken in02.
In theRanma ½ anime, Nabiki and Kuno got A Day in the Limelight episode when a fortune teller persuaded Kuno that his true love was Nabiki. The usual cast only appeared in three scenes.
In the manga, Nabiki got her own story arc and wacky challenger in theKinnosuke Kasaoh chapter where she was the one taking the lead against a verysimilar character.Ranma and Akane provided theCombat Commentator role that Nabiki usually filled.
The OAV "An Akane to Remember" is memorable for being set away from the usual Furinkan hijinks. Only Ranma and Akane appear in this story with Ryoga joining them later. The rest of the cast (Genma and the rest of the Tendos) appears only briefly in the beginning where most of them have no lines and the rest of the cast (Kuno et al) don't appear at all. This is a quieter story that focuses more on guests Shinosuke and his grandfather. Ranma and Akane's relationship is explored slightly but mostly in relation to Akane's past acquaintance with Shinosuke. There's no usual "Ranma nobaka!" in this story and Ryoga is there mostly to lend moral support.
Future GPX Cyber Formula does this with some of the characters (like Shinjyo, Randoll, Osamu and others) in both the TV series and OVAs. AndSIN, the last OVA, focuses on Kaga and his rivalry with Hayato.
Inazuma Eleven did this with Megane in the match versus Shuuyou Meito (episode 9); up until then his main contributions to the team were naming techniques and holding the bench down so it doesn't fly up into the air. While he obviously doesn't getA Death in the Limelight at the end of the episode, he doesinjure himself in aHeroic Sacrifice where he bounces the ball off his face to redirect it into the goal and score the game-winning point, after which he returns to being a benchwarmer.
Inukami! Some episodes have Youko hardly appear at all, like the one focusing on Tomohane searching for Keita.
Episodes 8 and 9 ofTenchi Muyo!! are special episodes to Washu and Sasami respectively:Episode 8 reveals a chunk of Washu's past and episode 9 reveals the connection between Sasami and Tsunami.
Persona 4: The Animation has episode 13, which focuses on his younger cousin Nanako. We get to see Yu's summer vacation through her eyes.
The main characters ofPopotan (Ai, Mai, Mii and Mea) each have two episodes that focus mostly on them.
Rail Wars!: Iida - who is (theoretically) the leader of the security team that are the stars of the show - gets A Day in the Limelight in the final episode of the series.
Comic Books
InWatchmen, each of the six main characters get an issue in the limelight, which illustrates their backstory and relations with other characters. The Comedian's is in Chapter 2, Dr. Manhattan's is in Chapter 4, Rorschach's is in Chapter 6, Nite Owl II's is in Chapter 7, Silk Spectre II's is in Chapter 9 and Ozymandias' is in Chapter 11. They vary from being an in-depth look at their origins, to showing various important events from their lives, to simply being a way of getting better to know a character. The reason for the inclusion of the issues was the fact that Alan Moore plotted the story for six issues, but was contracted for twelve. So he mixed in six character based issues.
An issue ofLegends of the Dark Knight focused on virtually forgotten c-lister "the Spook" after his release from Blackgate penitentiary. He winds up being so paranoid that Batman is stalking him that he commits a crime just to go back to Blackgate where he has peace of mind.
"Mr Freeze": a retelling of his origin with narrated by Freeze himself. Written, of course, byPaul Dini, whocreated the modern Mr. Freeze.
"Scarface: A Psychodrama" focuses on the Ventriloquist as he attempts to go straight and also, creepily, on the puppet that still causes death and pain even without him.
Jim Crowe received one of these inThe Invisibles which also doubled as his debut appearance.
Jubilee got more than a couple over the course of her original appearances inX-Men andWolverine.
InSonic X, most of the later issues star Dr. Eggman.
The "Lulu's War" mini-arc ofNikolai Dante followed Lulu Romanov as she fought to protect Venice from an army of vampires allied to Tsar Vladimir. Dante himself only appeared in a few panels at the very beginning, talking to Lulu.
Similarly, "The Tsar's Daughter" concentrates on Jena Makarov.
War Machine, ally ofIron Man, tends to get these whenever the latter is seriously incapacitated. His series tend to be the DEFINITION ofMore Dakka andStuff Blowing Up ANDLudicrous Gibs. Basically showcasing whatIron Man could do if HE ever cut loose from all restraint.
DifferentSpider-Man characters have gotten this treatment over the years. Whetherordinary supporting cast members, villains, and even second-tier heroes who made their debuts in the spider-comics have all been spotlighted in various one-shots and side stories.
The now-cancelled but very excellent "Spider-Man: Tangled Web" series was based on this premise. Only 2 stories actually starred Spider-Man rather than his rogues and supporting cast.
Bill Watterson occasionally did this with Calvin's parents inCalvin and Hobbes, showing everything from Calvin's Dad's ambivalence about American consumer culture to Calvin's Mom's frustrations with shitty customer service.
Every now and then, there's an issue ofFantastic Four that focuses on Franklin Richards.
The IDW version ofTransformers Generation 1 had "spotlight" comics, sometimes focusing on secondary characters.
This is essentially the point ofSonic Universe. It shows what's happening with secondary characters while Sonic is out fightingEggman in the regular comic.
They tend to play with it, though - the first story arc began withSonic The Hedgehog, bounced over to the last issue ofSonic X, then picked up in the first issue ofUniverse. There's also one storyline where Sonic himself is the star (mostly because it was a continuation of a story going on in the main comic)
In the FrenchAlternate UniversePokémonFanficPokemon X Terra, pretty much every chapter does this for some character or another. At first, Lucas was the lead, but because there are so many other characters that all have relevance to the plot somehow, and the fact that they all do different things and go at different places from each other, each chapter is split into sub-chapters, focusing on one character/group of characters. And most of the time, one of them gives a chance to the focused character to show what he/she can really do if he/she hasn't been able to prove him/herself before. Somehow subverted with Palmer, whose running gag is that he always want to be useful, but when given the occasion, fails for reasons like showing up when the emergency is already over or simply because his opponent his too powerful for him, which is easy since he himself isn't really a good fighter.
