- NaN/100 votes
#1 - The Swingin' Mrs. Jones
Season 1 Episode 1 - Aired 9/17/1965
Honey poses as a society matron in an effort to smash a blackmailing ring that preys on wealthy women.
Director: Paul Wendkos
Writer: Gwen Bagni, Paul Dubov
- NaN/100 votes
#2 - The Owl and the Eye
Season 1 Episode 2 - Aired 9/24/1965
In order to test a museum's security system, an insurance company hires Honey to steal a jade carving that they have insured.
Director: Paul Wendkos
Writer: William Bast
- NaN/100 votes
#3 - The Abominable Snowman
Season 1 Episode 3 - Aired 10/1/1965
A novelty salesman named Lucas hires Honey to deliver his sample case for him: Someone wants it badly enough to commit murder.
Director: Paul Wendkos
Writer: Gwen Bagni, Paul Dubov
- NaN/100 votes
#4 - A Matter of Wife and Death
Season 1 Episode 4 - Aired 10/8/1965
Someone tries to sink a ship carrying Honey and a woman who hired her after receiving anonymous death threats.
Director: John Florea
Writer: Tony Barrett
- NaN/100 votes
#5 - Live a Little, Kill a Little
Season 1 Episode 5 - Aired 10/15/1965
When the sister of a prominent businessman breaks off a relationship with a local mobster, Honey and an assassin race to be the first to find her.
Director: Murray Golden
Writer: Tony Barrett
- NaN/100 votes
#6 - Whatever Lola Wants....
Season 1 Episode 6 - Aired 10/22/1965
Honey's been hired to attend a charity ball with Ramon Vargas, and Ramon is dressed to kill—in fact,he has just committed murder.
Director: N/A
Writer: William Bast
- NaN/100 votes
#7 - The Princess and the Paupers
Season 1 Episode 7 - Aired 10/29/1965
Honey and Sam are hired to ensure that ransom money is delivered and the kidnap victim, a rock-'n'-roll singing son of a millionaire businessman, is returned safely. Honey soon suspects that the kidnapping was faked, either as a publicity stunt or so the young man could lay his hands on some easy cash.
Director: Virgil W. Vogel
Writer: Leonard Stadd
- 1.0/101 votes
#8 - In the Bag
Season 1 Episode 8 - Aired 11/5/1965
Honey manages to lose an obnoxious child she's escorting between divorced parents in a crowded airport. When security can't find the child, Honey fears the girl may have been abducted.
Director: Seymour Robbie
Writer: Gwen Bagni, Paul Dubov
- NaN/100 votes
#9 - The Flame and the Pussycat
Season 1 Episode 9 - Aired 11/12/1965
Honey and Sam attempt to capture an arsonist in order to earn a lucrative contract with a warehouse company backfires when they accidentally interfere with the police investigation.
Director: James Goldstone
Writer: George Clayton Johnson
- NaN/100 votes
#10 - A Neat Little Package
Season 1 Episode 10 - Aired 11/19/1965
Honey and Sam are hired by a newsdealer with amnesia and $150,000 that he doesn't know how it came into his possession.
Director: Murray Golden
Writer: Gwen Bagni, Paul Dubov
- NaN/100 votes
#11 - A Stitch in Crime
Season 1 Episode 11 - Aired 11/26/1965
Honey and Sam are hired to deliver gowns valued at over $100,000 to a fashion show. When their cargo is hijacked, the detectives race to recover the garments before the program or else their employer, a new dress designer, will be ruined.
Director: John Peyser
Writer: Gwen Bagni, Paul Dubov
- NaN/100 votes
#12 - A Million Bucks in Anybody's Language
Season 1 Episode 12 - Aired 12/3/1965
Honey investigates the death of a fellow private investigator found dead in an explosion. The trail leads to a set of counterfeit plates to be used to print phony British pounds.
Director: John Florea
Writer: Tony Barrett
- NaN/100 votes
#13 - The Gray Lady
Season 1 Episode 13 - Aired 12/10/1965
While acress Nicole Bridou is being interviewed on TV, jewel thief John Abbott watches from her hotel room where he's pulling a heist.
Director: Walter Grauman
Writer: William Link, Richard Levinson
- NaN/100 votes
#14 - Invitation to Limbo
Season 1 Episode 14 - Aired 12/17/1965
An electronics firm hires Honey to find out how secret information has been leaking out.
