The following is a list of episodes for the American television sitcom Night Court. The series originally aired on NBC from January 4, 1984 to May 31, 1992, with a total of 193 episodes produced, spanning nine seasons.
Harold T. Stone (Harry Anderson) becomes a night court judge in New York City. Working with him are court clerk Lana Wagner (Karen Austin), prosecutor Dan Fielding (John Larroquette), public defender Sheila Gardner (Gail Strickland), and bailiffs Bull Shannon (Richard Moll) and Selma Hacker (Selma Diamond). In his first case, he has to settle a dispute involving a woman threatening her husband with gunfire while at the same time trying to earn the trust of his staff, who are skeptical about his unorthodox judicial methods.
Note: This is Gail Strickland's only episode as a cast member.
The season is merry as Harry deals with a man in a red suit charged with trespassing (Jeff Corey) and tries to restore the faith of a pair of cynical teenage runaways (Michael J. Fox and Olivia Barash).
Note: Paula Kelly makes her first appearance as public defender Liz Williams, replacing Gail Strickland from the pilot episode.
The others try to pull Bull out of the dumps when he's turned down by a charitable organization because his size and appearance are intimidating to others.
Dan, Harry, and Bull all compete for the same pretty attorney (Caroline McWilliams); Harry tries to get tickets to see Mel Tormé.
Note: George D. Wallace appears as a doctor. The end credits have a different background for this episode. Instead of the court, they show Harry and his little homemade Mel Tormé concert.
Russian Yakov Korolenko (Yakov Smirnoff), who is charged with selling stolen property, would rather burn down the courtroom and everyone in it than go to jail.
Note: This episode marks the first appearance of Mike Finneran as courthouse handyman Art Fensterman. It also marks Karen Austin's final appearance as court clerk Lana Wagner, though she is listed in the opening credits through the end of the season.
Harry has to settle the legal status of a woman (Marcia Rodd) who remarried after her first husband Mitch Bowers (Charles Napier) was mistakenly declared dead, and who wants her back even though she is now seeing another man (Basil Hoffman).
Note: D.D. Howard appears as court clerk Charley Tracy. Milt Kogan appears as a doctor. Paula Kelly makes her final appearance as public defender Liz Williams.
An impressionable young nun (Dinah Manoff) decides to leave her order after meeting Harry; Dan tries to hit on a temporary public defender.
Note: Charles Robinson makes his first appearance as court clerk Mac Robinson. The unnamed temporary public defender (played by Sharon Barr) is not seen again. Randee Heller appears as a prostitute. Earl Boen appears as her client. Lu Leonard appears as an older nun.
A new public defender has a rough first day in court, thanks to Harry and her over-protective father (Eugene Roche); Selma returns to work delirious after surgery.
Note: This episode was originally intended to be the season premiere. Markie Post, in her first-ever appearance on the show, appears in a one-episode guest stint as new public defender Christine Sullivan. Shelley Hack was originally cast as Christine, but she left the show before filming when it was decided she was not right for the part.[15][16] Post was hired as her replacement before taping, but was only available for a single episode as she was still a regular on "The Fall Guy[17];" she would join the cast permanently at the beginning of season three. Paul Lieber appears as a defendant.
Harry sends the new public defender, Billie Young (Ellen Foley), to jail for refusing to reveal the whereabouts of a cat her client is accused of kidnapping.
Note: Ellen Foley makes her first appearance as public defender Billie Young.
The courtroom becomes a circus when a meek little fellow chooses Harry to decide what worthy person will receive the money from his winning lottery ticket.
Bull is finally allowed a foster son by a volunteer-fathers organization, but he winds up with a surprise when he learns the kid is a girl (Pamela Adlon, credited as "Pamela Segall") posing as a boy to help out her single mother.
Harry feels a lot of official pressure when a notorious madame with a hot diary comes before his bench; Bull tries to save Mac's turkey from getting killed for Thanksgiving.
