This is a list of episodes of the television series Route 66 .
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "Black November" | Philip Leacock | Stirling Silliphant | October 7, 1960 | |
Tod Stiles and Buz Murdock stop in the remote town of Garth, whose residents are determined to hide a terrible secret. George Kennedy is the first heavy to get into a fight with the boys. [1] | ||||||
2 | 2 | "A Lance of Straw" | Roger Kay | Stirling Silliphant | October 14, 1960 | |
Tod and Buz work as deck hands on a shrimp boat where they deal with a hurricane and their employer (Janice Rule)'s jealous suitor (Nico Minardos). | ||||||
3 | 3 | "The Swan Bed" | Elliot Silverstein | Stirling Silliphant | October 21, 1960 | |
Tod and Buz arrive in New Orleans where they encounter a waspish woman (Betty Field), a band of smugglers and a parrot-fever epidemic. | ||||||
4 | 4 | "The Man on the Monkey Board" | Roger Kay | Stirling Silliphant | October 28, 1960 | |
A concentration-camp victim finds his Nazi tormentor at an offshore-drilling barge where Tod and Buz happen to be working. Actors Ed Asner, Lew Ayres, Roger C. Carmel, Michael Conrad, Bruce Dern, Barnard Hughes, and Alfred Ryder all appear in this episode. | ||||||
5 | 5 | "The Strengthening Angels" | Arthur Hiller | Stirling Silliphant | November 4, 1960 | |
Tod and Buz attempt to stop a sheriff from getting revenge on the woman who murdered his brother. | ||||||
6 | 6 | "Ten Drops of Water" | Philip Leacock | Howard Rodman | November 11, 1960 | |
Tod and Buz try to help a beleaguered brother (Burt Brinckerhoff) and sister (Deborah Walley) save their drought-ridden Utah ranch. | ||||||
7 | 7 | "Three Sides" | Philip Leacock | Stirling Silliphant | November 18, 1960 | |
Tod and Buz come to the aid of a wealthy Oregon rancher (E.G. Marshall) whose irresponsible children are wreaking havoc in his life and on his lands. Location: Grants Pass, OR | ||||||
8 | 8 | "Legacy for Lucia" | Philip Leacock | Story by : Melvin Levy and Stirling Silliphant Teleplay by : Stirling Silliphant | November 25, 1960 | |
A Sicilian woman (Arlene Martel) arrives in Oregon to sell the "deed" to the state given to her by a GI during World War II so she can raise money for her church. | ||||||
9 | 9 | "Layout at Glen Canyon" | Elliot Silverstein | Stirling Silliphant | December 2, 1960 | |
Buz and Tod are assigned to guard a group of models. [2] | ||||||
10 | 10 | "The Beryllium Eater" | Alvin Ganzer | Richard Collins | December 9, 1960 | |
An elderly prospector (Edgar Buchanan)'s luck changes – for the worse – when he strikes a rich ore vein. | ||||||
11 | 11 | "A Fury Slinging Flame" | Elliot Silverstein | Stirling Silliphant | December 30, 1960 | |
A scientist (Leslie Nielsen) declares his intention to stay in the Carisbad Caverns until a nuclear war is over. | ||||||
12 | 12 | "Sheba" | William Claxton | Stirling Silliphant | January 6, 1961 | |
Tod and Buz help a widow (Whitney Blake) who's been framed for theft by a ruthless cattleman (Lee Marvin). | ||||||
13 | 13 | "The Quick and the Dead" | Alvin Ganzer | Story by : Charles Beaumont and Jerry Sohl Teleplay by : Stirling Silliphant | January 13, 1961 | |
Tod and Buz head to Riverside Raceway and get involved with a family on opposite sides of the father's future as a race-car driver. | ||||||
14 | 14 | "Play It Glissando" | Lewis Allen | Stirling Silliphant | January 20, 1961 | |
A jazz trumpeter (Jack Lord) is accused of trying to murder his wife (Anne Francis). | ||||||
15 | 15 | "The Clover Throne" | Arthur Hiller | Herman Meadow | January 27, 1961 | |
A date farmer (Jack Warden)'s ward (Anne Helm) is planning to leave him and a new road is about to cut through his property. | ||||||
16 | 16 | "Fly Away Home: Part 1" | Arthur Hiller | Stirling Silliphant | February 10, 1961 | |
A pilot (Michael Rennie) who believes he's a jinx attempts to help a widow and her daughter save their crop-dusting business from financial trouble. | ||||||
