Arthur | |
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Season 2 | |
No. of episodes | 20 (40 segments) |
Release | |
Original network | PBS |
Original release | October 20, 1997 – April 17, 1998 |
Season chronology | |
The second season of the television series Arthur was originally broadcast on PBS in the United States from October 20, 1997, to April 17, 1998, and contains 20 episodes. [1] [2] [3] This season, like seasons 1 and 3, was released on DVD in Europe only; due to the fact that this was actually two production seasons (the first ten episodes encompassing the first and the last ten encompassing the second) combined into one long season for US airings, the first ten episodes for this season can be found on the "Series 2" DVD and the last ten can be found on "Series 3."
In a September 2021 episode of Jason Szwimer's podcast Finding D.W., Daniel Brochu (Buster Baxter's voice actor) revealed that the inspiration for "Arthur's Faraway Friend" originated when he decided to take a sabbatical to Australia. [4] As the producers did not want to replace him, it was written into the show that Buster would be traveling with his father, much like Brochu himself. [4]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Written by | Storyboard by | Original air date | |
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31a | 1a | "Arthur Meets Mister Rogers" | Ken Scarborough | Denis Banville | October 20, 1997 | |
Fred McFeely Rogers stays at Arthur's house while visiting Elwood City. Arthur is scared of telling anyone that because his friends believe that his TV show is just for "babies". His avoiding actions cause Prunella, Rubella, and the Brain to jump to the false conclusion that zombies are the reason for his behavior. They try to find out what is happening, and get the police called on them by Mrs. Tibble, who mistakes them for burglars. The next day, Mr. Rogers visits Lakewood Elementary School and Arthur works up the courage to explain to his friends why he has been acting strange. | ||||||
31b | 1b | "Draw!" | Joe Fallon | Eric Bergeron & Gerry Capelle | October 20, 1997 | |
When Francine teases Fern for liking Mr. Ratburn's puppet shows, she draws a comic humiliating Francine, which everyone finds amusing. This escalates to everyone at school drawing insulting pictures of Francine, unaware of how much they're hurting her feelings. They decided to go apologize after they overhear Francine talking to Mrs. MacGrady about how she wants them to stop. | ||||||
32a | 2a | "Binky Barnes, Art Expert" | Joe Fallon | Harry Rasmussen | October 21, 1997 | |
Arthur and Buster have to work with Binky on an art report, but they are worried when Binky claims that a certain abstract picture in the museum is framed the wrong direction. They try to distract Binky and finish the assignment on their own, and are surprised when it turns out that Binky is right. | ||||||
32b | 2b | "Arthur's Lucky Pencil" | Peter K. Hirsch | Stéfanie Gignac | October 21, 1997 | |
After several days of bad luck, Arthur feels he is "cursed" until he finds a pencil on the sidewalk. Suddenly, his pencil starts to change his luck: it buys him free soda and better school lunches, and soon his friends all want to use it. With the pencil draining, Arthur hides it to keep his luck safe, but soon cannot remember where it went. | ||||||
33a | 3a | "D.W., the Picky Eater" | Anne-Marie Perrotta | Denis Banville | October 22, 1997 | |
At a restaurant, D.W. throws a tantrum over having to eat her least favorite vegetable, spinach, for dinner, and is banned permanently from all future dining-out trips. Arthur and his friends must figure out a way to get her to try new foods before Grandma Thora's birthday dinner at a popular fairy tale restaurant, which will be relocated to the Read’s if D.W. doesn’t matter change her eating habits. | ||||||
33b | 3b | "Buster and the Daredevils" | Peter K. Hirsch | Grace Lam | October 22, 1997 | |
Arthur and Buster want to hang out with two daredevils, Toby and Slink, and Buster does their embarrassing "dares" while seeking their approval. Arthur realizes that Toby and Slink are tricking Buster, and convinces him that they are making a fool out of him for their own amusement. | ||||||