A blizzard traps everyone in the courthouse and Dan in an elevator with a gay man (Jack Riley) who confessed his attraction to him after a trial involving his pet dog.
Dan's past is revealed when the parents (John McIntire and Jeanette Nolan, married actors in real life), whom he told everyone were dead, come from Louisiana to visit their successful "sonny boy".
Patients from a mental institution stage a strike to convince the court they're being mistreated at the hospital.
Note: This was initially scheduled to be the second episode of the season but was postponed and instead aired out of sequence. Ellen Foley does not appear and is also missing from the opening credits; her character of Billie is not mentioned, and no explanation is given for her absence. Deborah Harmon appears as overeager idealistic newly-assigned public defender Sue Harper. James Cromwell and Kevin Peter Hall guest star as two members of a group of escapees from a mental home who wind up in court for not paying their taxi fare.
Selma's old beau (Jack Gilford) wants to rekindle their romance and take care of her, and a substitute judge (Phil Leeds) isn't what he's cracked up to be.
His friends believe the worst when Dan starts dating an awkward and plain young woman (Mimi Kennedy) who happens to be the daughter of a multimillionaire.
Note: William Utay's first appearance as Phil Sanders the bum.
Harry searches for Yakov's brother, a Russian circus defector. Meanwhile, Soviet and American agents (Leonard Stone and Gordon Jump) negotiate an arms agreement.
Note: This is the final appearance of Selma Diamond before her death on May 13, 1985.
Everyone tries to adjust to Selma's death as Harry interviews possible replacements, but Bull goes on a drinking binge instead; public defender Christine Sullivan is permanently assigned to the court, to the delight of both Harry and Dan.
Note: Markie Post and Florence Halop join the cast as public defender Christine Sullivan and bailiff Florence Kleiner, respectively. The episode ends with a brief tribute to Selma Diamond.
A man charged with stealing electronic parts takes Dan hostage and demands the rest of the parts he needs to communicate with his home planet of Saturn.
Christine's father (Eugene Roche) has his first date in eight years and ends up in court, charged with soliciting a prostitute (Estelle Harris); Harry also must deal with the tenants of a clothing-optional building.
Harry falls hook, line and sinker for a beautiful woman, (Mary Margaret Humes) who turns out to be a real witch. Anne Ramsey, best known for her role in the film Throw Momma from the Train, appears as another member of the coven.
Dan has a real problem when his high school buddy comes to visit as a decidedly changed man. Meanwhile, the rest of the staff try to explain to Bull what a transgender woman is.
Everyone is in a financial crisis when the city can't pay its employees, Harry has to evict a woman and son from a sleazy hotel, and a homeless couple from West Virginia (the picaresque Wheelers, played by Brent Spiner and Annie O'Donnell) tells their tale of woe. The Wheelers appear in several future episodes.
Bull gets a new girlfriend, but the rest of the staff recognizes her as a gold-digging prostitute who's been in and out of court and jail many times. However, when Bull finds out and confronts Renee, his pity on her causes Renee to have an emotional meltdown. Meanwhile, Dan has a date with a dominatrix, but his injuries from Bull's rampage put a dent in his plans.
Dan takes a job as a paid escort for a wealthy, lonely woman (Barbara Cason) who expects a lot for her money, and Yakov appeals to Harry for help when his wife is arrested on a visit to the U.S.
A burned-out older judge (Jeff Corey) brought in to substitute for Harry exhibits bizarre behavior: he issues a bench arrest for the Rockettes, imprisons Dan and Mac for contempt, and appoints Florence and Phil (William Utay) as the defending and prosecuting attorneys.
After being mugged, Christine becomes belligerent and mistrustful, and unable to do her job as public defender. She has to rediscover her compassion when her mugger is trapped in the cafeteria and threatens hostages with a grenade. Meanwhile, Phil gets a hot stock tip from an old Wall Street buddy, and Dan nearly bankrupts himself trying to wheedle it out of him.