17 | 17 | "Fly Away Home: Part 2" | Arthur Hiller | Stirling Silliphant | February 17, 1961 | |
Summers (Michael Rennie) accepts a dangerous crop-dusting job in order to save the company for which he works from having to close down. | ||||||
18 | 18 | "Sleep on Four Pillows" | Ted Post | Stirling Silliphant | February 24, 1961 | |
Tod and Buz stop in Los Angeles where they encounter a teenager (Patty McCormack) who claims to be on the run from the mob. | ||||||
19 | 19 | "An Absence of Tears" | Alvin Ganzer | Stirling Silliphant | March 3, 1961 | |
Tod and Buz meet a blind woman (Martha Hyer) bent on killing the people who murdered her husband. | ||||||
20 | 20 | "Like a Motherless Child" | David Lowell Rich | Story by : Betty Andrews Teleplay by : Howard Rodman | March 17, 1961 | |
Buz deals with long-suppressed memories of living in an orphanage when he and Tod cross paths with a runaway orphan (played by Benedict Herrman) in Nevada. Sylvia Sidney and Jack Weston appear in prominent roles in a separate storyline. | ||||||
21 | 21 | "Effigy in Snow" | Alvin Ganzer | Stirling Silliphant | March 24, 1961 | |
A deranged killer (Scott Marlowe) terrorizes a ski lodge in Squaw Valley. | ||||||
22 | 22 | "Eleven, the Hard Way" | William A. Graham | George Clayton Johnson | April 7, 1961 | |
Tod and Buz, driving through Nevada, help protect the bankroll of two men who are from the dried up mining town of Broken Knee. The two men are heading to Reno to try to win enough money at the craps to fund a project that could save their town. Edward Andrews and Walter Matthau guest star. | ||||||
23 | 23 | "Most Vanquished, Most Victorious" | William Dario Faralla | Stirling Silliphant | April 14, 1961 | |
Tod's Aunt Kitty (Beatrice Straight) wants to see her long-lost daughter before she dies, sending him and Buz on a depressing search through the slums of Los Angeles. | ||||||
24 | 24 | "Don't Count Stars" | Paul Wendkos | Stirling Silliphant | April 28, 1961 | |
A drunk is wasting his young ward's inheritance. | ||||||
25 | 25 | "The Newborn" | Arthur Hiller | Story by : Herb Purdum Teleplay by : Stirling Silliphant | May 5, 1961 | |
Tod and Buz encounter a pregnant Indian girl on the run from her tyrannical father-in-law. | ||||||
26 | 26 | "A Skill for Hunting" | David Lowell Rich | Jack Turley and Milton Gelman | May 12, 1961 | |
Tod and Buz face the wrath of a trucking tycoon (Gene Evans) determined to expand his business. | ||||||
27 | 27 | "Trap at Cordova" | Arthur Hiller | Story by : Joseph Vogel Teleplay by : Stirling Silliphant | May 26, 1961 | |
Tod and Buz are convicted of a violating a local law in a small New Mexico town where they're sentenced to teach a year of school. | ||||||
28 | 28 | "The Opponent" | David Lowell Rich | Story by : Leonard Freeman Teleplay by : Stirling Silliphant | June 2, 1961 | |
Buz's boyhood idol, a one-time boxing champ, is now barely ekeing out a career as a washed-up, easy-to-defeat "opponent". Featuring Darren McGavin, Ed Asner, and Lois Nettleton. | ||||||
29 | 29 | "Welcome to Amity" | Arthur Hiller | Will Lorin | June 9, 1961 | |
The residents of small town band together to stop a young woman (Susan Oliver) from burying her despised mother in the local cemetery. Location: Amity, Ohio. | ||||||
30 | 30 | "Incident on a Bridge" | David Lowell Rich | Stirling Silliphant | June 16, 1961 | |
Tod and Buz watch as a pair of violent, quick-tempered men compete for the hand of their landlord's mute daughter. |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
31 | 1 | "A Month of Sundays" | Arthur Hiller | Stirling Silliphant | September 22, 1961 | |
Buz courts an actress (Anne Francis), unaware that she only has three weeks to live. | ||||||
32 | 2 | "Blue Murder" | Arthur Hiller | Story by : Wilbur Daniel Steele Teleplay by : Stirling Silliphant | September 29, 1961 | |
A wild stallion is the prime suspect in series of brutal murders. | ||||||
33 | 3 | "Good Night, Sweet Blues" | Jack Smight | Story by : Leonard Freeman and Will Lorin Teleplay by : Will Lorin | October 6, 1961 | |