TheHarry Potter fandom is so large that for any significant character, there is a complete saturation of limelight fics. No one even thinks of, for example, a Ginny fic as shedding light on her character since she has already been so thoroughly explored in previous fics that every possible interpretation of her has already been used thousands of times (maybeliterally thousands of times). In fact, by now the process is mainly viewed as simply choosing your favorite preexisting interpretation (slut!Ginny, innocent!Ginny, tomboy!Ginny, etc.) and running with it. Even when all that's known about the character is a name, a house and a plot point, expect several fics focusing on them and expanding on what little canon tells us.
Sometimes not even that. There's been fan fiction starring Caradoc Dearborn, a character who is mentioned once as an example of someone who died in the last war. That's it. Multi-chapter fiction.
And sometimes not even that. There exist fics for characters who were never even named in story, but aren'tOCs because their names can be spotted on the class list JK holds up inHarry Potter and Me. No house name, no plot point, no canon existence.
Happens in various chapters to various characters ofToyHammer, especially with the omake chapters and chapter 12.
In theMass Effect self-insertMass Vexations,Author Avatar Art gets the entire story to himself... until chapter 17, which is told entirely from the point of view of Tali, who had just become hisSecret Keeper at that point in the story.
There's a person somewhere that's made a detailed backstory forPauline of all people. Family, profession and what else she does when she's not theDamsel in Distress...
InKyon: Big Damn Hero, Koizumi gets a boost to his powers and gets to defeat a inter-dimensional robot by himself.
The Ollivander Children gives Mr. Ollivander, the mysterious and little-seen wandmaker, more screen time—although really most of the action is taken up by OC's.
Ultimate Sleepwalker: The New Dreams takes an unusual twist with this trope in that the action has occasionally focused onSpider-Man rather than on Sleepwalker. The reason it's unusual is that subvertingPopularity Power andC-List Fodder is one of the hallmarks of the series, giving second-stringers the spotlight and relegating A-listers to guest star appearances.
ThePeriphery Demographic ofMy Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic loves writing fanfic about side characters (likePrincess Celestia or Applejack's brother Big Macintosh), one-shot characters (like Trixie from "Boast Busters", Photo Finish from "Green Isn't Your Color", or Prince Blueblood from "The Best Night Ever") or evenbackground characters (like Ditzy Doo/Derpy Hooves orDoctor Whooves). A few wiseacres have even written fics aboutinanimate objects, like Bloomberg the tree from "Over a Barrel" and Tom the rock from "Return of Harmony, Part 2".
InThe Tainted Grimoire, Clan Gully may be the main characters but they are not the only ones the story focuses on.
Literature
InThe Railway Series every engine in the original ensemble had a volume to themselves. More than once in some cases, like Thomas.
Remnants #13,Survival. Kinda-sortaRecurrer Tate was friends with Jobs and Mo'Steel and had passages from her POV, but remained firmly in the background until the second-to-last book. Sheends up saving the entire world, making the 're-greening' of Earth possible by going back in time and crashing Mother into the Earth, killing herself instantly. Jobs and Echo named their second daughter after her.
Wedge Antilles is always a rather major character in theX Wing Series, both the books and the comics. But his role asThe Captain andThe Hero tends to give him less personal plotlines than his fellow main characters. Elscol feels out-of-place and is reckless. Gavin Darklighter worries about living up to his cousinBiggs' reputation and has to deal with being the kid. Corran Horn handles his attraction toThe Mole andthe daughter of the criminal whose father was his father's enemy, as well as learning that he's a Jedi's grandson. Tycho Celchupatiently bears up under suspicion and quietly mourns a lost homeworld. Asyr wrestles with allegiance issues. Then there's the Wraiths.
But most of Wedge's plotlines don't affect him very much personally. He gets determined and angry at various points, he works toimprove morale, he leads and inspires them, he's unhappy when his friends die, but he's theReasonable Authority Figure and hisCharacter Development is assumed to have taken place beforehand. It's basically impersonal and he's kind of the generic Good Guy, with occasional flashes of his personality showing. Sometimes a few pages or even scenes are given over to personal things, but his days in the limelight are the comics arc "The Phantom Affair" and the novel "Starfighters of Adumar".
The Hound of the Baskervilles focuses more on Dr. Watson than onSherlock Holmes.This is because Holmes is busily solving the case while in disguise.
TheNight Huntress World books each dedicate one novel to a different supporting character from the main series.
InTwilight Dragon Princess Atoli, despite Kayari telling this story in first person, has an entire two chapters dedicated to her early on in the novel.
TheTime Quartet series is primarily about Meg, Charles Wallace, and Calvin, but the fourth bookMany Waters gives a day in the limelight to Sandy and Dennys.
The Dresden Files short storiesBackup,Aftermath, andEven Hand are told from the perspective of Thomas Raith, Karrin Murphy, and John Marcone respectively.
Each book in theStar Trek: Typhon Pact series focuses on one member state (sometimes two) of the titular Typhon Pact. Many of these nations were previously underexplored or left as minor players in theStar TrekMyth Arc.
There are two significant ones inWarrior Cats. The first isMoonlight, which gives spotlight to Stormfur as he journeys through the mountains. The second isNight Whispers, which is about Flametail struggling to figure out the secrets of a mysterious omen from StarClan,which fortells his death.
Guards! Guards! wasplanned as one of these (not to a particular series, but to any one that plays city/palace guards as Mooks), but as Mr. Pratchett himself said:
"I wanted to give them a spot to shine in the sun, but it turned out to be a full blown tropical vacation."
Live-Action TV
In theStudio 60 on the Sunset Strip episode "The Disaster Show", Matt and Danny don't feature at all. Instead it wasA Day in the Limelight for Cal, the director.
While theCSI episode "Lab Rats" brings background lab techs Archie Johnson, Mandy Webster, Henry Andrews, and Wendy Simms to the fore and gives them each some time in the spotlight, the episode is actually A Day in the Limelight for Trace Evidence expert David Hodges. It was, after all, his lucky day.
And was later done again with the Lab Rats in the episode "You Kill Me". Fitting one reason for doing such an episode the actor playing Hodges is now a main character with title credit.
"Harm's Way" fromAngel season five, focusing onHarmony.
"The Zeppo" fromBuffy the Vampire Slayer season three, where Xander gets the limelight. He also gets it earlier in "Bewitched, Bothered and Bewildered", and later in "The Replacement",where he's both protagonist and antagonist.
