Arthur | |
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Season 13 | |
No. of episodes | 10 (19 segments) |
Release | |
Original network | PBS Kids Go! |
Original release | October 12, 2009 – April 9, 2010 |
Season chronology | |
The 13th season of the television series Arthur was originally broadcast on PBS Kids Go! in the United States from October 12, 2009 to April 9, 2010 and contains 10 episodes. All episodes from this season aired on several countries outside the U.S., such as CBBC in United Kingdom and TVOKids in Canada, prior to their U.S. air dates.
No. overall | No. in season [1] | Title | Written by | Storyboard by | Original air date | Prod. code [2] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
156 | 1 | "The Great MacGrady" [3] | Peter K. Hirsch & Leah Ryan | Zhigang Wang | October 19, 2009 | 163B 164B |
Mrs. MacGrady is diagnosed with cancer, and the children react differently: Arthur and D.W. rush to support her, Francine is worried, and Muffy is initially unaware of the severity of Mrs. MacGrady's condition, but jumps to action when she realizes how to help. Lance Armstrong guest stars for the second time in the series but is replaced in a remake of this episode in Season 24. Note: This episode was dedicated to the loving memory of Leah Ryan. This episode was pulled from live TV in 2021 due to controversy over Lance Armstrong happening shortly after this episode was released and in its place is the Season 24 remake of the same episode. | ||||||
157a | 2a | "The Silent Treatment" [4] | Claudia Silver | Robert Yap | October 13, 2009 | 153B |
Being silent, a shy George wonders if any of Arthur's friends notice him, and he has a great idea: he decides to remain that way until being noticed. When Arthur's friends throw a party as soon as they finally notice silent George, it backfires when they need to avoid him while planning the event. | ||||||
157b | 2b | "Kung Fool" [4] | Claudia Silver | Robert Yap | October 13, 2009 | 163A |
Fern volunteers to help an elderly Asian neighbor, Tony Wu, with his household chores and she learns is a retired kung fu master. Fern then imagines being a student and she becomes a kung fu master herself. | ||||||
158a | 3a | "Arthur's Number Nightmare" [5] | Peter K. Hirsch | Elie Klimos & Élise Benoît | October 14, 2009 | 154B |
When Arthur's friends discover what looks like a class-ranking list in Mr. Haney's office, they are all in for a big surprise. If Arthur's really #2, he must be really smart. #11 for Buster is his new lucky number, but there's a way for Francine to move up a rank. Fortunately, all numbers come to mean much more than they should to all the Lakewood students on the list. | ||||||
158b | 3b | "Brain Gets Hooked" [5] | Matt Steinglass | Aliaksei Kazakou & Michel Carbonneau | October 14, 2009 | 154A |
The Brain gets hooked on a latest tween reality series, "Junior Island". When he starts to avoid his friends and fall behind on his schoolwork, he knows he's got a problem. With Fern's help, the Brain gets over his addiction by skipping to the final episode of the show. | ||||||
159a | 4a | "MacFrensky" [6] | Jonathan Greenberg | Michel Carbonneau & Stéfanie Gignac | October 15, 2009 | 159A |
Francine is in the lead for Student of the Month until the Brain did a several good deeds that put him ahead of her. Muffy persuades Francine into framing the Brain for stealing Buster's alien toy, so Francine can take back the lead. The plan works, but Arthur and Buster don't believe the Brain stole Buster's toy, and the girls frame them for cheating on a test in fear of being caught from their first plan. | ||||||
159b | 4b | "The Good, the Bad, and the Binky" [6] | Claudia Silver | Gerry Capelle | October 15, 2009 | 159B |
As Binky babysits Emily for a day, he introduces his charge to the world of professional wrestling and teaches her some fierce moves. But when Emily ruffles the feathers of other preschoolers on the playground, Binky is let down that he hasn't been the best role model in wrestling. | ||||||