Tod and Buz go coast-to-coast to find a dying singer (Ethel Waters)'s old band. | ||||||
34 | 4 | "Birdcage on My Foot" | Elliot Silverstein | Story by : Stirling Silliphant and Elliot Silverstein Teleplay by : Stirling Silliphant | October 13, 1961 | |
Tod tries to rehabilitate a hostile drug addict (Robert Duvall). | ||||||
35 | 5 | "First Class Mouliak" | William Conrad | John Vlahos | October 20, 1961 | |
A Cleveland girl's death sets off a search for her boyfriend (Robert Redford), who must explain that her death was an accident before he pays the ultimate price at the hands of the girl's father (Martin Balsam). Location: Cleveland, OH | ||||||
36 | 6 | "Once to Every Man" | Arthur Hiller | Frank L. Moss | October 27, 1961 | |
A globe-trotting heiress on the run falls in love with Tod. | ||||||
37 | 7 | "The Mud Nest" | James Sheldon | Story by : Leonard Freeman Teleplay by : Stirling Silliphant | November 10, 1961 | |
Buz thinks he may have found his mother when he and Tod stop in a small Maryland town. George Maharais’s real-life siblings – brothers Mark and Hank and sister Cleopatra appear as the Colby clan. | ||||||
38 | 8 | "A Bridge Across Five Days" | Richard Donner | Howard Rodman | November 17, 1961 | |
Tod and Buz befriend a woman (Nina Foch) who has just been released from a mental institute. | ||||||
39 | 9 | "Mon Petit Chou" | Sam Peckinpah | Stirling Silliphant | November 24, 1961 | |
Tod takes action when an impresario, haunted by the memory of his cheating wife, mistreats his protégée. | ||||||
40 | 10 | "Some of the People, Some of the Time" | Robert Altman | Stirling Silliphant | December 1, 1961 | |
Max Coyle promises a movie role to the winner of a beauty contest. | ||||||
41 | 11 | "The Thin White Line" | David Lowell Rich | Story by : Jordan Brotman & Bill Stine Teleplay by : Leonard Freeman | December 8, 1961 | |
Tod's drink is spiked with a hallucinatory drug, making him a danger to himself and to others. | ||||||
42 | 12 | "And the Cat Jumped Over the Moon" | Elliot Silverstein | Frank L. Moss | December 15, 1961 | |
Tod and Buz get caught up in a gang war as they try to help a harried social worker. | ||||||
43 | 13 | "Burning for Burning" | Charles Haas | Stirling Silliphant | December 29, 1961 | |
A widow tries to make amends with her bitter mother-in-law. | ||||||
44 | 14 | "To Walk with the Serpent" | James Sheldon | Will Lorin | January 5, 1962 | |
Tod and Buz help an FBI agent stop a madman from setting off a bomb in Boston. | ||||||
45 | 15 | "A Long Piece of Mischief" | David Lowell Rich | Story by : Richard Shapiro and Esther Mayesh Teleplay by : Stirling Silliphant | January 19, 1962 | |
Tod and Buz come to the aid of a rodeo clown whom no one takes seriously, especially the woman he loves. | ||||||
46 | 16 | "1800 Days to Justice" | David Lowell Rich | Jo Pagano | January 26, 1962 | |
An ex-con convinces a small-town to organise the trial of the man who was responsible for wrongly putting him in jail. | ||||||
47 | 17 | "A City of Wheels" | David Lowell Rich | Frank Chase | February 2, 1962 | |
A beautiful woman tries to help a paraplegic out of self-pity and frustration. | ||||||
48 | 18 | "How Much a Pound Is Albatross?" | David Lowell Rich | Stirling Silliphant | February 9, 1962 | |
Tod falls for a flaky female motorcyclist (Julie Newmar). | ||||||
49 | 19 | "Aren't You Surprised to See Me?" | James Sheldon | Stirling Silliphant | February 16, 1962 | |
A religious madman takes Buz hostage and threatens to kill him unless the people of Dallas go a full day without committing sin. | ||||||
50 | 20 | "You Never Had It So Good" | James Sheldon | Story by : Frank L. Moss Teleplay by : Frank L. Moss and Stirling Silliphant | February 23, 1962 | |
Buz is promoted to an executive position at a large construction factory. | ||||||
51 | 21 | "Shoulder the Sky My Lad" | David Lowell Rich | Mort Thaw | March 2, 1962 | |
Tod and Buz pursue a 13-year-old boy who ran away following his father's murder. | ||||||