Harry's distracted from a courtroom full of ventriloquists and their dummies by the delivery of a letter from his mother, mailed fifteen years earlier.
Note: First appearance of Marsha Warfield as baliff Rosalind Russell and John Astin as Harry's stepfather Buddy Ryan.
Bull tries his hand at writing a children's story for a contest, but when one of the judges personally appears to criticize how disturbing and violent it is, Bull becomes upset. Meanwhile, Dan is at the sexual mercy of a woman diagnosed with multiple personality disorder.
Dan makes a friend out of a substituting judge until he realizes the man is trying to bribe him, and his friends talk him into wearing a wire to entrap the man.
Harry returns and finds a lovely woman substituting on the bench for him, who likes him a lot and jails Christine for mouthing off about perceived mistreatment of a client.
A mild earthquake traps Dan, Roz, and two sumo wrestlers in an elevator. Meanwhile Harry has to deal with three kids who are spitting images for Dan, Christine, and Harry himself.
Harry deals sympathetically with an escaped felon whose only wish is to spend New Year's Eve in Times Square to celebrate his 42nd wedding anniversary.
Harry has to deal with a woman who confesses to him that she killed her husband that morning, a detective who can't get used to working without his partner, and a morose Dan who was rejected as a sperm bank donor.
Christine's new boss (Michael Gross) sexually harasses her and Harry helps Christine catch him in the act. Meanwhile, Dan meets his match in a woman (Teresa Ganzel) who has sworn herself to celibacy.
Quon Le plans to become a US citizen before her baby is born, but she and Mac are both rushed to the hospital with pains just as Harry begins the swearing-in ceremony.
Part one of four. Dan thinks he will become a new judge, but Christine is awarded the position. However, Harry discovers his name is not on the judge's reappointment list. Meanwhile, the Wheelers, the hick couple from West Virginia, become the proprietors of the concession stand.
Part two of four. Upon learning that he will not be reappointed as a judge, Harry disappears to perform an outrageous stunt, not realizing that Christine got Harry his job back.
Part three of four. Christine nervously takes the bench as Dan and Mac try to cover for the newly-reinstated Harry, who's planning the greatest prank of all time.
Conclusion. While preparing to attempt his outrageous stunt, Harry talks to and saves the life of a suicidal man. Christine realizes she cannot look at cases neutrally and goes back to being a defense attorney.
Bull has a near-death experience after getting struck by lightning at the courthouse, and soon becomes overly charitable when he gives away everything in his life savings to the homeless.
On Halloween, Harry traps himself inside a safe while practicing a magic trick and laments over his obsession with magic and pranks. Meanwhile, a man in a devil costume gives Dan $100 in exchange for his soul.
An old friend who saved his life in Vietnam, Horace "Hondo" Jenkins (David Graf) asks Mac to lose his court records. Meanwhile, a Japanese man about to be honored by the governor dies just as he's being put in custody for soliciting prostitutes and Bull loses track of the man's corpse.
86
7
"Who Was That Masked Man?"
Jeff Melman
Story by : Tom Straw & R.J. Colleary Teleplay by : Tom Straw
Dan's boss, Vincent Daniels, orders Dan to look out for Daniels' very sexy visiting niece, Kitty (Teri Hatcher) while Harry tries to prevent a TV hero of yesteryear from committing suicide after being taken to court over an order to not wear his costume or act like his character because of a movie adaptation.
Harry hires a blind assistant (Elayne Boosler) whose abrasive sense of humor puts everyone on edge and Dan struggles with impotence when he meets a seductive prospective employer (Janice Lynde).
Part one. Harry tangles with a desperate man holding an original draft of the Constitution hostage in the courtroom. Meanwhile, Roz struggles with being diagnosed with diabetes.
Conclusion. The Constitution draft hostage escalates in Harry's courtroom while Dan and Christine try to save Roz after her insulin overdose leads to erratic behavior.