160a | 5a | "No Acting, Please" [7] | Cusi Cram | Elie Klimos, Nadja Cozic & Élise Benoît | October 12, 2009 | 158B |
Actor Philip Seymour Hoffman guest stars as director William Toffman about theater and the arts. When Fern lands a role in Elwood City's community production of "It Began With a Whistle", she is anxious that she won't be talented very well for a star actress. Luckily, Mr. Toffman teaches Fern how to enjoy her moment and truly shine. | ||||||
160b | 5b | "Prunella and the Disappointing Ending" [7] "Prunella Deegan and the Disappointing Ending" [2] | Jonathan Greenberg | Robert Yap | October 12, 2009 | 157A |
The final volume of the Henry Screever series has been released and Prunella and Marina compete to see who can finish the novel first, but the duo learns that "speed-reading" does not always pay off. Note: In other countries, this episode is titled "Prunella Deegan and the Disappointing Ending". | ||||||
161a | 6a | "When Carl Met George" [8] "George and the Missing Puzzle Piece" [2] | Peter K. Hirsch | Gerry Capelle & Nick Vallinakis | April 5, 2010 | 164A |
George is excited about spending time with his new friend, Carl. who seems to know all kinds of cool facts about steam engines and... well a lot of things. Suddenly, George learns that Carl has Asperger syndrome, a form of autism that makes Carl see the world differently than most people. Note: In other countries, this episode is titled "George and the Missing Puzzle Piece." | ||||||
161b | 6b | "D.W. Swims with the Fishes" [8] | Cydne Clark & Steve Granat | Robert Yap | April 5, 2010 | 150A |
D.W. and James enter the preschool swim meet and recruit their older siblings to coach them. It all goes swimmingly until Arthur and Molly take their jobs too seriously, prompting the youngsters to wonder just who this race is about. | ||||||
162a | 7a | "A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Tibble" [9] | Peter K. Hirsch | Nick Vallinakis & Daniel Miodini | April 6, 2010 | 150B |
The Tibbles set out on their new business venture and sell their preschool art masterpieces for money to buy the coveted Krummy Kreepy Kastle. | ||||||
162b | 7b | "The Secret Guardians" [9] | Guy Lancaster | Daniel Decelles | April 6, 2010 | 160A |
When Arthur, Binky, and Sue Ellen discover a private woodland oasis, they vow to keep the place a secret. However, they find evidence of human habitation by sailing a model ship on the river. | ||||||
163a | 8a | "Fernlets by Fern" [10] | David Steven Cohen | Zhigang Wang | April 7, 2010 | 158A |
As part of her latest business venture, Muffy talks to Fern about writing poetry for greeting cards, and they both become Elwood City's big hit. However, when booming business causes Fern to burn out, will she and Muffy find a way to make writing fun again? | ||||||
163b | 8b | "Prunella and the Haunted Locker" [10] | Gentry Menzel | Nick Vallinakis & Sylvie Lafrance | April 7, 2010 | 157B |
Prunella has to use a locker that is rumored to be haunted and she denies believing this, until mysterious and unexplained obstacles cause Prunella's mind to play tricks on her. Can Prunella get to the bottom of the frightening mystery, or will she have seven years of bad luck. | ||||||
164a | 9a | "Paradise Lost" [11] | Jonathan Greenberg | Nick Vallinakis & Daniel Miodini | April 8, 2010 | 153A |
As Kate is beginning to grow up, she's started saying her first words. But strangely, the more words she learns, the less she seems to understand Pal. They head to a children's zoo in search of a "Dolly Llama" for an explanation, and to see if they can reverse the process. Luckily, they soon learn that growing up is inevitable and not too unsettling. | ||||||
164b | 9b | "The Pride of Lakewood" [11] | Peter K. Hirsch | Zhigang Wang, Jeremy O'Neill, Nick Vallinakis & Gerry Capelle | April 8, 2010 | 165B |
To boost school pride, Arthur's friends form the Lakewood Pride Committee, fervently adding a lot of members and creating special chants. But the Brain and Sue Ellen are feeling too pressured to join in and are accused of hating Lakewood Elementary. Can both prove that they are proud of this school? | ||||||