52 | 22 | "Blues for a Left Foot" | Arthur Hiller | Leonard Freeman | March 9, 1962 | |
Tod helps an old girlfriend whose dancing career is in jeopardy. | ||||||
53 | 23 | "Go Read the River" | Arthur Hiller | Stirling Silliphant | March 16, 1962 | |
Tod tries to help a girl make peace with her estranged father. | ||||||
54 | 24 | "Even Stones Have Eyes" | Robert Gist | Barry Trivers | March 30, 1962 | |
Buz loses his sight in an accident at a construction company where he's working. | ||||||
55 | 25 | "Love Is a Skinny Kid" | James Sheldon | Stirling Silliphant | April 6, 1962 | |
The arrival of a masked girl in a small Texas town sets off a series of chaotic events. | ||||||
56 | 26 | "Kiss the Maiden All Forlorn" | David Lowell Rich | Stirling Silliphant | April 13, 1962 | |
An embezzler (Douglas Fairbanks Jr.) returns from his sanctuary abroad to stop his daughter (Zina Bethune) from becoming a nun. | ||||||
57 | 27 | "Two on the House" | David Lowell Rich | Gilbert Ralston | April 20, 1962 | |
A construction tycoon has no time for his 12-year-old son, even when he receives a letter threatening the boy's life. | ||||||
58 | 28 | "There I Am, There I Always Am" | John Newland | Stirling Silliphant | May 4, 1962 | |
Buz tries to rescue a girl trapped between two rocks off the coast of Catalina Island. | ||||||
59 | 29 | "Between Hello and Goodbye" | David Lowell Rich | Stirling Silliphant | May 11, 1962 | |
Tod falls in love with an emotionally disturbed woman whose life is oddly connected with that of her lookalike sister. | ||||||
60 | 30 | "A Feat of Strength" | David Lowell Rich | Story by : Everett DeBaum Teleplay by : Howard Rodman and Joseph Petracca | May 18, 1962 | |
A wrestling promoter is in love with the wife of the wrestler he's attempting to free from a Hungarian prison. | ||||||
61 | 31 | "Hell Is Empty, All the Devils Are Here" | Paul Stanley | Stirling Silliphant | May 25, 1962 | |
The owner of an animal exhibition (Peter Graves) plots to avenge the death of his first wife. | ||||||
62 | 32 | "From an Enchantress Fleeing" | William A. Graham | Story by : Abram S. Ginnes Teleplay by : Stirling Silliphant | June 1, 1962 | |
Tod tries to reconcile a successful dentist with her husband. |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
63 | 1 | "One Tiger to a Hill" | David Lowell Rich | Stirling Silliphant | September 21, 1962 | |
Tod and Buz clash with a fisherman whose wartime experiences have turned him against mankind. | ||||||
64 | 2 | "Journey to Nineveh" | David Lowell Rich | William R. Cox | September 28, 1962 | |
Buz and Tod arrive in Harleyville, Missouri, where they deal with the town jinx (Buster Keaton). | ||||||
65 | 3 | "Man Out of Time" | David Lowell Rich | Larry Marcus | October 5, 1962 | |
An ex-gangster (Luther Adler) believes there's a price on his head as soon as he's released from jail. | ||||||
66 | 4 | "Ever Ride the Waves in Oklahoma?" | Robert Gist | Story by : Borden Chase and Frank Chase Teleplay by : Stirling Silliphant | October 12, 1962 | |
Buz is tricked into challenging a surfing champ to a dangerous ride that got another youth killed. | ||||||
67 | 5 | "Voice at the End of the Line" | David Lowell Rich | Larry Marcus | October 19, 1962 | |
Buz helps a shy man prepare to meet a girl he only knows over the phone. | ||||||
68 | 6 | "Lizard's Leg and Owlet's Wing" | Robert Gist | Stirling Silliphant | October 26, 1962 | |
Buz gets a job overseeing a secretaries' convention, while Tod has to moderate a meeting between Lon Chaney Jr., Boris Karloff and Peter Lorre. | ||||||
69 | 7 | "Across Walnuts and Wine" | Herbert B. Leonard | Stirling Silliphant | November 2, 1962 | |
Tod and Buz meet a struggling businesswoman (Nina Foch) who attends daily seances to solve her problems. | ||||||
70 | 8 | "Welcome to the Wedding" | George Sherman | Howard Rodman | November 9, 1962 | |
A sociopath murderer (Rod Steiger) who says he has no feelings and has never known remorse takes Tod hostage at gunpoint to hunt for hidden loot. | ||||||
