The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Saying goodbye to ‘Arthur’: How it became TV’s longest-running animated series for children

- By Neal Justin

The average aardvark lives for about 20 years. Arthur Read, the most famous of those mammals, has defied those odds and inspired several generation­s of young viewers in the process.

On Monday, ‘Arthur,’ the longest-running animated series for children in TV history, concludes its 25-season run. While the characters will continue to pop up in podcasts, online video shorts and games on PBS’ website, it’s basically the end of era.

For those of us without kids, ‘Arthur’ is first and foremost a movie in which Dudley Moore gets caught between the moon and New York City. But parents know that the cartoon Arthur has had a lot more impact than any drunken millionair­e on its core audience — ages 4 to 8 — without ever talking down to them.

The show’s popularity was evident when creator

Marc Brown visited St. John the Baptist Catholic School in Savage, Minnesota, in 2009. The surprised secondgrad­ers treated their guest like he was a rock star.

‘’Arthur’ is not only part of their weekday-morning ritual at home, it’s part of their curriculum,’ said Beth Behnke, who was then the principal. ‘We love ‘Arthur’ here.’

Older viewers who grew up on ‘Arthur’ can be just as fanatical.

‘I’ll take my daughters to school and meet with teachers who grew up on ‘Arthur,’’ said Jodie Resther, who voices the character of orangutan Francine Frensky, during a virtual news conference last month with other cast members and producers. ‘When they find out I do the voice of Francine, the reaction is insane.’

One of the key reasons the show has endured so long is that over the course of nearly 200 episodes the writers never seemed to run out of fresh ideas, getting inspiratio­n wherever they could. Executive producer Carol Greenwald recalled the time she was on the phone with an internatio­nal distributo­r when he suddenly had to go; his son had gotten on the wrong bus.

‘We hung up and I was like, ‘OK, I have to wait until he finds his son, but then it is going in Arthur’s story,’’ she said.

Greenwald and her team have taken on subjects few other children’s programs would touch. In the final four episodes, airing consecutiv­ely Monday afternoon, children will learn how a newspaper works, get tips on how to make small talk with grown-ups and get introduced to the magic of silent films.

‘We really knew that we were on the right path if we just continued to be authentic and kind of push limits,’ Resther said. ‘We knew if we kept being the resource to help kids learn and grow we would eventually be taken into wonderful directions.’

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