165a | 10a | "Looking for Bonnie" [12] | David Steven Cohen | Daniel Miodini & Jeremy O'Neill | April 9, 2010 | 165A |
Dean Lomax, a famous rock musician, visits Elwood City and asks Mr. Lundgren to fix his equally also-famous guitar, Bonnie. Legend says that Bonnie is magical, and Buster and George are convinced that one strum will give them special powers. They sneak into Mr. Lundgren's garage during a sleepover to find out if it's true. | ||||||
165b | 10b | "The Secret Origin of Supernova" [12] | Jonathan Greenberg | Robert Yap | April 9, 2010 | 160B |
Arthur is dismayed when he learns that an energy drink endorsed by his favorite comic character is overloaded with sugar, and it won't give him energy or magic powers, so he ends up inventing his own superhero. |
Episodes from this season were produced together with season 12. As a result, the episodes from this season were aired on several countries such as Canada, United Kingdom, and Australia, prior to the U.S.
One of the most notable episodes, "The Great MacGrady" (co-sponsored by the Lance Armstrong Foundation) deals with the topic issue of cancer (a topic that had only been addressed once in an animated series). Executive producer Jacqui Deegan comments on the WGBH press release:
Cancer affects nearly everyone in some way. We hope that this two-part episode will empower kids, families and caregivers to talk about all the feelings that can come up when a loved one has cancer, and how they can work together and remain positive and hopeful through difficult times. [13]
The episode premiered during the week-long programming block A Very Special Arthur. The episode's ending features a dedication to Leah Ryan, who died in 2008. The character of Mrs. MacGrady was renamed Leah MacGrady in Ryan's honor.
"No Acting, Please / Prunella and the Disappointing Ending" is listed as the fifth episode of this season on PBS's official episode guide and "The Great MacGrady" as the first, although they are flipped in order according to original U.S. airdate.
Philip Seymour Hoffman guest starred as himself on the episode "No Acting, Please".
Lance Armstrong guest starred as himself — for the second time on the series — on the episode "The Great MacGrady".
A book version of the episode has been released on the PBS Kids website in English and Spanish before its airing date, along with information about cancer. [14]
The Lance Armstrong Foundation Headquarters and WGBH Boston Studios have shown pre-screenings of "The Great MacGrady" a week before its television premiere. In addition to viewing the episode, children had the opportunity to participate in activities in response to the contents of the episode. WITF Public Media Center also held a pre-screening event [15] along with several other public libraries.
"The Great MacGrady" was aired on October 19, 2009 at Arthur's regular time. This programming block was promoted as A Very Special Arthur. A promotional video [16] was shown the week before the programming block in between Arthur and other PBS Kids GO! television programs.
The decision for A Very Special Arthur was made by PBS and the Lance Armstrong Foundation. Their goal was to make the episode as accessible as possible to children, families, and educators so they would have the tools to discuss about the heavily impacting topic. [17]
Arthur is an animated television series for children ages 4 to 8, developed by Kathy Waugh for PBS and produced by WGBH. The show is set in the fictional U.S. city of Elwood City and revolves around the lives of Arthur Read, an anthropomorphic aardvark, his friends and family, and their daily interactions with each other.
WGBH-TV, branded GBH or GBH 2 since 2020, is the primary PBS member television station in Boston, Massachusetts, United States.
The French Chef is an American television cooking show created and hosted by Julia Child, produced and broadcast by WGBH, the public television station in Boston, Massachusetts, from February 11, 1963 to January 14, 1973. It was one of the first cooking shows on American television.
