TV Shows - Beverly Hillbillies
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- DirectorRichard WhorfStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasThe Clampetts begin to settle in their new home in Beverly Hills, California. They are having to adjust to things such as refrigerators (Granny remarks how a ham will require two days to thaw out), ovens and the "cement pond." Jed also is having to confront how his daughter Elly May is maturing. He tells her that he, in effect, raised her as a boy and should not have. Jethro also encounters a flamingo that he thinks is a chicken (which causes Jed to suspect Jethro has been sneaking drinks of moonshine). Meanwhile, Miss Hathaway, executive secretary to banker Milburn Drysdale, mistakes the Clampetts for "domestic" help. She thinks Granny is a cook and Elly a maid.
- DirectorRichard WhorfStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasA father and daughter from back home come to Beverly Hills to meet Jed.
- DirectorRichard WhorfStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasEllie May starts wearing dresses but takes it as an insult when someone says she looks like a city girl. Mr. Drysdale talks Jed into taking in his butler and upstairs girl in a plan to civilize the Clampetts, but they don't quite understand the idea of servants. Miss Hathaway takes Jethro bowling and begins to show an interest in him.
- 1962–197130mNot Rated8.6 (200)TV EpisodeDirectorRichard WhorfStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasGranny encounters a kangaroo, and thinks she's found a giant jackrabbit, but no one will believe her.
- DirectorRichard WhorfStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasJed enrolls Jethro at an exclusive Beverly Hills elementary school. Millicent Schuyler-Potts, the proprietor of the school, is aghast when Jed and Jethro show up, convinced this is part of some ghastly hoax. After Jed says that banker Milburn Drysdale is his neighbor, she calls the banker. It turns out that Drysdale's bank holds the mortgage on the school. Schulyer-Potts suddenly warms to the charms of the Clampetts, even if it means accepting Jethro as a fifth grader.
- DirectorRichard WhorfStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasMrs. Drysdale recommends Elly for a high-brow finishing school in hopes that humiliating her will drive the Clampetts away; but instead Miss Hathaway convinces the girls at the school that Elly is a fashion trend-setter. Elly invites the filthy rich Fenwicks over, thinking they're destitute.
- 1962–197130mTV-PG8.4 (142)TV EpisodeDirectorRichard WhorfStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasJed and Jethro go golfing with Leo Durocher, coach of the Los Angeles Dodgers, who wants to recruit Jethro as a pitcher when he sees how well he can throw.
- 1962–197158mTV-PG8.3 (369)TV EpisodeDirectorRalph LevyStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasJed Clampett is told by a representative of an oil company that the swamp behind his shack is full of oil. (The oil company employee has been hauled in by Jed's daughter Elly May who asks whether she can keep him.) Later, Mr. Brewster, the head of the oil company, does a deal with Jed. Jed tells Cousin Pearl that he'll receive 25 to 100 of "some new kind of dollar." Pearl, thinking Jed has been "slickered", asks what kind of dollar he's talking about. "Million dollars," Granny, Jed's mother-in-law, replies. "Jed, you're a millionaire," Pearl says. "Yeah, that's what that Brewster fella said." Pearl convinces Jed to move to Beverly Hills, California (she pronounces it "Cal-i-forn-ee") and volunteers her son, Jethro, to drive Jed, Elly May and Granny there. Upon arriving, Granny complains the hills aren't that high. Jed says at least there are hills and "we'll be among our own kind of people." The Clampett clan mistakes their new home for a prison and the groundskeepers for prisoners. The Clampetts end up in jail, but Milburn Drysdale, their new banker, gets them freed. But, as Drysdale tries to take the Clampetts to their new mansion, the foursome flee, fearing they're going to prison.
- DirectorRichard WhorfStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasGranny and Cousin Pearl are at each other's throats over who's going to take care of cooking and the house, so Jed has to find ways to keep them apart.
- DirectorRichard WhorfStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasGranny and the rest of the Clampetts start a feud with the Drysdales since Sonny courted Elly May and then stood her up when granny suggested marriage.
- 1962–197130mTV-PG7.7 (131)TV EpisodeDirectorRichard WhorfStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasMrs. Drysdale leaves for a health farm, saying Mr. Drysdale is "going to have a new wife," while Mr. Drysdale tells Cousin Pearl he'd like her to keep his house. However, the Clampetts think he's wanting to marry Pearl, so Jed comes up with a plan to "save" the Drysdale's marriage.
- 1962–197130mTV-PG8.1 (113)TV EpisodeDirectorJoseph DepewStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasThe Clampetts decide to get a taste of culture to fit in the high-class society of Beverly Hills.
- 1962–197130mNot Rated7.8 (125)TV EpisodeDirectorRichard WhorfStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasThe Clampetts receive an overdraft from the bank intended for the deadbeat actor J.D. 'Jake' Clampett, while he gets their statement and starts to spend their money.
- DirectorRichard WhorfStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasMrs. Drysdale has a garden party and 'invites' the Clampetts by mistake. They end up back by their 'cement pond' to handle the 'overflow' from Mrs. Drysdale's party. A gun shot by Granny starts the real party.
- 1962–197130mNot Rated7.9 (138)TV EpisodeDirectorRichard WhorfStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasMrs. Drysdale continues to be forced into doing "practices from the past" by Mrs. Smith-Standish, who discovers that Jed's family is possibly the first to come the country. If so they'd be famous worldwide, but does Jed want that?
- 1962–197130mNot Rated7.8 (142)TV EpisodeDirectorRichard WhorfStarsBuddy EbsenIrene RyanDonna DouglasJethro decides that he wants to go a-courtin', so after Uncle Jed gives him a little education, he finds himself a woman--who happens to be a stripper. As usual, neither she or the Clampetts actually understand what the other is really saying.