A crazed man (Patrick Thomas O'Brien) handcuffs a briefcase to Dan that turns out to be rigged with a bomb. Meanwhile, Joy shows Bull what it's like to be blind.
Dan ties up Mel Tormé so Harry can meet him, but the judge is preoccupied with trying to keep his stepfather Buddy and his catatonic schizophrenic friend (Shelley Berman) out of the mental hospital.
Panic grips the courtroom as the gang races to clear 207 cases in one session so a millionaire will donate money to save an orphanage and so Dan can win an office pool for the most convictions.
An old flame of Harry's drops by to renew their relationship but neglects to tell him she's married. Meanwhile, Dan bails out of bowling night with the staff so he can have sex with his latest fling, but he and Harry end up out on the ledge when Mac, Christine, Bull, and Roz go looking for them.
Soviet defector Yakov Korolenko returns for some help in getting a visa to return to Russia to visit his sick mother, while sparks fly between Harry and a charming Soviet consul named Ludmila Irena Medavoy (aka Irena Ferris). Meanwhile, Christine finds a secret admirer letter from Johnny Carson (who appears as himself) and thinks it's a trick.
The gang joins Roz in a therapist group she's required to attend to temper her hostile attitude at work, which turns into a police situation when a young, inexperienced gangbanger (Don Cheadle) holds everyone hostage.
Harry becomes uncharacteristically glum and morose when an elderly judge dies after one of Harry's pranks. His friends urge him to respond when a new judge (Gary Kroeger) lays claim to Harry's crown as the "King of the Courtroom Cutups."
Part one of three. Dan flip-flops on his active duty for the Army Reserve until he learns it will be in a tropical paradise with a beautiful lady officer.
Parts two of three and conclusion. After a plane wreck, Dan is rescued by some Inuit and must save a tribeswoman by performing an emergency appendectomy. Meanwhile, the night court staff fear that Dan is dead and hold a funeral for him.
A fire breaks out in the building so everyone is forced to retreat to the morgue for safety, but this doesn't stop Dan from watching the election results for his race for the state assembly.
Bull falls for a sweet, but inept bailiff trainee (Denny Dillon) who allows a psychotic, movie-obsessed woman (Nana Visitor) to escape, and things get worse when Dan takes the woman to a sleazy motel during his lunch break.
Christine wears herself out planning a Thanksgiving feast for the courthouse regulars and Mac faces the seduction of an attractive classmate (Renée Jones).
Dan has to choose between Christine and membership in an exclusive law club when his sponsor demands his silence about his plans to seduce her to win a sexual scavanger hunt.
An inventor runs away from court to avoid being committed to Bellevue, a man just out of a 20 year coma appears before the bench, and Christine fences with her replacement when a computer error declares her dead.
A city auditor (Richard Sanders) tries to investigate some of the more bizarre expenses attributed to Harry's court (via flashbacks) but he's interrupted by a clown (Jack Riley) wielding a gun and threatening to shoot everyone.
A woman (Marion Ross) who can't tell where her life begins and television ends interrupts the proceedings brandishing a grenade and demanding that her husband be released from prison and given a pardon.
Bull goes on a game show to raise money for a rec center, but the gang has to hypnotize him so that he is not too nervous to go on. Meanwhile, a cantankerous, old female judge (Florence Stanley) wreaks havoc in the courtroom while Harry is away.
Harry and the gang refuse to take Christine and her new beau seriously because of his age. Meanwhile, Dan dates a middle-aged woman after hearing that she's wealthy enough to help his campaign.
Dan finally meets his opponent (Janet Zarish) for the state assembly seat on election day and falls in love with her. Meanwhile, Harry gives his flu to Mel Tormé in exchange for two concert tickets.
Part one of two. Christine is worried about Harry after he rants about the justice system being a joke after a mobster is acquitted of all charges and suddenly sees Harry talking to the acquitted mobster about protecting him from legal interference (not knowing that the whole thing is part of an undercover sting). And things get worse when Buddy reveals to Harry that he's his biological father (and not his stepfather) and accidentally tells the mobster about Harry's sting operation.
