23x01 Up & Down (1)
November 23, 1992 12:00 am
Rogers and Mr. McFeely ride an elevator and an escalator in a mail. In the Neighborhood of Make-Believe, Lady Elaine accepts the delivery of a hydraulic platform.
23x02 Up & Down (2)
November 24, 1992 12:00 am
Famed domino artist Bob Speca sets up and knocks down dominoes at Negri's Music Shop. In the Neighborhood of Make-Believe, Robert Troll rides the hydraulic platform outside the Museum-Go-Round.
23x03 Up & Down (3)
November 25, 1992 12:00 am
King Friday XIII wants the neighbors to find a place where Mimus polyglottos and Troglodytes aedon can take up dance lessons. While they are not looking, Robert Troll takes Mimus and Trog for a walk/dance. Chuck Aber goes off looking for the birds.
23x04 Up & Down (4)
November 26, 1992 12:00 am
Rogers hears from clarinetist Richard Stoltzman. In the Neighborhood of Make-Believe, two crises remain unsolved: stop the Museum-Go-Round from going up and down, and get the wooden birds back.
23x05 Up & Down (5)
November 27, 1992 12:00 am
Bruce Franco again makes balloon art, concentrating on animals. In the Neighborhood of Make-Believe, the hydraulic platform is fixed. By chance, Robert Troll is seen with the King's two wooden birds.
23x06 Love (1)
February 15, 1993 12:00 am
Rogers enters with a stuffed bear and a bear costume (which he wears). Mr. McFeely then brings a video on how stuffed bears are made. The Neighborhood of Make-Believe finds one of its neighbors in a bear costume.
23x07 Love (2)
February 16, 1993 12:00 am
Rogers shows a picture of one friend, an ornithologist, and visits him at The Aviary in Pittsburgh. In the Neighborhood of Make-Believe, Lady Elaine Fairchilde is readying a "Museum of Love."" At Mayor Maggie's suggestion, Lady Elaine decides to start a soap opera.
23x08 Love (3)
February 17, 1993 12:00 am
Rogers soaks his feet in a tub outside his porch and finds an unexpected visitor: "Officer" Clemmons. In the Neighborhood of Make-Believe, Lady Elaine is preparing to do a soap opera she calls As the Museum Turns.
23x09 Talks about Love (4)
February 18, 1993 12:00 am
Rogers discusses the way images are reflected in mirrors. Lady Elaine continues preparations for her one-woman soap opera.
23x10 Love (5)
February 19, 1993 12:00 am
After Rogers uses bubble mix and a wand to make large bubbles, he discovers he has no running water. Before things are fixed, Rogers remembers his visit to a kitchen where he helped make spinach egg rolls. In the meantime, the Neighborhood of Make-Believe witnesses the soap opera at the Museum of Love. Some of the neighbors help Lady Elaine perform.
23x11 Then & Now (1)
August 30, 1993 12:00 am
Rogers does a science experiment with food coloring and water. In the Neighborhood of Make-Believe, Robert Troll takes the Neighborhood Trolley off its tracks. This prompts several neighbors to search for it.
23x12 Then & Now (2)
August 31, 1993 12:00 am
Shadows and light are the contrasts of the day, as guest shadow artist Jim West performs silhouettes of various animals. Later, Mr. McFeely shows a tape on how people make light bulbs. In between, the Court of the Neighborhood of Make-Believe wants to return the shadows of Harriet Elizabeth Cow, Donkey Hodie, X the Owl, and Henrietta Pussycat. Before long, Robert Troll reveals the Trolley's Extra Dimension to Lady Aberlin.
23x13 Then & Now (3)
September 1, 1993 12:00 am
Mr. McFeely brings a pantomimist to Rogers' television house. The trolley's reputation for revealing the past spreads through the Neighborhood. It gets to the point where Trolley turns the Neighborhood upside-down.
23x14 Then & Now (4)
September 2, 1993 12:00 am
Mr. McFeeley brings a dead bird to the television house and asks Mister Rogers for a box in which to bury it. This prompts a Neighborhood of Make-Believe discussion of death as Lady Aberlin helps Henrietta Pussycat and Daniel Striped Tiger.
23x15 Then & Now (5)
September 3, 1993 12:00 am
This program provides the last glimpse of Trolley's Special Dimension. For the bulk of the show, Rogers visits Itzhak Perlman at a concert hall and reflects on his visit to Colonial Williamsburg.