71 | 9 | "Every Father's Daughter a.k.a Every Father's Daughter Must Weave Her Own" | Richard L. Bare | Anthony Lawrence | November 16, 1962 | |
Buz falls for a girl (Madlyn Rhue) caught between her overprotective father (Jack Kruschen) and self-righteous brother (Robert Drivas). | ||||||
72 | 10 | "Poor Little Kangaroo Rat" | Walter E. Grauman | Les Pine | November 23, 1962 | |
A doctor hires Buz and Tod to capture sharks for his cholesterol research. | ||||||
73 | 11 | "Hey Moth, Come Eat the Flame" | James Sheldon | Stirling Silliphant | November 30, 1962 | |
Tod and Buz try to help a teenager deal with his father's alcoholism. | ||||||
74 | 12 | "Only by Cunning Glimpses" | Tom Gries | Story by : Stirling Silliphant and Preston Wood Teleplay by : Stirling Silliphant | December 7, 1962 | |
Tod tries to disprove a spiritualist (Lois Smith)'s prediction that he will kill Buz. | ||||||
75 | 13 | "Where Is Chick Lorrimer? Where Has He Gone?" | George Sherman | Story by : Bert Lambert Teleplay by : Larry Marcus | December 14, 1962 | |
Tod tries to find a fast-talking strip teaser he unknowingly helped escape from a surly bail bondsman. | ||||||
76 | 14 | "Give an Old Cat a Tender Mouse" | Tom Gries | Stirling Silliphant | December 21, 1962 | |
A persistent policeman helps Tod stay just one step behind Vicki Russell. | ||||||
77 | 15 | "A Bunch of Lonely Pagliaccis" | Tom Gries | Stirling Silliphant | January 4, 1963 | |
Tod investigates the murder of a man who was supposedly unfaithful to his wife. | ||||||
78 | 16 | "You Can't Pick Cotton in Tahiti" | Robert Ellis Miller | Shimon Wincelberg | January 11, 1963 | |
A country girl falls for a man who's broken a lot of hearts. | ||||||
79 | 17 | "A Gift for a Warrior" | David Lowell Rich | Television Story and Teleplay: Larry Marcus Based on a story by: Harlan Ellison | January 18, 1963 | |
A young German sailor sets out to find his father and kill him. | ||||||
80 | 18 | "Suppose I Said I Was the Queen of Spain" | David Lowell Rich | Story by : Jerome B. Thomas Teleplay by : Stirling Silliphant | February 8, 1963 | |
Tod looks for a girl (Lois Nettleton) who uses a different alias every time he sees her. | ||||||
81 | 19 | "Somehow It Gets to Be Tomorrow" | David Lowell Rich | Stirling Silliphant | February 15, 1963 | |
Tod befriends a 13-year-old boy and inadvertently worsens the boy's troubled relationship with his foster parents. | ||||||
82 | 20 | "Shall Forfeit His Dog and Ten Shillings to the King" | Tom Gries | Stirling Silliphant | February 22, 1963 | |
Tod joins a posse when he witnesses a brutal murder. | ||||||
83 | 21 | "In the Closing of a Trunk" | Ralph Senensky | Stirling Silliphant | March 8, 1963 | |
After 27 years in prison, a woman (Ruth Roman) returns to a village in the Gulf Coast to find her son while facing continuing hostility in the village. | ||||||
84 | 22 | "The Cage Around Maria" | George Sherman | Jesse Sandler | March 15, 1963 | |
Maria Cardenas (Elizabeth Ashley) intends to commit suicide when she finds herself caught between her amorous stepfather (Mario Alcalde), her invalid mother (Beatrice Straight), and Tod. | ||||||
85 | 23 | "Fifty Miles from Home" | James Sheldon | Stirling Silliphant | March 22, 1963 | |
Vietnam War hero Linc Case has trouble living up to his reputation, especially when he gets into a brawl with a youth. | ||||||
86 | 24 | "Narcissus on an Old Red Fire Engine" | Ralph Senensky | Joel Carpenter | March 29, 1963 | |
Linc falls for a woman (Anne Helm) with periodic journeys into an imaginary world. | ||||||
87 | 25 | "The Cruelest Sea of All" | James Sheldon | Stirling Silliphant | April 5, 1963 | |
A mysterious show swimmer (Diane Baker) falls for Tod. She's reluctant to talk about her past and Tod can't believe some of what she does reveal. Location: Weeki Wachee, FL | ||||||
88 | 26 | "Peace, Pity, Pardon" | Robert Ellis Miller | Stirling Silliphant | April 12, 1963 | |
A Cuban supports Castro's government, while his brothers oppose it. | ||||||