120
19
"From Snoop to Nuts (Part 2)"
Jeff Melman
Story by : Larry Strawther, Gary Murphy and Harry Anderson Teleplay by : Gary Murphy & Larry Strawther
Conclusion. Harry's world falls apart following Buddy's revelation over who his biological father is, and Dan freaks out when he thinks two men in tailored suits are the killers enforced to go after Harry over the sting operation.
Roz falls in love with Christine's prison pen pal (Dennis Haysbert), who has escaped from prison; Dan flirts with a law student, but grosses her out, thanks to a roach infestation in the courthouse.
Christine accepts a date with Art the handyman, then regrets it when she escorts him to his lodge club meeting's annual dinner/talent show; meanwhile Mac's children's story for school is lost in the courthouse computer.
The gang tries to set another record for cases adjudicated as the building slowly floods, causing prisoners to pile up in the hallways and Dan grinds his teeth to be off by midnight to catch a flight to anywhere.
Buddy leaves the mental institution and moves in with Harry while Dan and his real estate agent scheme to take over a dying man's Park Avenue apartment.
Bull saves the life of Jordan King, a billionaire land developer, and Dan plans on swindling him. Meanwhile, Quon Le gets involved in a cosmetics pyramid scheme and Mac steps in after she gets sick.
Christine falls for the officer assigned to protect Dan when the sleazy DA receives several death threats. Meanwhile, Bull records a video letter to his mom, and Roz tries to avoid appearing on camera.
127
4
"Come Back to the Five and Dime, Stephen King, Stephen King"
Harry embarrasses Christine in front of a very pro-feminist judge with his trick handcuffs while Dan takes Bull out to his favorite nightclub after Bull thinks his girlfriend, Rhoda, is cheating on him with a student in her dental hygienist class.
Buddy proposes to a wealthy, fun-loving widow who doesn't know he's a mental patient while Dan tries to hide the fact that he's been reduced to living in his office following his botched real estate plan.
Roz drafts Mac to pose as her fiancé when her overbearing aunt (Della Reese) comes to visit; Dan meets an older actress/wealthy socialite (Magda Harout) who teaches him some new tricks in an elevator.
Mac's plan to sell his wife's snacks hits a snag when a snack magnate interested in the product drops dead in the court cafeteria. Meanwhile, Christine's stingy uncle visits her, and Dan pretends he's in touch with his feminine side to win over a woman who thinks all men only want her for sex.
Part one of two. Dan becomes the target for first a job offer, then disbarment proceedings when a wealthy lawyer seeks to get charges against his son dropped. Meanwhile, Christine and Roz become diet buddies.
Dan and Harry each vie for the attentions of an attractive reporter (Annette McCarthy) doing a story on Harry's courtroom, but Christine learns that the journalist is her favorite novelist and a lesbian. Meanwhile, a trio of jugglers from an obscure, Eastern European country hit on Roz.
Christine finds everyone too busy to help her out with her new romance so she turns to two feuding sisters (Jodi Carlisle and Lynne Marie Stewart) who happen to be competing advice columnists.
An old theater's demolition prompts Bull to chain himself to the entrance in protest. At the same time, Harry tries to get a petition to stop the demolition, and Christine discovers that Mac was once a member of a doo-wop group who blamed him for quitting before they could hit the big time.
Christine makes an impulsive decision at her farewell dinner with beau Tony, one that has severe repercussions when he leaves on an assignment he may not return from.
Dan becomes the host of a Morton Downey, Jr.-esque talk show where he berates the guests and gets hurt by the audience members. Meanwhile, Mac and Quon Le's vacation to Graceland is interrupted.
Harry helps Yakov get a visa extension for his father (Arte Johnson), who would rather hang out with Bull than with his own son. Meanwhile, Mac buys a washing machine with an attitude problem, Roz teaches Dan how to waltz, and Christine tries to choose a name for her baby.
