The Best Episodes Written By Lou Rambeau

Every TV Episode Written by Lou Rambeau Ranked from Best to Worst by Thousands of Voters

Lou Rambeau Ratings Summary

The best episode written by Lou Rambeau is "Hangover", rated 7/10 from 2 user votes. It was "directed by Bernard Girard". "Hangover" aired on 12/6/1962 and is rated 0.0 point(s) higher than their second highest rated, "Last Seen Wearing Blue Jeans".

  • Hangover
    7.0/10 2 votes

    #1 - Hangover

    Season 1 Episode 12 - Aired 12/6/1962

    Hadley Purvis is an alcoholic advertising executive whose wife Sandra tells him that she will leave him if he takes another drink. Unfortunately, he drinks himself into a stupor. When he awakens he cannot remember anything that happened to him while he was drunk. He can't remember losing his job for being drunk during a presentation and he can't remember buying his wife a new scarf to prove that he had not been drinking. Ultimately, he discovers his wife's strangled body in his basement. Though he cannot remember, he realizes that, while he was drunk, he strangled her to death with the scarf he bought for her.

    Director: Bernard Girard

    Writer: Lou Rambeau

  • Last Seen Wearing Blue Jeans
    7.0/10 1 votes

    #2 - Last Seen Wearing Blue Jeans

    Season 1 Episode 28 - Aired 4/19/1963

    Visiting from Englad, David Saunders is making a cross-country tour of America by car with his wife Roberta and their daughter Loren. They stop at a cafe in Arizona late one evening. Since Loren cannot stay awake she heads to the car and goes to sleep in the backseat. Unfortunately she get into the wrong car. She gets into a stolen car that is headed for Mexico. The cafe owner runs a stolen car ring. Thing get worse for Loren when the car deal goes awry and she witnesses a murder. She is spotted before she can get away and the criminal begin to search for her as do her parents. Eventually the criminals find her, but she manages to get away with the help of a friendly rancher named Pete Tanner. Later Loren reunites his her family at the cafe. The cafe owner, however, is arrested.

    Director: Alan Crosland, Jr.

    Writer: Lou Rambeau