89 | 27 | "What a Shining Young Man Was Our Gallant Lieutenant" | James Goldstone | Howard Rodman | April 26, 1963 | |
Linc attempts to help his former Army platoon leader Lt. School (Dick York), whose war injuries have left him permanently with the mind of a seven-year-old. | ||||||
90 | 28 | "But What Do You Do in March?" | Robert Ellis Miller | Stirling Silliphant | May 3, 1963 | |
Tod hunts down the speedboat driver who wrecked his dinghy then he and Linc get mixed up with two rich spoiled women (Janice Rule and Susan Kohner). Location: Tierra Verde, FL | ||||||
91 | 29 | "Who Will Cheer My Bonnie Bride?" | James Goldstone | Shimon Wincelberg | May 10, 1963 | |
Linc is suspected of being a thief when a pair of hoodlums (Albert Salmi and Rip Torn) force him at gunpoint to drive their getaway car. | ||||||
92 | 30 | "Shadows of an Afternoon" | James Sheldon | Story by : Leonard Freeman and Eric Scott Teleplay by : Leonard Freeman and Alvin Sargent | May 17, 1963 | |
In a small Florida town, Linc is thrown in jail on a false charge of hurting a dog, whose life he actually saved. | ||||||
93 | 31 | "Soda Pop and Paper Flags" | Fred Jackman | John McGreevey | May 24, 1963 | |
An epidemic breaks out in a Midwestern town where Tod, Linc and a drifter (Chester Morris) are working – and one of them is suspected of being the carrier. Locations: Highland, Illinois; St. Louis, Missouri. |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
94 | 1 | "Two Strangers and an Old Enemy" | Walter E. Grauman | Stirling Silliphant | September 27, 1963 | |
A Japanese man (Sessue Hayakawa) joins the search for a pilot who crashed in the Everglades, their lives somehow connected. Location: Cape Coral, FL | ||||||
95 | 2 | "Same Picture, Different Frame" | Philip Leacock | Stirling Silliphant | October 4, 1963 | |
A distraught woman (Joan Crawford) is on the run from her deranged ex-husband whom she believes is bent on murdering her. Location: Poland Spring, ME | ||||||
96 | 3 | "Come Out, Come Out Wherever You Are" | Alvin Ganzer | Story by : Richard Jessup Teleplay by : Anthony Basta and Stirling Silliphant | October 11, 1963 | |
Tod prepares for the worst when Linc falls for a fickle French-Canadian girl (Diane Baker). | ||||||
97 | 4 | "Where Are the Sounds of Celli Brahms?" | Allen Miner | Stirling Silliphant | October 18, 1963 | |
Linc gets ready to judge a beauty contest, while Tod attempts to keep up with a tireless acoustical engineer (Tammy Grimes) who lacks some important social skills. Location: Minneapolis, MN | ||||||
98 | 5 | "Build Your Houses with Their Backs to the Sea" | Frank R. Pierson | Frank R. Pierson | October 25, 1963 | |
Ted and Linc get caught in the middle of a feud between a fisherman (Pat Hingle) and his son (William Shatner). Location: Portland, ME | ||||||
99 | 6 | "And Make Thunder His Tribute" | Leonard Horn | Lewis John Carlino | November 1, 1963 | |
A stubborn farmer (J. Carrol Naish) constantly clashes with his rebellious son (Lou Antonio). | ||||||
100 | 7 | "The Stone Guest" | Allen Miner | Stirling Silliphant | November 8, 1963 | |
In Colorado, an opera troupe's production of Don Giovanni is topped by an off-stage affair between a philandering miner (Lee Philips) and a lonely woman (Jo Van Fleet). | ||||||
101 | 8 | "I Wouldn't Start from Here" | Allen Miner | Ernest Kinoy | November 15, 1963 | |
Tod and Linc work for an elderly New England farmer (Parker Fennelly) trying to make a living. Location: Newfane, VT | ||||||
102 | 9 | "A Cage in Search of a Bird" | James Sheldon | Stirling Silliphant | November 29, 1963 [lower-alpha 1] | |
An elderly uncaught bank robber wants to bestow his illicit fortune on a dicey woman (Stefanie Powers) who is on the run from her fellow cardsharp boyfriend (Alex Cord). Location: Denver & Golden, CO | ||||||
103 | 10 | "A Long Way from St. Louie" | Alvin Ganzer | Stirling Silliphant | December 6, 1963 | |