In another compilation of court cases, Harry helps a young man appearing before his court stop his girlfriend's marriage to a prefab preppie, and Wile E. Coyote gets put on trial for his years of harassing the Road Runner.
Christine returns from having her baby and has to deal with the shadow of her replacement, good 'ole Ted, who turns out to be a con artist who gets busted for impersonating a surgeon and a lawyer. Meanwhile, Dan tries to reconnect with his long-lost sister (Susan Diol), and Harry discovers that he never graduated high school and needs to pass a ninth grade history test in order to keep his job.
Note: First appearance of Joleen Lutz as ditzy stenographer Lisette Hocheiser.
Dan is thrilled when he offers himself as a prize at a bachelor auction until he sees the passionate old woman who bids highest for him, and Christine is beginning to have doubts about her marriage to Tony.
On Halloween, Harry locks up a defendant known as the Spirit of Death (Stephen Root), whose imprisonment causes strange cases of people not dying. Meanwhile, Dan fears that he may die after seeing his obituary in the newspaper.
Two-part episode. When the staff is quarantined for the night, they spend the hours reminiscing about turning points in their lives that led them to being hired at the night court.
The staff is temporarily assigned to day court, where the cases are more serious and everyone's personality is different. Meanwhile, Tony tells Christine he wants to move out.
Dan tries to win over Margaret during a night at the opera. Meanwhile, disciples of an ancient religion stalk Bull after a tabloid story reveals that one of their gods looks just like him.
Harry has to summon the courage to face a bully (Donald Gibb) from his childhood who is brought before him in court. Meanwhile, Christine, with the help of Roz, searches for a live-in nanny after her previous one is jailed for aggravated assault.
A street artist helps raise Christine's spirits, but his crush on her may land him jail time for repeat offenses. Meanwhile, Mac indulges a passion for photography, and so does Dan when he uses Mac's camera to take pictures of his latest sexual conquest.
Harry tries to make sense of a feud between a foul-mouthed comedian (Louis Mustillo) and the preacher (Clifton James) who condemns his filthy stand-up routine. Meanwhile, Bull writes an autobiography, but has to sell the book himself after getting scammed by a vanity publisher.
A TV director picks the courthouse to film an episode of The Lil'est Lawyer, a legal drama about a ten-year-old lawyer. Still, the star of the show's bratty attitude rubs everyone the wrong way, including Roz. Meanwhile, Harry gets cast as a bailiff on the show, but finds that he's not good at acting.
Dan anticipates a windfall from Phil the bum's will but gets a surprise instead. Meanwhile, Bull anxiously awaits a visit from his mother, an old salt due to retire from the sea and come live with her sonny boy.
Christine finds herself tense over finalizing her divorce, Harry is nervous about moving in with Margaret, Dan is frustrated over what to do with the Phil Foundation money, and Bull follows his mother's advice and looks for a wife — with the help of a matchmaker.
Harry gets a wealth of conflicting advice when he confides in his friends that he thinks Margaret is about to propose marriage, but Margaret has a bombshell that's bigger than Harry's proposal. Meanwhile, Christine has a divorce party.
165
18
"Hey Harry, F'Crying Out Loud — It is a Wonderful Life... Sorta"
In this homage to It's A Wonderful Life, Harry is still depressed over his girlfriend, Margaret, leaving him. After angrily snapping at his friends and lamenting over taking his night court judge job, a guardian angel who looks like Mel Tormé visits Harry to show him what life would be like if he never took the job, which includes Dan becoming a corrupt judge, Mac becoming a bitterly-divorced district attorney, Christine losing her optimism and falling for Judge Dan, Roz being put in jail for protesting against the poor conditions of Dan's apartments, and Bull being elected deputy mayor and set up to be framed for Dan's crimes.