Fetch! with Ruff Ruffman is an American live-action/animated television series that aired on PBS Kids Go! and is largely targeted toward children ages 6–10. It is a reality competition hosted by Ruff Ruffman, an animated anthropomorphic dog who dispenses challenges to the show's real-life contestants. The series ran from May 29, 2006, to November 4, 2010 on PBS across five seasons and 100 episodes, and featured 30 contestants. Although a sixth season was planned, with auditions taking place in January 2010, WGBH announced on June 14, 2010 that the series would end due to lack of funding. In June 2008, the series received its first Emmy for Best Original Song for its theme.
Emily Rooney is an American journalist, television talk show and radio host and former news producer. She hosted the weekly program Beat the Press on WGBH-TV until its cancellation on August 13, 2021.
The 4th season of the television series Arthur was originally broadcast on PBS in the United States from October 4 to 18, 1999 and contains 10 episodes. It is the last season with Luke Reid voicing Brain. Oliver Grainger has replaced Michael Caloz as D.W. due to Caloz's voice changing after the previous season.
The 5th season of the television series Arthur was originally broadcast on PBS in the United States from September 25 to November 27, 2000, and contains 10 episodes. The special "Arthur's Perfect Christmas" served as the finale to this season. Steven Crowder replaced Luke Reid as Brain. This is the last season where Michael Yarmush voices Arthur due to his voice changing. Starting in season 9, he returns to voice the character Slink, one of the Tough Customers. Yarmush additionally will return to play Arthur one more time in the final episode of the series, "All Grown Up" by voicing the character's adult self. This is also the last season where Ricky Mabe voices Timmy Tibble due to his voice changing as well. Alex Trebek guest starred as Alex Lebek on the season premiere "Arthur and the Big Riddle".
The 6th season of the television series Arthur was originally broadcast on PBS in the United States on September 24 to November 26, 2001 and contains 10 episodes. A shortened version of the remix of the opening theme song, "Believe in Yourself", is played at the ending credits of this season as a promotion for the third music album of the franchise. Olympic figure skater Michelle Kwan guest starred on "The Good Sport" as herself. Justin Bradley replaced Michael Yarmush as Arthur, due to him getting too old to keep playing him and this is the only season where he voices him. Executive producer Carol Greenwald and Peter Moss said the reason was because Bradley's voice was too deep and lacked the vocal range of Michael Yarmush. Samuel Holden also replaced Ricky Mabe as Timmy Tibble. This is the last season where Steven Crowder voices Brain. This is also the last season where Oliver Grainger voices D.W. The versions of these episodes with Bradley's voice were distributed in International VHS and DVD home media, and they are still aired on TV in countries outside and in North America.
The 7th season of the television series Arthur was originally broadcast on PBS in the United States from October 8 to November 29, 2002 and contains 10 episodes. The special "Arthur, It's Only Rock 'N' Roll" served as the premiere of this season. Jason Szwimer replaced Oliver Grainger as the voice of D.W. Alex Hood is cast as the new voice of Alan "The Brain" Powers, replacing Steven Crowder. Mark Rendall replaced Justin Bradley as Arthur. This is the last season in which Patricia Rodriguez voices Catherine Frensky, this is also the last season Vanessa Lengies voiced Emily, and this is the final season where Jonathan Koensgen voices Tommy Tibble, and this is the last season in which Mitchell Rothpan voices George Lundgren. The series won a Daytime Emmy in 2003 for Outstanding Sound Mixing - Live Action and Animation.
The 8th season of the television series Arthur was originally broadcast on PBS Kids in the United States from September 15 to December 26, 2003 and contains 10 episodes. This is the last season with Mark Rendall and Patricia Rodriguez voicing Arthur and Sue Ellen Armstrong, respectively, as well as the last season before CINAR, the show's original production company, was rebranded as Cookie Jar Entertainment the following year. Evan Smirnow replaced Mitchell Rothpan as George and this season is the only one in which he voices the character. Alexina Cowan and Sally Taylor-Isherwood also replaced Patricia Rodriguez and Vanessa Lengies as the voices of Catherine and Emily, respectively.