Linc tries to help five women who've been sent out into the cold by an unfeeling hotel manager. Location: Toronto, Ontario, Canada | ||||||
104 | 11 | "Come Home, Greta Inger Gruenchaffen" | Philip Leacock | Joel Carpenter | December 13, 1963 | |
Tod and Linc compete for the attentions of physical culturist Greta Inger Gruenchaffen (Tammy Grimes). Location: Mt. Snow, VT | ||||||
105 | 12 | "93 Percent in Smiling" | Philip Leacock | Story by : Walter Brough and Alvin Sargent Teleplay by : Alvin Sargent | December 20, 1963 | |
After years of nomadic living in a mobile home due to their father (Albert Salmi)'s inability to satisfactorily provide for his family, two children decide to give their baby brother a better life in an empty house. | ||||||
106 | 13 | "Child of a Night" | Allen Miner | Stirling Silliphant | January 3, 1964 | |
Linc is sent on a mission to deliver $38,000 to a dying man (Herschel Bernardi)'s child. Location: Savannah, GA. Daniel J. Travanti, early in his career, plays Marty Johnson. | ||||||
107 | 14 | "Is It True There Are Poxies at the Bottom of Landfair Lake?" | John Peyser | Alvin Sargent | January 10, 1964 | |
Simon Devereaux (Geoffrey Horne) returns home from his humiliating experiences in the Army and sets out to shield his father Amos (Crahan Denton) and sister Olivia (E. J. Peaker) from "city folks". Olivia is bored with small-town life and wants to experience the rest of the world. Location: Midville, GA | ||||||
108 | 15 | "Like This It Means Father, Like This Bitter, Like This Tiger" | Jeffrey Hayden | Stirling Silliphant | January 17, 1964 | |
Linc ruins a coward (Larry Blyden)'s attempts at burying his past. Location: Savannah, GA | ||||||
109 | 16 | "Kiss the Monster, Make Him Sleep" | Allen Reisner | Stanley R. Greenberg | January 24, 1964 | |
Linc falls for a woman (Barbara Mattes) seeking to be independent of her possessive brother (James Coburn). Location: Minneapolis, MN | ||||||
110 | 17 | "Cries of Persons Close to One" | Allen Miner | Story by : William Kelley Teleplay by : Howard Rodman | January 31, 1964 | |
A third-rate fighter throws fits of depression and violent outbursts after years of alcoholism. | ||||||
111 | 18 | "Who in His Right Mind Needs a Nice Girl?" | Jeffrey Hayden | Joel Carpenter | February 7, 1964 | |
A murderer (Lee Philips) wants a librarian (Lois Smith) to help him escape the authorities. Location: Daytona Beach, FL | ||||||
112 | 19 | "This Is Going to Hurt Me More Than It Hurts You" | Alvin Ganzer | Stirling Silliphant | February 14, 1964 | |
Several "desperately sick" women plot to exploit a millionaire's weakness for ill people. Location: The Ponce de Leon Hotel, St. Augustine, FL | ||||||
113 | 20 | "Follow the White Dove with the Broken Wing" | Denis Sanders | Alvin Sargent | February 21, 1964 | |
A disturbed teenager (Lee Kinsolving) kills his only friend by accident and becomes the target of an angry posse. Location: St. Augustine, FL | ||||||
114 | 21 | "Where There's a Will, There's a Way: Part 1" | Alvin Ganzer | Stirling Silliphant | March 6, 1964 | |
Tod must get married in order to receive $100,000. Location: Tampa Bay area, FL | ||||||
115 | 22 | "Where There's a Will, There's a Way: Part 2" | Alvin Ganzer | Stirling Silliphant | March 13, 1964 | |
Now that Tod is married to Margo Tiffin (Barbara Eden) his life is endangered by his greedy new in-laws. Location: Tampa Bay area, FL | ||||||
116 | 23 | "I'm Here to Kill a King" | Allen Reisner | Stirling Silliphant | March 20, 1964 | |
A hired assassin bears a remarkable resemblance to Tod. Location: Niagara Falls, NY |
U.S. Route 66 or U.S. Highway 66 was one of the original highways in the United States Numbered Highway System. It was established on November 11, 1926, with road signs erected the following year. The highway, which became one of the most famous roads in the United States, ran from Chicago, Illinois, through Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona before terminating in Santa Monica in Los Angeles County, California, covering a total of 2,448 miles (3,940 km).