34a | 4a | "Arthur Makes a Movie" | Peter K. Hirsch | Robert Yap | October 23, 1997 | |
Arthur and his friends are too young to watch a James Hound movie because it is rated PG-13, so they film their own. While the filming goes wrong, they end up enjoying their outtakes. | ||||||
34b | 4b | "Go to Your Room, D.W." | Kathy Waugh | Alex Szewczuk | October 23, 1997 | |
D.W. is impatient when she receives a ten-minute timeout in her room after being mean to Kate and Jane grounds for two days Arthur. She recalls her past behavior, and with Nadine's help, she realizes how bad she treated her sister. | ||||||
35a | 5a | "Arthur's Underwear" | Peter K. Hirsch | Jean Lajeunesse | October 24, 1997 | |
When Binky accidentally splits his pants in class, Arthur thinks it is funny, until he starts having nightmares about losing his pants. Buster tries to help Arthur with different ways to end his nightmares, but none of them work. When Arthur accidentally rips his pants in the cafeteria at school, Binky and Mrs. MacGrady give him advice on how to live with the brief embarrassment, putting an end to Arthur's nightmares. However, Buster starts having nightmares about losing his pants too. | ||||||
35b | 5b | "Francine Frensky, Olympic Rider" | Kathy Waugh | Denis Banville | October 24, 1997 | |
Francine attends horse riding lessons, and her older sister, Catherine Frensky, has to take her there. Catherine decides to take lessons too and quickly becomes better than Francine, as well as getting a crush on Stanley, the riding instructor. Francine gets envious and considers quitting her lessons. | ||||||
36a | 6a | "Buster Baxter, Cat Saver" | Joe Fallon | Denis Banville | October 27, 1997 | |
When Buster inadvertently saves a cat, the cat's owner glorifies his "heroics" to Buster's mother, Bitzi Baxter, causing the incident to become headline news. Buster builds his fame up, causing him to become a "big-shot". Arthur, Francine, and the Brain find out the truth and plan on showing everyone that Buster is not as big a hero as he makes himself to be. However, Buster gets another shot at fame when he saves his friends from a runaway piano. Meanwhile, Arthur is being constantly annoyed by D.W. and her new "Crazy Bus" CD. | ||||||
36b | 6b | "Play it Again, D.W." | Joe Fallon | Harry Rasmussen | October 27, 1997 | |
D.W. is still playing her "Crazy Bus" CD a thousand times (from "Buster Baxter, Cat Saver") and Arthur is furious by it, even threatening that he will break it to smithereens. When the CD goes missing, an enraged D.W. blames Arthur for taking it, with no one believing his denials. Luckily, Mr. Read says when he went to work he accidentally took the CD with him. | ||||||
37a | 7a | "Arthur's TV-Free Week" | Peter K. Hirsch | Stéfanie Gignac | October 28, 1997 | |
Arthur and his friends sign a petition at school to survive one week without television. Everyone tries to resist the temptation of TV while they go through their week, with Arthur and Buster struggling in particular. | ||||||
37b | 7b | "Night Fright" | Joe Fallon | Gerry Capelle | October 28, 1997 | |
Binky has a night light and tries to go without it when Arthur sleeps over. Binky goes through another nightmare, and Arthur finds out about it. He believes that Arthur will tell everyone his secret, though Arthur is not particularly interested. Even so, Binky tries to pamper Arthur to keep his secret until Binky finally decides to admit it to avoid Arthur possibly telling everyone. | ||||||
38a | 8a | "Arthur vs. the Piano" | Joe Fallon | Harry Rasmussen | October 29, 1997 | |
Arthur's music class has an upcoming recital and everyone except for Arthur who is anxious and practicing. Arthur is confident that he knows everything well enough, until a nightmare makes him worry that he may miss a note, and he tries to restore his confidence. Meanwhile, D.W. has endless hiccups, despite numerous attempted remedies. | ||||||
38b | 8b | "The Big Blow-Up" | Joe Fallon | Alex Hawley | October 29, 1997 | |