The seventh season had racked up such a huge supporting cast that there was a day-in-the-limelight every other episode, it seemed: "Same Time, Same Place" for Willow, "Selfless" for Anya, "Potential" for Dawn, "Lies My Parents Told Me" for Spike, "Storyteller" for Andrew"...
And "Superstar" in season four, which is so Jonathan-centric it even features a newTitle Sequence.
Don't forget "Doppelgangland" in series three for Willow, and Giles' 'A New Man' in season four.
TheDream Episode "Restless" gave each of the four main characters a ten-minute dream which focused solely on their characters.
Dawn gets two; "Real Me" in season 5, and "Potential" in season 7.
And "Family", which establishes Tara's backstory and fleshes out her relationship with the rest of the cast.
The X-Files did a number of A Day in the Limelight episodes later in its run, including "Zero Sum" (focused on Assistant Director Skinner, Mulder and Scully's FBI superior), "Musings of a Cigarette-Smoking Man" (the recurring villain and agent ofThe Conspiracy dubbed "Cancer Man" or "the Cigarette-Smoking Man"), "Unusual Suspects", "Three of a Kind" and "Jump the Shark" (the Lone Gunmen, conspiracy theoristComic Trio and cohorts of Mulder).
Scrubs has done this on multiple occasions, in the episodes "His Story" (I-IV), "Her Story, (I-II) and "Their Story" (I-II). These episodes feature the inner monologues of characters other than JD, often alluded to in-character with phrases like "Now that I have this tape recorder, I won't need to be in my head as much". They also include a whooshing sound as JD makes physical contact with the focus character right before the voice over switches, as though the ability to narrate is the result of some sort of communicable disease.
This also works backwards near the end of the episode, often including similar phrases.
House had an episode called "Wilson," which revolved around House's beleaguered best friend Wilson, while House and his team's antics gets pushed to the sidelines, with only occasional glimpses at their wacky adventures. "5 to 9" did the same with Cuddy and "Last Temptation", did it for Masters.
Degrassi, "Don't Believe the Hype." This episode took Hazel, who was previously just a flunky for theAlpha Bitch, and revealed her secret: she's a Somali Muslim immigrant who was bullied at her previous school for being a "terrorist." She's been pulling an elaborateMasquerade so the popular girls will accept her. WhileThe Reveal was well-done, it never answered the question of how she got into the in-crowd when she could never let them visit her house. And none of this came up in any other episode,ever again, aside from an offhand comment by Paige in "Holiday". There's rarely a time when one character is focused on in two consecutive episodes outside two parters.
Happens at least once a season onLaw and Order Special Victims Unit, when Stabler and Benson, the lead detectives, step aside and allow the secondary team of Munch and Fin to be the primary focus of the episode, or the time when Fin got an entire episode to himself.
Sometimes the episode starts fairly near to the end of the "Law" section, and the majority of the episode is the "Order", as the ADAs run around Manhattan trying to scare up witnesses. This is far less common than it was onThe Mother Ship.
Melinda Warner has a minor day in the limelight in "Blast".
The TV showJAG was known for giving each of the supporting characters an episode of their own once a season.
Subverted in theStar Trek: The Next Generation episode "Lower Decks" where one guest character, who'd appeared in a single episode in an earlier season, was the focus of the show. It seemed to be setting her up as a recurring character, right up to the point whereshe dies at the end.
It was originally planned that the character would return onStar Trek: Deep Space Nine, but the writers decided that would "diminish" the ending of "Lower Decks".
The modernStar Trek series all have had limelight episodes for various characters, butStar Trek: Deep Space Nine was the clear champion in this category thanks to its large cast of secondary, minor, and recurring characters. By the end of the series the recurring villains were getting as much screen time and focus on their problems and schemes as the heroes were.
Star Trek: Voyager took this to an extreme with an entire episode devoted to Lt. Barclay, who was not even on the Voyager and inhabited a different sector of space. The episode revolves around Barclay attempting to make contact with the distant Voyager, and the main cast doesn't even appear until the last act of the episode.
Lost, despite having a huge main cast, has (almost) every episode focus on one character. Some notable episodes that focus on recurring characters who don't usually get their own episodes include:
"S.O.S", which focused on Rose & Bernard.
"Live Together, Die Alone", which focused on Desmond, who was made a main character next season.
"Exposé", which focused on Nikki and Paulo, who weremeant to be major in the series' arc and were billed as main characters, but instead ended upbeing universally despised and only appeared in about five episodes each beforedying in this episode.
"The Incident", though containing flashbacks from almost every living character, focused onJacob and also featured aIlana flashback (both characters were also the focus of one of the episode's two plotlines).
"Ab Aeterno", considered by most to be one of the series' greatest episodes, is the long-awaited flashback episode of Richard. About 85% of the episode takes place in the past, specifically1867.
"Across the Sea" is focused on Jacob and the Man in Black, two important guest stars, and features no regular cast members outside of stock footage.
Once Upon a Time follows the same format asLost (obviously due to being created by the same producers) and has every episode focus on one character, some on minor and one episode characters, which include:
"Fruit of the Poisonous Tree" focusing on Sidney Glass (The Magic Mirror)
"Dreamy" which focuses on Leroy (Grumpy)
"Red-Handed", a notable example which focuses on Ruby (Red Riding Hood) where it was revealedthat she is a werewolf
Supernatural hadGhostfacers, which featured two characters from a first season episode and their friends. Fans eitherloved it or loathed it.
"The Rapture", told theBackstory of Castiel's vessel.
The Impala gets flashbacks and a backstory in "Swan Song".
In Season 6,Bobby Singer gets one of these, aptly titled, "Weekend at Bobby's" (also aShout-Out, as the episode titles often are). It focuses on what Bobby does when he'snot helping Sam and Dean, and how that actually interferes with his life. The episode also wraps up the minorStory Arc aboutselling his soul to Crowley to help save the world.
"Death's Door" is also Bobby-centric.
"The Man Who Would Be King" is about Castiel, and narrated from his point of view.
Babylon 5 with "A View From The Gallery" , which centers upon repairmen Mack and Bo and how they interact with all the main characters over the course of a usual Babylon 5 day of disaster. Mack and Bo were played by guest actors who were not in any other episodes, showing that even the unknown extras have tales to tell.