The year 1963 involved some significant events in television. Below are lists of notable TV-related events.
Alfred Hitchcock Presents is an American television anthology series created, hosted and produced by Alfred Hitchcock, airing on CBS and NBC, alternately, between 1955 and 1965. It features dramas, thrillers, and mysteries. Between 1962 and 1965, it was renamed The Alfred Hitchcock Hour. Hitchcock himself directed only 18 episodes during its run.
Sorrell Booke was an American actor who performed on stage, screen, and television. He acted in more than 100 plays and 150 television shows, and is best known for his role as corrupt politician Jefferson Davis "Boss" Hogg in the television show The Dukes of Hazzard.
Frank Romer Pierson was an American screenwriter and film director.
Martin Sam Milner was an American actor and radio host. He is best known for his performances on two television series: Route 66, which aired on CBS from 1960 to 1964, and Adam-12, which aired on NBC from 1968 to 1975.
Glenn Corbett was an American actor in movies and television for more than 30 years. He came to national attention in the early 1960s, when he replaced George Maharis in the cast of the popular CBS adventure drama Route 66. He followed this with roles in high-profile films and television shows, including a guest role in the original Star Trek series, the daytime soap opera The Doctors, the primetime soap Dallas, and movies such as Chisum with John Wayne, as one of Jimmy Stewart's sons in Shenandoah, and the World War II epic Midway.
Tammy Lee Grimes was an American film and stage actress and singer.
Anne Helm is a retired Canadian-born actress and children's author, who primarily appeared in guest roles on episodes of various American television series. Her few film roles include playing Elvis Presley's love interest in the 1962 film Follow That Dream. Helm had two recurring roles, playing Molly Pierce in five episodes during the 85-episode run of the mid-1960s series Run for Your Life and playing the minor role of nurse Mary Briggs in an unknown number of episodes of the daily soap opera General Hospital from 1971 to 1973.
Route 66 is an American adventure crime drama television series that premiered on CBS on October 7, 1960, and ran until March 20, 1964, for a total of 116 episodes. The series was created by Herbert B. Leonard and Stirling Silliphant, who were also responsible for the ABC drama Naked City, from which Route 66 was an indirect spin-off. Both series employed a format with elements of both traditional drama and anthology drama, but the difference was where the shows were set: Naked City was set in New York City, while Route 66 had its setting change from week to week, with each episode being shot on location.
Everett H. Sloane was an American character actor who worked in radio, theatre, films, and television.
Neil Oliver "Bing" Russell was an American actor and Class A minor-league baseball club owner. He was the father of Hollywood actor Kurt Russell and grandfather of ex–major league baseball player Matt Franco and actor Wyatt Russell.
Naked City is an American police procedural television series from Screen Gems that aired on ABC from 1958 to 1963. It was inspired by the 1948 motion picture The Naked City and mimics its dramatic "semi-documentary" format. As in the film, each episode concluded with a narrator intoning the iconic line: "There are eight million stories in the naked city. This has been one of them."
Simon Oakland was an American actor of stage, screen, and television.
Michael Conrad was an American actor perhaps best known for his portrayal of veteran cop Sgt. Phil Esterhaus on Hill Street Blues. He won two Emmy Awards for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series for Hill Street Blues in 1981 and 1982.
George Maharis was an American actor, singer, and visual artist who portrayed Buz Murdock in the first three seasons of the TV series Route 66. Maharis also recorded several pop music albums at the height of his fame, and later starred in the TV series The Most Deadly Game.
Mike Kellin was an American actor.
Mary Janice Rule was an American actress and psychotherapist, earning her PhD while still acting, then acting occasionally while working in her new profession.
Elliot Silverstein was an American film and television director. He directed the Academy Award-winning western comedy Cat Ballou (1965), and other films including The Happening (1967), A Man Called Horse (1970), Nightmare Honeymoon (1974), and The Car (1977). His television work includes four episodes of The Twilight Zone (1961–1964).
Lane Nakano was a former American combat soldier turned actor.