Francine and the Brain war over soccer practice that carries into class and through the next soccer match. Arthur and Buster resolve things between Francine and the Brain with fake apology letters, before the last game of the season that will determine if they can make the playoffs or not. | ||||||
39a | 9a | "Lost!" | Kathy Waugh | Gerry Capelle | October 30, 1997 | |
Arthur has to take a city bus to the Elwood City Pool for his swimming lesson, but while reading a book, he falls asleep on the bus, only to miss his stop. Ending up at the edge of town, Arthur tries to find his way home, while D.W. becomes truly scared for Arthur's safety. Arthur stops at a nearby diner for help, where he talks to a friendly bus driver named Sam, who takes him back home. | ||||||
39b | 9b | "The Short, Quick Summer" | Joe Fallon | Denis Banville | October 30, 1997 | |
Arthur loses his to-do list he planned for the summer, and another new school year is quickly approaching. As summer ends, he feels upset that his friends did fun things and he didn’t. On the last day of summer vacation, Arthur finds his list taped to his bedroom door and realizes that he did everything he wanted to. | ||||||
40a | 10a | "D.W. Goes to Washington" | Joe Fallon | Gerry Capelle | October 31, 1997 | |
The Reads visit Washington, D.C. for their holiday weekend. They tour the popular landmarks, including the White House, but D.W., who wishes to go to "Pony Land", abruptly separates from the tour group and meets the President. | ||||||
40b | 10b | "Arthur's Mystery Envelope" | Sheilarae Carpentier Lau | Gary Scott & Nelson Dewey | October 31, 1997 | |
Mr. Haney gives an envelope to Arthur to give to Mrs. Read. Arthur is worried about the contents of the envelope, thinking that he might go to summer school, so he tries to hide it from her. D.W. insists on showing the envelope, so she can see how much Arthur is going to get into trouble. When Arthur finally reveals the envelope, it turns out to be Mr. Haney's tax returns, as Mrs. Read is his accountant. | ||||||
41a | 11a | "D.W.'s Deer Friend" | Joe Fallon | Robert Yap | April 6, 1998 | |
The Reads spend the weekend camping and D.W. befriends a deer, whom she names him Walter. Willing to take him home, Mr. & Mrs. Read teach D.W. a lesson that taking away an animal from its habitat is forbidden and against the law. | ||||||
41b | 11b | "Buster Hits the Books" | Joe Fallon | Jeremy O'Neill & Ivan Tankushev | April 6, 1998 | |
Buster needs to write a book report, but has never managed to finish a book. His friends try to find one that is easy for him to read, but Buster can’t pay attention long enough to read one in its entirety, until he finds one that interests him: Robin Hood . | ||||||
42a | 12a | "Arthur's Faraway Friend" | Joe Fallon | Brian Anderson | April 7, 1998 | |
Arthur and Buster finish reading Robin Hood (from "Buster Hits the Books"), and decide to write their own continuation of the book, but it gets sidetracked when Buster tells him that he is leaving for a couple of months with his father, who is a pilot. Arthur tries to find a way for Buster to stay, until Sue Ellen points out how it will be hard for him to go away. Arthur has to become supportive to Buster until he leaves, and both are upset. Buster soon sends Arthur a surprise gift in the mail: chapters of their book based on his travels. | ||||||
42b | 12b | "Arthur and the Square Dance" | Peter K. Hirsch | Gerry Capelle | April 7, 1998 | |
Arthur and Francine are made partners for Mrs. MacGrady's square dancing class. Binky thinks that Francine is in love with Arthur and starts a rumor about it. The two avoid each other because they are afraid of getting cooties. | ||||||
43a | 13a | "Water and the Brain" | Peter K. Hirsch | Robert Yap | April 8, 1998 | |
Muffy is throwing a party at a water park, and everyone is invited, except the Brain. Arthur and Binky discover that the Brain is afraid of water and try to help him get over this fear so he can go to Muffy's party. | ||||||
43b | 13b | "Arthur the Unfunny" | Joe Fallon | Stéfanie Gignac | April 8, 1998 | |