Usually the lesser recurring characters got B-plots rather than episodes of their own, but Vir got "Sic Transit Vir".
Torchwood had perhaps several of these - "Cyberwoman" for Ianto, "Greeks Bearing Gifts" for Tosh, and in season two,"A Day in the Death" for Owen. Of course, this was after he died. But it was also before hestopped moving.
The new series gives us the Donna-centric episode "Turn Left". The Doctor only appears very briefly in the beginning and the end, except for the bit in the middle where heappears as a sheet-covered corpse.
In a show that wavers betweenTwo Lines, No Waiting andFour Lines, All Waiting, the episode "Company Man" inHeroes Volume 1 almostcompletely focused around HRG (aka Mr. Bennet) and his very messed-up relationship with his job and family. Up to this point, he was just anOverprotective Dad In Black, but this greatly expanded backstory and explanation of his motives permanently cemented hisEnsemble Darkhorse status.
HRG gets another one in "Cold Wars" while both Tracey and Sylar are going to be getting a few in Volume 4. And "The Year of Our Lord" focused more or less entirely on Peter/Future Peter. ("Five Years Gone" did the same for Hiro/Future Hiro.)
TheM*A*S*H episode "Hey, Look Me Over" centers on Nurse Kellye, who's usually strictly a background character.
That's actually a rather nice story...actress Kellye Nakahara's "Nurse Kellye" had more appearances and lines over the years than any of the other nurse characters (strictly bit parts, though), and she was well-liked by the cast. Alan Alda felt she deserved an episode where she could really shine, and surprised her with the script for "Hey, Look Me Over."
"Dear Sigmund", which is told from the point of view of psychiatrist Sidney Freedman, a recurring guest character.
There's also the other "Dear" episodes, when not told by Hawkeye, technically.
Depending on whether you consider Hawkeye to be the show's lead character or just one part of the ensemble, than any number of episodes centering on the other regulars - Margaret, Radar, Father Mulcahy, etc. - could be regarded as this.
Hawkeye himself gets one in the season 4 episode "Hawkeye", where he's the only one of the main characters to appear in the entire episode.
The newBattlestar Galactica has done this a few times, especially in its third season:
3.10 "The Passage" is about Kat's past.
In 3.14 "The Woman King", Helo investigates a potential murder among civilian refugees.
In 3.16 "Dirty Hands", Chief Tyrol becomes the focus of a labour dispute.
Power Rangers RPM features 5 episodes named after the title characters ("Ranger [color]"), as well as their mentor, Dr. K. Each elucidates a character's backstory. Dillon, Ranger Black, does not have his own episode, attributable toLaser-Guided Amnesia.
Though Dillon's character episodes are more or less the two first, where he's made to choose between becoming a ranger, or jail. And a bunch of episodes trying to solve his amnesia.
The original season finale would have been called Ranger Black and featured the truth about his past. However due to a change in staff this never came to pass.
Each episode ofSkins focuses on a particular member of the cast, with each cast member getting an episode (or sometimes two) to themselves each season.
Band of Brothers. Each of the 10 episodes focuses on a specific character to some degree. The lead is Lt/Capt/Maj Winters who is in the limelight for episodes 2, 5, and 10. The other episodes focus on (1) Capt. Sobel, (3) Pvt. Blithe (a case ofA Death in the Limelight), (4) Sgt. Bull Randleman, (6) "Doc" Roe, (7) Sgt. Lipton, (8) Pvt. Webster, and (9) Capt. Nixon. If the episode has narration, it's by the character in the limelight from theirPoint of View.
Blake's 7 gives Vila a chance to shine in "City at the Edge of the World".
In theRemember WENN episode "The Ghost of WENN," it is revealed that the ghost is actuallyCJ, who's miffed at being ignored by the main cast.
During the 70s, there were two versions of the TV game showPyramid: The daytime network version (First,The $10,000 Pyramid; later,The $20,000 Pyramid), and a nighttime syndicated version (The $25,000 Pyramid), with two different hosts—Dick Clark andBill Cullen, respectively—who would oftenappear as acelebrity guest on the other's version to help the contestants win money.
Firefly has a few such episodes: "Jaynestown," where the plot centers on Jayne, "War Stories" explores the dynamics of Wash and Zoe's marriage, and "Objects in Space," which lets the viewer insideRiver's head.
TheStargate SG-1 episode "The Other Guys" focuses on the scientists who usually are just background characters.
Stargate Atlantis had "Sunday", the episode was unusual in that this troper didn't guess who the story was about until the endwhen Carson Beckett Died
InThe West Wing, C.J. Cregg has a few episodes devoted to her, such as season 4's "The Long Goodbye" and season 5's "Access."
In the episode ofCake Boss where Buddy is making a full scale NASCAR car cake away from the bakery. While Buddy obviously has the bigger and cooler job, Mauro, Buddy's assistant, is in charge of the bakery and get to be the star of his half of the hour long episode (it was split between Buddy and Mauro more or less evenly, with Buddy getting a tiny bit more time). This in effect give Mauro his own episode in Buddy's role, leading the cake team make a cake for a client he met with and narrating the segment.
One episode gave the spotlight to Cousin Anthony for his 21st birthday, and another one to head baker Joey on whether he'd leave the bakery or not. Not as much as the first example, but a change from the usual.
Co-host Vanna White played one round for charity at the end of a 1989 episode, with host Pat Sajak turning the letters.
During a week of episodes in November 1996, Pat had laryngitis for the entire taping session. His condition was so bad that come Thursday'sBonus Round, he turned the letters and Vanna "hosted" for him.
A year later, Pat andJeopardy! host Alex Trebek traded places and hosted each other's shows onApril Fools' Day. Pat and Vanna alsoplayed that day'sWheel (with Pat's wife, Lesly, turning the letters) and won over $50,000, which they split between two charities.
And in early 2011, the show held a contest which allowed one home viewer to take Vanna's place for two rounds. The winner appeared on the March 24 episode.
TheFrasier episode "Head Game", which focuses on Niles. In fact, the title character only appears in the first three minutes!
Also, season 7's "Dark Side of the Moon", which focuses on Daphne, season 8's "The Return of Martin Crane", which focuses on Martin, and season 5's "The Kid", which focuses on Roz.
