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The Best Episodes Written By Davis Grubb

Every TV Episode Written by Davis Grubb Ranked from Best to Worst by Thousands of Voters

Davis Grubb Ratings Summary

"The Return of Verge Likens" is the best rated episode written by Davis Grubb. It scored 7/10 based on 1 votes. It was directed by Arnold Laven. It aired on 10/5/1964 and is rated 0.0 points higher than their second-best episode, "Where the Woodbine Twineth".

  • The Return of Verge Likens
    7.0/101 votes

    #1 - The Return of Verge Likens

    Season 3 Episode 1 - Aired 10/5/1964

    Verge Likens is a farmer whose father was killed by a crooked politician named Riley McGrath. Verge returns home to avenge his father's death. He manages to get close to Riley by getting hired as an assistant at a barbershop. After asking the barber to run an errand, Verge is alone with Riley and proceeds to lather up the murdering politician for a shave. Verge vividly describes how he is planning to cut Riley's throat. When the barber returns to the barbershop he finds the door locked. He gets the police who break down the door. Inside they find Verge standing over Riley's dead body. Berge has avenged his father's death and he is not guilty of a crime. Riley died of a heart attack.

    Director: Arnold Laven

    Writer: Davis Grubb

  • Where the Woodbine Twineth
    7.0/101 votes

    #2 - Where the Woodbine Twineth

    Season 3 Episode 13 - Aired 1/11/1965

    Nell Snyder has been taking care of her orphaned neice and has been growing more and more concerned over her neice's behavior. Her neice continually blames all the trouble she causes on an imaginary friend named Mr. Peppercorn. When the girl's grandfather Captain King Snyder gives her a Creole voodoo doll, Nell grows more and more worried. Her nieces says the doll came from Mr. Peppercorn. She names it Numa and treats as if it were a real person. Eventually, Nell becomes convinced that the doll is real and that it is trying to take her neice's soul. She follows her neice and Numa into the forest. There she frightens her away, not realizing that the switch has already occurred. She later sees the doll and discovers that it bears her neice's face.

    Director: Alf Kjellin

    Writer: Davis Grubb