In a letter to a far-away Buster, Arthur tells him that he is struggling with being funny when his friends act as clowns for a carnival. Arthur cannot learn any clown tricks, and his friends fear that he will ruin the carnival. Arthur learns that he has his own style of being funny that works: playing the piano while making faces with Kate. | ||||||
44a | 14a | "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary" | Peter K. Hirsch | Ivan Tankushev | April 9, 1998 | |
Sue Ellen loses her diary in the library, so Muffy, Francine, Binky, and Arthur team up to find it, and think that it contains her opinions on them and whether to open it or return it unread. | ||||||
44b | 14b | "Arthur's Knee" | Sheilarae Carpentier Lau | Marisol Gagnon & M. Cuadrado | April 9, 1998 | |
Arthur sneakily goes into the Elwood City dump to retrieve a wheel for his school project, but accidentally cuts his knee on a sharp can lid. He hides the injury and makes D.W. promise not to tell anyone because he is not allowed to trespass into the dump, but D.W tries to convince him, with the Brain's help, that he has to confess to Mr. and Mrs. Read before his injury gets worse. | ||||||
45a | 15a | "Grandma Thora Appreciation Day" | Kathy Waugh | Angus Bungay | April 10, 1998 | |
Arthur and D.W. feel sorry for Grandma Thora because she does not have cable TV, cannot eat any good snacks, and has to keep her dentures in a glass. They plan a surprise party for her, but struggle to make things work and do not want any help planning the party. | ||||||
45b | 15b | "Fern's Slumber Party" | Sandra Willard | Nelson Dewey | April 10, 1998 | |
Fern's mother, Mrs. Walters, wants her to host her own slumber party to help her expand her social skills, but Fern is very reluctant. Her guests, Francine, Muffy, Jenna Morgan, Sue Ellen, and Prunella, get bored quickly, and the party is a fiasco. When Francine's bracelet goes missing, Fern uses her detective skills learned from Sherlock Holmes to solve the mystery. | ||||||
46a | 16a | "Love Notes for Muffy" | Sandra Willard | Robert Yap | April 13, 1998 | |
The Brain and Francine use fake love notes to get vengeance against Muffy after her science project gets more credit. Their joke has unintended consequences, which means they must fix it before things get worse. | ||||||
46b | 16b | "D.W. Blows the Whistle" | Barry Rinehart & Ian Saunders | Robert Yap | April 13, 1998 | |
When D.W. saves a little boy from getting run over by a car by blowing her whistle, she becomes an overzealous safety control freak. Arthur and his friends try to stop her from ruining the upcoming soapbox race, while D.W. learns the hard way that her obsession with finding everyone else's safety faults causes her to jeopardize her own safety. | ||||||
47a | 17a | "Francine Redecorates" | Sandra Willard | Stéfanie Gignac | April 14, 1998 | |
Francine and Catherine are both fed up of sharing a room with each other. So Catherine moves out to the family living room, leaving Francine alone with their old room. They both struggle with adjusting to their new environments and later decide to compromise with each other as Catherine moves back. | ||||||
47b | 17b | "Arthur the Loser" | Joe Fallon | Brian Anderson | April 14, 1998 | |
Arthur has a losing streak when he continues to be dominated in the new No Guessing! board game, so he resorts to cheating to win. His friends are annoyed by his sore-winner attitude and tag along with Binky to make Arthur lose. When Arthur sees everyone rooting against him, he has an imaginary conversation with Buster, who is still away with his father, and makes him see the error of his ways. | ||||||
48a | 18a | "Arthur vs. the Very Mean Crossing Guard" | Ken Scarborough | Gerry Capelle & Marisol Gagnon | April 15, 1998 | |
Arthur and the Brain confront a new crossing guard who charges $10 every time someone crosses the street and threatens to send his "goons" after them. They think of ways to avoid him, until they learn that he is a friend of Grandma Thora's and that he was just teasing them, after overhearing how Arthur constantly teases D.W. the same way. | ||||||
48b | 18b | "D.W.'s Very Bad Mood" | Kathy Waugh | Guy Lamoureux & Robert Yap | April 15, 1998 | |