SitcomGreek's Beaver is one of the most prominent secondary characters, yet nothing was known about him except that he got his nickname for biting a chair while drunk, that's until the final season where he gets an episode titled "all about beave" where his motivations, his background, his day-to-day living and even his real name are revealed.
TheUltraman episodeHuman Specimen 5.6 was centered largely around Captain Muramatsu's efforts to combat and escape aliens who had infiltrated a scientific facility. Sort of ruined by the requisite Ultraman/Monster of the Episode fight.
OnHogan's Heroes, Kinch was often involved in plots requiring technical/radio work, but since the color of his skin would be a bit noticeable trying to impersonate aWW 2 German official, he didn't get as many "dress up" plots as the rest of the cast. One exception involved him capturing and impersonating an African royal trying to ally himself with the Axis forces, complete with aGirl of the Week.
TheWhite Collar episode "As You Were" focuses on Jones, who's normally the junior FBI agent who sits in the surveillance van.
One episode ofDoctors was all about Julia alone in her house dealing with her mental degeneration; all the other characters only appeared in her hallucinations.
Breaking Bad episode "Hermanos" (Season 4, Episode 8) focuses on Gus, which fleshes out his character as well asgiving a backstory to his relations with the Cartel, especially Hector / Tio.
InHighlander, Duncan MacLeod had a greatly reduced presence in the final season. Most of these werePoorly Disguised Pilots for new Immortals, but the penultimate episode, "Indiscretions," gave Methos and Joe Dawson their own story.
The season 7How I Met Your Mother episode "Symphony Of Illumination" seemed to be this, similar to theScrubs examples above: unlike every single previous episode, it begins with Future!Robin narrating the episode toher future kids, rather than Future!Ted narrating it to his own. Howevertragically subverted in the end, with the revelation that Robin's narration, (but not the events of the episode) was actually just a fantasy in her head taking place during one scene near the end of the episode, where she was sitting in the snow trying to convince herself that she was glad about learning that she was infertile, and glad that those kids of hers she's imagining aren't real. At the very end of the episodethe narration switches back to Future!Ted talking to his kids and telling them that their Aunt Robin never became a mother, so Robin's narration was just one more incident that Future!Ted wasn't around to see and only learned about later, which isn't that much of A Day in the Limelight, because many, many episodes of the show revolve around a character other than Ted.
As Zachary Levi was busypreparing "Chuck Versus the Leftovers", most of "Chuck Versus Phase Three" focused on Sarah.
While Auggie's role is probablyCovert Affairs' second largest, theaction always directly follows Annie, with Auggie acting as herMission Control. Except in the season 2 episode "Half a World Away", which basically switches those roles.
An episode in the waning season ofMoonlighting gave Agnes and Herbert an episode to themselves and a case to solve, playing out approximately like a first-season episode as a welcome respite from watching David and Maddie hash out their relationship problems.
There are a couple episodes ofStarsky and Hutch that center on Huggy Bear.
Music
"In The Cold, Cold Night" byThe White Stripes is sung by Meg instead of Jack.
Hello! Project members sometimes only get to lead a single once. An example isMorning Musume`sNamida ga Tomaranai Houkago, but there are plenty more.
"I Drive Myself Crazy" is one of the few ((NSYNC)) songs where someone other than Justin or JC sings the lead-in (in this case, it's Chris.)
Most earlyQueen albums had two or three songs sung by Roger Taylor or Brian May instead of Freddie Mercury. Taylor's "I'm In Love With My Car", the B-side of "Bohemian Rhapsody", is probably the most famous of the bunch. That or Brian May's "39" from the same album.
Rammstein's cover ofThe Ramones' song "Pet Sematary" was sung by keyboardist Flake Lorenz instead of singer Till Lindemann.
"Such a Shame" fromThe Bee Gees' 1968 albumIdea, written and sung by Vince Melouney, is the only song on a Bee Gees album not written or sung by a Gibb.
TheWings songs by people other thanPaul McCartney. Denny Laine had a small handful of songs, Jimmy McCulloch had two ("Medicine Jar" and "Wino Junko"), and Joe English had one ("Must Do Something About It").
Marigold byNirvana has Dave Grohl (before he became a well known frontman with Foo Fighters) sing lead while Kurt Cobain played the drums.
And, in turn,Foo Fighters drummer Taylor Hawkins sings "Cold Day in the Sun" instead of Dave Grohl.
The Beach Boys' God Only Knows was originally A Day in the Limelight for Carl Wilson on lead vocals. Carl eventually became a much more frequent lead singer from this moment on.
The Basics are all singers, mostly with Kris and Wally taking lead, but on their second album Stand Out/Fit In they specifically put in their cover of "Have Love Will Travel" which has Tim take lead
The Edge has sings lead vocals on threeU2 songs: "Seconds," "Van Diemen's Land," and "Numb." Bassist Adam Clayton makes a vocal appearance on b-side "Endless Deep."
Gene and Paul sing almost all ofKiss' songs. However, one of the few songs Peter Criss sang was one of their biggest hits, "Beth".
He also sings such favorites as "Hard Luck Woman" and "Black Diamond"
Tom Petty, on some tours, would let one of the other Heartbreakers sing. You can see this on the 1992 VHS "Take the Highway."
"Rock Me" and "Does Your Mother Know" are among the few songs fromABBA where one of the male members, in this case Bjorn, is the one who sings lead.
New Media
Once in a while inConquering the Horizon there will be a brief POV shift that lasts well under a chapter. So far the quest has had 2nd person where the reader is Mr. Mooshi and Chlrehistra (and of course 2nd narration of the protagonist, which is most of the story).
Tabletop Games
Indie RPG "Primetime Adventures" (where you play as the protagonist of a TV series) plays this trope straight, even inserting it in the rules: each "Protagonist" has a "Spotlight Episode" in which he's more likely to overcome obstacles and the plot is centered on him/her.
Debatable, since the whole point of the play is to show what's going on in the wings; in other words; R&G aren't in the limelight, but the audience isn't looking at what's in the limelight (that being Hamlet) either.
Video Games
In General:Gaiden Games tend to take this idea and run with it, for obvious continuity reasons.
