
The Beverly Hillbillies
Sonny decides he needs to be Pygmalion to Elly and remake her from a hillbilly into a woman of society.

Sonny decides he needs to be Pygmalion to Elly and remake her from a hillbilly into a woman of society.

Elly May's first date in Beverly Hills ends in a riot of confusion before it even starts.

A private school teacher is shocked to learn that her new fifth-grade student is Jethro.

The homesick Clampetts, unaware that it's Halloween, decide to go calling on their Beverly Hills neighbors.

Upon Mr. Drysdale's advice to buy good stock, Jed purchases cows, pigs and chickens to raise.

When Mr. Drysdale describes his wife as a hypochondriac, the Clampetts assume she's a tippler.

The Clampetts find that their mansion is a poor substitute for their mountain shack.

A Beverly Hills psychiatrist pursues Granny instead of Pearl when Granny's love potion misfires.

Jed acts as his own attorney when he's sued by a couple seeking damages for a fake accident.

Prejudice erupts on both sides when Ben gives an Indian named Matsou and his wife some of his land after Matsou saves Ben's life from a renegade Indian who almost killed him on the Ponderosa.

Ranchers are being killed, cattle stolen, even after the U.S. deputy marshal sends posses after the suspects.

Jacob Darien is leading his family of Quakers through Virginia City.

The Clampetts find that their mansion is a poor substitute for their mountain shack.

A rural Ozark family relocates to Beverly Hills after oil is discovered on their property worth 25 million dollars.

Freeloader Lafe Crick lingers at the Clampett mansion as an unwanted guest in search of an easy fortune.

Some old love letters from Jethro lead mountain man Lafe Crick and his daughter, Essiebelle, to Beverly Hills.

An banker sends Drysdale a kangaroo as a joke and Granny thinks she has discovered a giant jackrabbit.

Quirt Manly, celebrated star of Westerns, is invited to the Clampett mansion to try to tame Elly May.

Rachel Barrett's act of kindness toward an injured Native leads to her family's capture by his fellow tribesmen. Despite their lives being endangered, Rachel continues to be compassionate, which impresses the chief.

A spectacular wrinkle develops around an aging marshal's refusal to wear glasses.