D.W. has been very aggressive for several days straight. Francine and Arthur spy on D.W. and discover that she is enraged over not being invited to a classmate's birthday party. Francine tries to tell D.W. that she cannot have everything that she wants, but when D.W still struggles to manage her anger, Francine consoles her by inviting D.W. to her birthday party. | ||||||
49a | 19a | "D.W.'s Name Game" | Joe Fallon | Robert Yap | April 16, 1998 | |
Arthur and D.W. make fun of each other with different insulting nicknames. After Arthur calls by her full first name, D.W. has a nightmare and learns that calling people names can hurt them. | ||||||
49b | 19b | "Finders Key-pers" | Chris Moore | Stéfanie Gignac | April 16, 1998 | |
Arthur, Binky, and the Brain find a key in the grass while looking for their lost baseball. Arthur theorizes that it is the key to the city, Binky hopes it belongs to a sports car, and the Brain thinks that it opens an upcoming science museum. They war over who gets to keep the key, despite none of them knowing what it unlocks. It is later revealed to open the sprinkler control system for the school's baseball field. | ||||||
50a | 20a | "How the Cookie Crumbles" | Joe Fallon | Brian Anderson | April 17, 1998 | |
Muffy is having difficulty coming up with a recipe for a strawberry-themed contest. Her friends suggest a cookie recipe, which turns out to taste delicious, and she takes all of the credit, much to her friends' anger and disgust. Muffy learns the hard way about taking credit for someone else's work when she tries to bake the cookies herself, but cannot remember the recipe. | ||||||
50b | 20b | "Sue Ellen's Little Sister" | Peter K. Hirsch | Stéfanie Gignac | April 17, 1998 | |
Sue Ellen feels left out without a brother or sister, so she tries to pretend having her friends as siblings, but they each have their own flaws. During a playdate with D.W., Sue Ellen learns about the dangers of having a younger sibling and gets bullied by D.W. Soon after, Sue Ellen gets a letter from a boy named Tenzin living in Tibet, who becomes her new pen pal. |
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.
The Real Ghostbusters is an American animated television series, a spin-off and sequel of the 1984 comedy film Ghostbusters. The series ran on ABC between September 13, 1986 and October 5, 1991, and was a joint production of DIC Enterprises in association with Columbia Pictures Television and distributed by Coca-Cola Telecommunications.
Postcards from Buster is an American children's television series that originally aired on PBS. It is a spin-off of the Arthur TV series. The show features Buster Baxter, an 8-year-old anthropomorphic rabbit and Arthur's best friend. The television series was created by Cookie Jar Group, WGBH Boston, and Marc Brown Studios.
The Concord label Rounder Records through the Rounder Kids imprint has released 3 soundtracks of the 1996 animated television series Arthur.
Daniel Brochu is a Canadian actor.
Marc Tolon Brown is an American author and illustrator of children's books. Brown writes as well as illustrates the Arthur book series and is best known for creating that series and its numerous spin-offs.
The first season of the television series Arthur was originally broadcast on PBS in the United States from October 7 to November 15, 1996, and contains 30 episodes with each episode containing two 11-minute segments, making it the longest season of the show.
The 3rd season of the television series Arthur was originally broadcast on PBS in the United States from November 16, 1998 to January 1, 1999 and contains 15 episodes. This season, like seasons 1 and 2, was released on DVD in Europe only.
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 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 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.
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.
Jason Szwimer sometimes mistakenly credited and known as Jason Szwimmer, is a Canadian voice actor. He was the voice of Dora Winifred Read on Arthur. He provided the voice of Elf in the Télétoon TV series Caillou's Holiday Movie and voiced Phil in the Teletoon TV series The Tofus.