Dragon Quest IV: Chapters of the Chosen has 5 chapters—4 of which are Days In the Limelight for the various henchmen and side-characters that join you in chapter 5.
Luigi's Mansion was Luigi's second day in the limelight. His first was 8 years earlier in the educational gameMario Is Missing! Then again, that one might be closer to a blacklight.
On the subject of Luigi, all three of theSuper Mario Bros. cartoons had an episode starring him. One of them ("Life's Ruff") didn't even have Mario or any other main characters besides Hip and Hop Koopa appear.
The Nintendo Adventure BookKoopa Capers also had Luigi on a solo adventure.
Even Bowser gets in on the action.Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story has Bowser as the main protagonist. He's forced to take back the Mushroom Kingdom from Fawful (with aid from the Mario Brothers, who spend most of the game inside his body futzing around with his internal systems to occasionally power up the big lug) andtakes a massive Level In Badass as he reluctantly becomes the hero.
Toad hadWario's Woods.
Waluigi, while not having any game to his name, only appearing in spinoffs, had a couple of great moments and stages to himself. In theMario Tennis series andMario Golf: Toadstool Tour, he and Wario are featured the most in the games intro scenes, and he appeared without Wario in the GBA game (considering that bothMario Golf and theMario Tennis series are developed by Camelot, this makes sense). InMario Party 3, he is aClimax Boss of sorts,hijacking the villain spot from Bowser and being battled on his own board, and had some great themes in addition. InDance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix, while only serving as the first boss, he had one of the best musics to dance to, and inMario Kart DS, he hadWaluigi Pinball the whole thing and it's theme being considered some of thebestthings ever to graze a Mario game. InMario Sports Mix, he again has a pinball stage, which also had a really good theme to it's name.
She wasn't thestar ofSuper Mario Odyssey, but Pauline certainly became aBreakout Character for the New Donk City chapter, turning the whole city into one big street party.
Final Fantasy VI has this in the World of Ruin - Relm's painting, Gau's father, Strago and Hidon, Cyan's Dream, Locke and Celes in the Phoenix Cave...pretty much every main character in the game gets a subquest which explores their backstory and wraps it up.
Choboco Racing games were eventually made.
Knuckles from theSonic the Hedgehog games got his own game calledKnuckles Chaotix, which was also a day in the limelight for the eponymous Chaotix group. Interestingly, despiteMetal Sonic's presence in the game,Sonic does not appear until the very end. Tails has also gotten two games of his own,Tails Adventure andTails Sky Patrol, but the second was a very obscureGame Gear game only released in Japan.Dr. Robotnik's game was actually acleverly-hidden clone of the Japanese-onlyPuyo Puyo (likewise,Kirby's Avalanche is just a Kirby-fied version of Puyo Puyo).Shadow also gothis own game, which went in a different direction by being primarily aThird-Person Shooter with only some of the more familiar Sonic elements mixed in.
InSonic Heroes, each of the four teams gets an arc, so many of the characters (notablyall of Team Chaotix, who hadn't been seen sinceChaotix, mentioned above) get far more focus than in their other appearances.
Valkyria Chronicles has a DLC where the story focuses on 6 of the minor characters in the game. Of course it focuses primarily onEdy, a very popular character in Japan.
The thirdMarl Kingdom title (never released in the U.S., due to the low sales of Rhapsody) was essentially a collection of different characters getting time in the limelight. One event in particular sets up one of the characters fromLa Pucelle Tactics.
Disgaea: Afternoon of Darkness had "Etna Mode", where she accidentally kills Laharl and tries to cover it up.
Disgaea 2: Dark Hero Days had Axel Mode, where he desperately tries to reclaim his stardom and get work to support his family.
Disgaea 3: Absence of Justice had the downloadable Raspberyl Mode, where she makes an attempt to become a teacher at Evil Academy.
A borderline case being the Asagi Wars mode of Prinny 2, as well as Asagi Mode in the original. WhilePrinny: Can I Really Be the Hero? is, in itself, a day in the limelight for the titularensemble darkhorses, each of those alternate modes focus onAsagi (with Asagi Wars actually finally having her in the role of main protagonist).
Touhou Hisoutensoku has three main characters, each with individual stories. Sanae had previously been both a major character and a playable character, but until then Cirno and Hong Meiling were insignificant minor characters, surprising everyone with their presence. And then withGreat Fairy Wars Cirno got her own game!
Randar/Lander who has made cameo appearances in several Compile games before, eventually got his own game.
Putt-Putt and Pep's Dog on a Stick had you controlling Putt-Putt's dog Pep instead of the titular character.
Freddi Fish and Luther's Water Worries has Freddi's sidekick Luther as the main playable character. The only way to play as Freddi is in two-player mode.
Portal 2 has a new DLC level editor that comes with a mini-storyline involving Cave Johnson sending you through multiple dimensions to build and test new test chambers. Cave discovers a multiverse of alternate Caves, and squares off with hisEvil Twin, Dark Cave, before sending you to find a dimension of pure money.
The Dreamer has short stories which serves as these, with two revolving around Nathan Hale and Freddy Knowlton, respectively.
Homestuck's Act 5Act 1 focused exclusively on the trolls, who up until that point had been heard from a fair bit but rarely seen.
InEl Goonish Shive, the Bringing Silly Back arc seems to be his for secondary character Noah. Also, Justin gets a lot more attention in this arc than previous ones.
Web Original
In theGlobal Guardians PBEM Universe, there were stories that focused on the support staff of this or that hero team, on bystanders to superheroic battles, on journalists reporting on super-battles, and so on.
Most memorably, in theHyperion Academy campaign, there were six player characters, but over twenty non-player character students at the school. Every one of the non-player students was featured in a story.
The King of Town's Very Own Quite Popular Cartoon Show inHomestar Runner. Initially subverted in that when it was originally released, it was just a well-disguised Strong Bad Email, but they actually released one a year later. There's also No Hands on Deck, which is fanservice to those who think Strong Bad is hogging Homestar's spotlight (not only does neglected Pom Pom appear, but Strong Bad doesn't appearat all).
Also noteworthy is A Folky Tale, the only story centered around Strong Sad and Coach Z (who rarely have anything to do with each other). It's one of the very few toons on the site where neither Homestar Runner nor Strong Bad shows up anywhere.