166
19
"To Sleep, No More"
Jim Drake
Story by : Tom Abraham & Mike Underwood Teleplay by : Bob Underwood
The court staff worries that Dan's insomnia over spending all his time preparing for the Phil Foundation banquet may be affecting his sanity. Meanwhile, Bull wins a high-end toupee in a cereal contest, and his new hair attracts all the women who once thought he was weird and repulsive.
Roz tries Christine's "happy therapy" and sets the group back several months. Meanwhile, Jack's son finally admits to himself and his dad that running the newsstand isn't for him, and Dan's dealing with the Phil Foundation opens his eyes to all of society's ills.
Harry gets riled when a Supreme Court judge woos Mac away to serve as a vote-getting token on his staff and Dan hires a British valet in an attempt to replace Phil.
Harry lets an article naming him one of New York's ten most interesting men go to his head, and he disappoints Christine by fibbing to get out of date. Meanwhile, Dan tries to live up to his responsibilities as head of the Phil Foundation.
Harry experiences some very mixed emotions when Tony tries to win Christine back, and the transformed Dan gets some help in running the Phil Foundation, from Phil's twin brother Will.
Harry wrestles with his feelings for Christine. Meanwhile, with Dan missing, the court hires a loud-mouthed, amoral DA named Oscar (Gilbert Gottfried) and Christine, who is also wrestling with her feelings for Harry, gets kidnapped at a costume party.
Christine finds herself in the court's sub-basement with Dan, who now goes by The Phantom of the Courthouse. Meanwhile, a detective is out to bust Dan for embezzlement, Bull keeps searching for Dan, and Oscar asks Lisette (the ditzy stenographer) out on a date.
Harry, Dan, and Mac tell Christine, Roz, and Lisette the story of how Bull's bachelor party went pearshape after their party bus exploded and a deranged pizza delivery man kidnaps Bull.
Christine is disillusioned when a law professor (George Coe) she once idolized reveals that the good grades she earned were because she wore short skirts to his class. Meanwhile, Bull undergoes an unusual ceremony to regain his virginity, which Dan and Roz think is nonsense.
Harry has his hands full when he agrees to teach a law course with an eclectic group of students. Meanwhile, Christine writes a children's picture book showing what her job is like, but the illustrator she hires also gets hired by Dan to create a portfolio of sleazy pin-up art featuring Christine.
Bull's wedding day threatens to fall apart when bride Wanda refuses to wear Mother Hank's wedding gown, Harry and Art quarrel over being best man and Christine over-organizes everything.
On Christmas Eve, Dan tries to show a disillusioned Santa (Hansford Rowe) that the holiday spirit still exists as Harry tries to get away from a depressing lonely soul (Terri Hanauer) he's befriended.
Harry uncovers a city financial snafu when a defendant (Stephen Root) proves he owns several prominent landmarks. Meanwhile, Dan enjoys being a beauty pageant judge.
A political consultant persuades Christine to run for Congress, Dan becomes a sexual surrogate, and Mac's "artistic" take on Bull's wedding video gains a Rocky Horror Picture Show-style cult following after his video editor screens it at a midnight film festival.
Dan begins kissing up to Harry as part of his campaign to replace him on the bench when he becomes a full-time law professor, and Art, the handyman, becomes a surrogate dad to Bull when he starts dating Bull's mama.
Roz dreads meeting a male pen pal who's expecting someone just a little different from the real Roz. Meanwhile, Harry and Dan attempt to break into a safe they discover in Harry's office.
In the series finale, Harry contemplates the many job opportunities coming his way, Christine runs against a Congressman who's related to Art the janitor, Dan comes to terms with his womanizing ways when a wealthy socialite bars him from marrying her daughter and he dreams that every woman in New York City is suing him; Mac considers a career change, and Bull befriends some old men who turn out to be aliens from Jupiter who need his help on their home planet.
Roz steals the show and Dan's spot with the in-crowd when a gossip columnist discovers her and Lisette tries to deal with her erotic dreams about Harry.
Note: This episode was originally scheduled for May 6, 1992, but aired after the series finale.