Director: Tom Gries
Writer: William Link, Richard Levinson
- NaN/100 votes
#15 - Rockabye the Hard Way
Season 1 Episode 15 - Aired 12/24/1965
Honey and Sam are hired to prove that a truck driver isn't a security risk and in the process tangle with spies who drug drivers driving secret weapons so they can take photographs while their victims are unconscious.
Director: Bill Colleran
Writer: Gwen Bagni, Paul Dubov
- NaN/100 votes
#16 - A Nice Little Till to Tap
Season 1 Episode 16 - Aired 12/31/1965
Honey goes undercover as a teller to learn how gang of bank robbers avoids tripping the vaults' high-priced alarm systems.
Director: Jerry Hopper
Writer: Tony Barrett
- NaN/100 votes
#17 - How Brillig, O, Beamish Boy
Season 1 Episode 17 - Aired 1/7/1966
Honey is faced with a dilemma when she's being paid to deliver a package with a half million dollars, but crooks kidnap Sam in order to trade his life for the money.
Director: Ida Lupino
Writer: Don Ingalls
- NaN/100 votes
#18 - King of the Mountain
Season 1 Episode 18 - Aired 1/14/1966
Honey poses as a nurse to investigate a secretive billionaire supposedly suffering from a rare biochemical defect.
Director: Thomas Carr
Writer: Jay Simms
- NaN/100 votes
#19 - It's Earlier Than You Think
Season 1 Episode 19 - Aired 1/21/1966
A bullet-riddled collector hands Honey what appears to be an 1865 newspaper, which he hints is a forgery, but he dies before explaining how he knows. Honey and Sam must keep the paper away from thieves, deliver it to its rightful owner, and determine whether it is really a forgery.
Director: James H. Brown
Writer: Marc Brandel
- NaN/100 votes
#20 - The Perfect Un-Crime
Season 1 Episode 20 - Aired 1/28/1966
An embezzler who has had a change of heart hires Honey and Sam to break into his boss's safe to return the money.
Director: Sidney Miller
Writer: Ken Kolb
- NaN/100 votes
#21 - Like Visions and Omens and All That Jazz
Season 1 Episode 21 - Aired 2/4/1966
A young socialite survives numerous "accidents" including a parachute that opens late and a near hit-and-run. Honey and Sam are suspicious when the woman's mother reveals that a psychic has predicted the accidents. Things really heat up when the socialite becomes the prime suspect after her ex-boyfriend is murdered.
Director: John Florea
Writer: Tony Barrett
- NaN/100 votes
#22 - Don't Look Now, But Isn't That Me
Season 1 Episode 22 - Aired 2/11/1966
Thieves target Honey's client list using a decoy who looks almost exactly like Honey. Honey and Sam have to figure out how the thieves are getting to their clients and then set a trap to catch the gang. Honey particularly wants a face-off with her double.
Director: James H. Brown
Writer: Gwen Bagni, Paul Dubov
- NaN/100 votes
#23 - Come to Me, My Litigation Baby
Season 1 Episode 23 - Aired 2/18/1966
Although stymied when they try to get incriminating photographs of a man suspected of making a phony accident claim, Honey and Sam discover that the subject's accident witness, a seemingly sweet old lady, is suspiciously accident-prone herself.
Director: Thomas Carr
Writer: Gwen Bagni, Paul Dubov
- NaN/100 votes
#24 - Slay, Gypsy, Slay
Season 1 Episode 24 - Aired 2/25/1966
When a wealthy man is kidnapped, Honey traces his whereabouts to a caravan of Gypsies whose leader, Darza, is more than he seems.
Director: James H. Brown
Writer: Tony Barrett
- NaN/100 votes
#25 - The Fun-Fun Killer
Season 1 Episode 25 - Aired 3/4/1966
Honey and Sam must solve the murder of a toy manufacturer killed by an oversize toy robot made by his own company.
Director: Murray Golden
Writer: Arthur Weingarten
The Best Episodes of Honey West Season 1
Every episode of Honey West Season 1 ranked from best to worst. Discover the Best Episodes of Honey West Season 1!
After her father's death, Honey West takes over his high-tech private-detective firm, assisted by rugged Sam Bolt--and her pet ocelot Bruce.
Genres:Action & AdventureDrama
Network:ABC
Season 1 Ratings Summary
"The Swingin' Mrs. Jones" is the best rated episode of "Honey West" season 1. It scored N/A/10 based on 0 votes. Directed by Paul Wendkos and written by Gwen Bagni, Paul Dubov, it aired on 9/17/1965. This episode is rated NaN points higher than the second-best, "The Owl and the Eye".