The 9th season of the television series Arthur was originally broadcast on PBS Kids Go! in the United States from December 27, 2004, to April 8, 2005, and contains 10 episodes. Cameron Ansell replaced Mark Rendall as the voice of Arthur, Jessica Kardos replaced Patricia Rodriguez as the voice of Sue Ellen Armstrong, Eleanor Noble Replaced Evan Smirnow as the voice of George, and Paul-Stuart Brown replaced Alex Hood as Brain. However, Brown shared this with Alex Hood who also voiced Brain since season seven. But in Seasons 10 and 11, Brown provides Brain alone. This is also the last season where Alex Hood voices Brain, as well as the first season where Cookie Jar Entertainment produced this series after the CINAR-Cookie Jar rebrand. It produced the series until the end of Season 15, when it merged with DHX Media.
The 10th season of the television series Arthur was originally produced in 2005 and broadcast on PBS Kids Go! in the United States from May 15 to May 26 of 2006 and contains 10 episodes. The DVD set for the season was released in region 1 on March 25, 2008. This included downloadable teaching materials and described video for the visually impaired. The season's guest stars are Édgar Rentería, Mike Timlin, Johnny Damon, and Ming Tsai. This is the last season in which Jason Szwimmer voices D.W. This is the second season of Arthur where the episodes aired in one month, following season 4.
The 11th season of the television series Arthur was originally broadcast on PBS Kids Go! in the United States from June 25 to September 7, 2007 and contains 10 episodes. This is the last season in which Cameron Ansell voices Arthur. Starting in season sixteen, he returns to voice the new character Rafi. Robert Naylor replaced Jason Szwimmer as the voice of D.W. This is also the last season in which Paul-Stuart Brown voices Brain. This is the last season animated by AKOM.
The 12th season of the television series Arthur was originally broadcast on PBS Kids Go! in the United States from October 6, 2008, to April 24, 2009, and contains 20 episodes. The 10 episodes listed below were broadcast as season 12, and the other 10 were broadcast as season 13. This resulted all of season 13 episodes airing in several countries such as Canada and United Kingdom for many months prior the U.S. broadcast. This season was created and originally aired in the 16:9 widescreen format in Non-US markets though still in 480i; in the U.S., they were and continued to be aired in 4:3, with the left and right sides cropped out. The animation was produced by Animation Services HK Ltd. instead of by AKOM. This was also the first season where Michael Hirsh was credited as the executive producer.
The 14th season of the television series Arthur was originally broadcast on PBS Kids Go! in the United States from October 11, 2010 to April 29, 2011, and contains 10 episodes. Season 14 began screening at Israel in late August 2010 and on ABC2 of Australia on September 27, 2010. It has also screened in United Kingdom on CBBC since November 1, 2010. The second half started on Earth Day 2011 and ended the day before the Royal Wedding the next day.
The 21st season of Arthur aired on PBS Kids in the U.S. from October 24, 2017 to February 15, 2018. John Lewis guest starred on the episode "Arthur Takes a Stand". This is also the last season where Jacob Ursomarzo voices Arthur, Christian Distefano voices D.W. and Max Friedman Cole voices Brain.
"Arthur Takes a Stand" is the second segment of the fourth episode of the 21st season of Arthur. It originally aired on PBS Kids in the United States on February 12, 2018. "Arthur Takes a Stand" was written by Peter Hirsch and storyboarded by Cilbur Rocha. In the episode, Arthur learns that his school's lunch lady, Mrs. MacGrady, has to do all her work by herself. He attempts to get the principal to hire an assistant for her, but his request is denied. Through advice and encouragement from his friend Sue Ellen and civil rights leader John Lewis, Arthur gets the rest of his class to participate in a sit-in protest.