Red Panda Adventures introduced Harry Kelly in "When Darkness Falls" in this manner.
Ferr of theFreelance Astronauts recently got to do a live webcast all by himself on the day of his birthday, choosing to deliver a very surreal LP of Civilization IV, in a narration style bordering on that of Bob Ross.Quite funny
In theWhateley Universe, there are over a dozen canon authors, so this is becoming typical. There has been an entire story on the side character The Grunts (the superpowered kids who are in a version of JROTC and plan to go into military service); one with them, plus Folder, plus one of the school sociopaths; a Combat Final featuring a student who's the daughter of a notorious supervillain, ...
All the special combat finals vignettes that aren't part of the main character stories. Except Aquerna's, because her story was so popular she now has an ongoing novel and she has probably graduated to 'protagonist'.
InArenas, some episodes are centered on characters which aren't called Doom.
Western Animation
The Simpsons epsiode "22 Short Films About Springfield" gave a ton of minor characters vignettes of their own. Professor Frink is late, and can only manage to belt out his planned theme song ("Professor Frink, Professor Frink, he makes you laugh, he makes you think...")
Most of theLoads and Loads of Characters inThe Simpsons have had their day in the limelight, most times more than once. Usually these take the form of "Minor Character has some kind of problem and needs to stay with the Simpsons temporarily." Noteworthy examples include Grounds-keeper Willie, Gil, and Otto the Bus Driver. Even the Crazy Cat Lady got a B-plot of her own. We are still waiting for episodes centric on Disco Stu, Sea Captain, the Bumblebee Man, Moleman, andmany many others though.
Moe is a particularly strong example of this.
Avatar: The Last Airbender with "Zuko Alone", "Appa's Lost Days" and "Sokka's Master". The first showed what the main antagonist (well, by that point, hewasn't quite that anymore) did and thought about when he wasn't, well, antagonizing; the second told a story that explained where the main character's pet had been and who he met along the way since his four-week disappearance following his kidnapping; and the third depictedPlucky Comic Relief character Sokkataking a level in badass through sword training.
There was also "The Beach" for the Zuko, Azula, Mai, and Ty Lee, which served as a means of exploring the dynamics between the four and what makes them tick cleverly disguised as aBeach Episode.
Also, "The Boiling Rock," a two-parter that sets up the friendship of Sokka and Zuko and has them breaking in and out of the Fire Nation's most secure prison. It's all kinds of badass.
The third quarter of season three was basically one episode for each character sharing this trope with Zuko. Toph evenlampshades this in the finale, noting that she hasn't had her own "life-changing field trip" with him.
Last but not least, there's "The Tales of Ba Sing Se", with six short tales focusing on one character (or two in one tale) each, including the tales ofToph and Katara,Iroh and even ofMomo.
Hey Arnold! deserves props for having several stories where a secondary character is spotlighted ("Timberly Loves Arnold" with Gerald's younger sister and "Career Day" with the neighborhood ice cream man, for example).
Codename: Kids Next Door also did this with "Op TRAINING", focusing on Numbuh 2's younger brother, Tommy, going through training at the KND Arctic base, without the regulars appearing at all. In fact, the only other character who had appeared in a previous episode was the villain, Father.
The G.I. Joe example is marvellously parodied in aRobot Chicken episode - angry that he's left out of all of the missions because his white costume is too noticeable in a jungle environment, Snowjob is called up by the "President of Switzerland" to help flush out some yeti in the Swiss Alps. After a transport montage include ski-sleds, dog sleds, and tobogganing, it turns out the yeti claim was a hoax for the normal G.I. Joes to throw snowballs at and mock Snowjob (they apologise to him and give him a job clearing snow from around the base afterwards).
What Its Like Being Alone often got up to this sort of thing over its mercifully short run, and, if "Sammy's Episode" was anything to go by, was well aware of it.
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2003: The 2003 series had an episode entitled "Hun on the Run", centering around Shredder's minionHun. Although the Turtles also appear, Hun is the main focus of the episode, giving hints as to his background.
Danny Phantom had the episode "Girls' Night Out" which focused heavily on the major female cast while main character Danny is out fishing, though not without his problem.
"Girls' Nite Out" was also the name of such an episode forBatgirl andSupergirl. It was one of the manyCrossovers that led to the foundation of theDCAU.
The Box Ghost also gets one in one episode, when he takes control ofPandora's Box.
Any time Fred appears inSpongeBob SquarePants, he's going to hurt his leg; it's the show's longestRunning Gag. In season eleven, Fred hurting his leg was the focus of an entire episode.
ThePucca television series has several of these. The one forSanta Claus is probably the most notable, solely for establishing the... unique character history that he was a former ninja thief that, after realizing it was wrong to steal things out of people's houses, decided to use his skill in stealth and infiltration for bringing presentsinto people's houses instead.
South Park has had a few, such as "Pip" (which was aboutPip) and "Butters' Very Own Episode" (which is Butters' very own episode). Other examples include "Erection Day" and "Stupid Spoiled Whore Video Playset", which focused on Jimmy and Wendy, respectively.
WhileKim Possible is the main character of the series, the sidekick Ron Stoppable gets many episodes focusing on him while leaving Kim as a background character. One of the worst examples of this is the episode where Ron goes to a Japanese Ninjutsu school where he meets this really cute girl, learns Kung Fu, learns Mystical Monkey Kung Fu, battles with the villain of the episode, being all heroic and stuff. Kim on the other hand spends the entire episode at home doing nothing more than crushing on some random JapanesePurity Sue. Doy...
Ron might be the "sidekick" but he's clearly equal in status in the actual show, especially in Season 3 and 4. Better examples of this trope would be the episode where Ms Dr Possible joins Kim on a mission against Drakken and Shego, the one where the Tweebs save the day after Kim gets mind controlled, and an episode involving Ron's father. Wade comes out ofMission Control a few times as well.
The villains often get a few episodes to shine in as well. in fact Drakken and Shego, the two most well known villains on the show arguably end up the real heroes of the series finale as they're the ones who supply the means to thwart the alien invasion.
Besides the one mostly featuring Rufus with Camille Leon's dog, "Mother's Day" is closest to this trope, as Ron stays at home while Kim's mother goes on a mission with her.
MostAmerican Dad episodes either focus on Stan or at the very least feature him prominently. Two major exceptions are "The One That Got Away", whose plot focuses exclusively on Roger, with the rest of the family getting only a token B story. They don't even getthat in "Escape from Pearl Bailey"; the plot is driven entirely by Steve, while the rest of the family has a grand total oftwo lines in the entire episode.
The Fairly OddParents had a couple of these. "The Secret Origin of Denzel Crocker" focused heavily on Timmy's fairy-obsessed teacher and explains how he became the way he is, and shortly afterwards, "The Big Scoop!" revisited first-season episode "A Wish Too Far!", but fromChester and AJ's perspective.
Phineas and Ferb had an episode, "Isabella and the Temple of Sap", devoted to Isabella and the Fireside Girls obtaining an ingredient for the title character's Project of the Day (as seen in the episode "Bubble Boys").
"Vanessassary Roughness" focuses on Doofenshmirtz's daughter Vanessa trying to obtain a rare chemical to impress him. Said episode could also count as one for Ferb, who, despite being a main character, is usually overshadowed by his brotherfor some reason. Phineas basically just lays in a vibrating chair for this episode while Ferb runs aroundhelping Vanessa.
"Nerdy Dancing" is centered around Jeremy trying to impress Candace, in a reversal to many other episodes.
"Ferb TV" is this is for pretty much every supporting character. Phineas and ferb only appear at the very start and very end.
TheTeen Titans episode "Lightspeed" combines this with aVillain Episode, focusing on Kid Flash (hero) and the Hive Five (villains). Also "For Real," which concerns Titans East.
One could also count "Titans East," which focuses on that team and Cyborg while the other main Titans barely appear.
One Hundred and One Dalmatians: Two-Tone got her share of the limelight in "Love `em and Flea `em". In most episodes, she has one or two lines.
InChowder, Gazpacho was given his own episode toward the end of the series' run. Chowder and Mung only appear briefly in the beginning.
The Penguins of Madagascar could be considered ashow in the limelight, since its primary characters are the title penguins (Kowalski, Private, Rico, Skipper) and the lemurs (King Julien, Maurice and Mort), all of whom were only secondary characters in theMadagascar films.
Winx Club had an episode where Stella participates in a beauty pageant, and another where Tecna is strongly suspicious of Professor Avalon. But the most notable non-Bloom-centric episode was "Magic in My Heart", which focuses on Musa putting on a concert at Red Fountain against her father's wishes. It's especially notable since Bloom and Flora (and in the original, Tecna) were allDemoted to Extra s. (It could also be considered A Day in the Limelight for Stormy, as the rest of the time, the Trix's plans revolve around Icy and Darcy, but here she gets to fight Musa by herself.)
Dexter's Laboratory did this a few times, with Dexter's Mom, Dad, and Dee Dee getting the spotlight in a few episodes.
Mandark had one in "A Mandark Day", though that was essentially a massiveOverused Running Gag.
ThePeanuts specialWhat a Nightmare, Charlie Brown! centers around anAcid Reflux Nightmare that Snoopy has, and is almost entirely about him. Charlie Brown only appears at the very beginning and end of the special, and none of the other regular characters are seen.
The feature filmSnoopy Come Home is also one of these, to an extent.
It's the Girl in the Red Truck, Charlie Brown stars Snoopy's brother, Spike.despite the title, Charlie Brown (and Snoopy) only appear in a very brief intro.
Tiny Toon Adventures had "Sepulveda Boulevard", a full episode detective noir-esque story centering around Montana Max, Plucky Duck, and Elmyra Duff. It was the only episode of the show that did not have Buster Bunny or Babs Bunny in any capacity (there's a picture of Babs on a billboard, but that's it).
A lot of season 2 episodes ofMy Little Pony Friendship Is Magic focused on side characters, with Spike, the Cutie Mark Crusaders (whether individually or as group together), Granny Smith, Big Macintosh, and Cheerilee being the center of attention.
Gargoyles did an episode focusing on Vinnie Grigori, a very minor character who had appeared in several episodes as a generic security guard. The titular Gargoyles unintentionally disrupted his life and lost him several jobs, and the Limelight episode was about his quest for vengeance. He ultimatelysucceeds, and actuallycreams Goliath by using a specially designed shoulder-mounted cannon.
Recess: The main six got their own episodes centering around them. Aside from that, most of the other major characters got their own episodes centering around them, such as The Ashleys, Miss Grotke, and King Bob, and one episode that centers on Gordy, who's a background character (who's famous fornot liking T.J. for no reason, as well as asking Miss Grotke aboutsex.)
Though the center of the shower and the plot itself is supposed to be all about Kuzco inThe Emperors New School, the second season focused on several secondary character's such as Guaca, Yatta, Bucky the Squirrel... heck, even Kronk's shoulder angels gets one.
ThoughBatman: The Brave And The Bold is aLimelight Series in general, teamingBatman up with various other heroes, the episode "Aquaman's Outrageous Adventure!" stands out for focusing almost entirely onAquaman ashe works with various other heroes (and goes sightseeing with his family). There's also aVillain Episode starringThe Joker.
Disney'sWinnie the Pooh series does this a lot with some of the cast.The Tigger Movie andPiglet's Big Movie arefull length theatrical features focused mainly around one particular character or the cast's relationship with them. Short filmsA Day For Eeyore andSpringtime For Roo also revolve around originally minor characters whileThe New Adventures of Winnie the Pooh gives nearly every supporting character at least two or three episodes to themselves.
Tale Spin episode "Flight School Confidential" is revolved largely around Kit venturing to Thembria, with Baloo only getting a brief role in the opening and closing scenes. A couple of episodes also focus dominantly on Rebecca and Molly's relationship.
King of the Hill has "Peggy Makes the Big Leagues". Peggy begins substitute teaching at high school and ends up failing the star football player, which under "No Pass No Play" gets suspended from the team. Everyone else (even regularStraight Man Hank) throws a fit and does their best to go around Peggy just so the team can get to state. Peggy is normally aBase Breaker, but in this episode she's completely in the right and sticks to her morals in the face of overwhelming peer pressure.
Although most of the episodes ofWITCH focus on one of the five main girls, at least one episode per season revolves aroundMatt,Caleb, andBlunk as well.