04x26 - The Reincarnation of Eb

Episode transcripts for the TV show "Green Acres". Aired: September 15, 1965 - April 27, 1971.*
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Oliver & Lisa move from NYC to a farm to live off the land and have a simpler life.
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04x26 - The Reincarnation of Eb

Post by bunniefuu »

(green acres theme music)

- [Man] ♪ Green
Acres is the place to be

♪ Farm living is the life for me

♪ Land spreading
out so far and wide

♪ Keep Manhattan just
give me that countryside

- [Woman] ♪ New York
is where I'd rather stay

♪ I get allergic smelling hay

♪ I just adore a penthouse view

♪ Darling I love you
but give me Park Avenue.

- ♪ The chores - ♪
The stores - ♪ Fresh air

- ♪ Times Square
- ♪ You are my wife

- ♪ Good bye city life

♪ Green Acres we are there
- ♪ Green Acres we are there

- It's your move Arnold.

(pig oinking)

- Boy, that's a pretty
dumb move even for a pig.

Let's see ya get outta that.

(pig oinking)

(pig squealing)

- That makes 40
cents you owe Arnold.

- Like to play another
game, double or nothing?

(pig oinking)

- Oh look I didn't come
here to watch Arnold

b*at you at checkers.

Now let's get the
meeting started.

Whose chief for the month?

(pig oinking)

- No you was chief last month.

It's Kimball's turn.

- Hey that's right.

Where's the white
chief's helmet?

- Arnold forgot to bring it.

- How will anybody know
I'm chief without the helmet.

- Well we all know.

Come on let's get started.

The chief stands there.

- Oh.

(fire truck horn blaring)

- Thank you, thank you.

As chief of the month,

I call the meeting
of the Hooterville...

What was the name of
this organization again?

- The Hooterville Volunteer
Fire Department stupid.

- Oh yes.

The Hooterville Fire
Department stupid.

- I'm leaving, there's
a good movie on TV.

- Oh hey Arnold.

- Good evening
gentlemen I'm sorry I'm late.

- Mr. Douglas that's
the third time this month,

I'll have to fine you $10.

- $10?

This is the first time
I've ever been late.

- Oh, well in that
case it'll only be $12.

- I'm not paying it.

- Are we gonna have
a meeting or aint we?

I wanna go home and see
the Tuesday night movie.

- This is Thursday night.

- Well the station's a
little bit behind schedule.

See they have to show
the Friday night movie

on Saturday night,

on account of the live broadcast

of the Coolidge inauguration.

- The Coolidge Inauguration?

- Yeah Oscar Coolidge.

He was sworn in
as county supervisor.

- Anyway they had to move
the Saturday night movie

to Sunday night,

but they couldn't show
the Sunday night movie

Monday night because they
were cleaning the station.

So they showed the
Sunday movie on Tuesday,

and the Tuesday movie
didn't show up in time,

so they're showing it tonight.

- Unless they decide to rerun
the Coolidge inauguration.

- Why don't we go
on with the meeting.

- Now, before we get into the
main business of the evening.

What is the main
business of the evening?

(pig oinking)

Oh, that's right Arnold,

the Hooterville Search
and Rescue Squad.

- That ain't what he said.

He wants to know
where his 40 cents is.

- What 40 cents?

- Arnold b*at Hank
four games of checkers.

- How can Arnold?

- And now I turn this meeting
over to Eustace Haney.

(group clapping)

- Thank you.

I don't think there's any
doubt in anybody's mind,

but what we need a
search and rescue squad.

Which will be responsible
for searching and rescuing

people that get lost.

- There's little doubt
in my mind that...

- Mr. Douglas do you know
how many millions of dollars

in tourist trade that
Hooterville loses every year?

Because people are
afraid to come here,

cause they afraid
they might get lost,

and there'll be nobody to
search and rescue them.

- Oh boy.

- So by the authority
invested in me

by our chief of the
month, Hank Kimball,

I'm appointing all of
you here to be members

of the search and rescue squad.

- Tell us what
we got to do first.

- Oh well there's a very
simple procedure to follow.

Well it's not simple but,

yes I guess it is simple.

Well let's assume that
somebody gets lost.

- I wish you would so I can go
home and see the movie on TV.

- You better listen to this Sam,

you got an important part in it.

- Yeah Sam you live
closest to the railroad tracks.

So when somebody
gets lost you have to run

and get the train crew to blow

three boops on the
whistle of the cannonball.

- Three boops?

- Yeah you know.

Boop, boop, boop.

- You fellas...

- Now upon hearing the boops,

you'll all assemble here

and pick up your search
and rescue equipment,

which I am donating
to each one of you

for the nominal sum, of $12.78.

- If you're donating it Haney
it shouldn't cost us anything.

- You're right
Sam, it shouldn't,

but it will.

Now where was we.

- You were up to the booping.

- I have a question.

Suppose the train is up in
Pixley then what do we do?

- Well you call Pixley

and you tell them to tell
the train to boop up there.

- How can we hear it
all the way up in Pixley?

- That's simple.

After booping up there,

Pixley will call you back
and tell ya they've booped.

- That way we'll
know it's official,

and not some cr*ck pot
turning in a false boop.

- Of all the
ding-a-ling-I've heard.

- Now since this is a new unit,

I'm going to call a practice
search and rescue operation

for tomorrow night.

To do this I'm gonna have
to ask of ya to volunteer

to go out and get lost.

(chuckles)

Who wants to volunteer.

- Mr. Kimball.

- We have a volunteer!

Mr. Douglas.

- No I didn't...

- Mr. Douglas, tomorrow
night at eight o'clock

you go out in the
woods and lose yourself.

As soon as you do you call Sam

and he'll set the
boops in motion.

- The only thing I'm gonna
set in motion is myself.

I'm going home and
watch the movie on TV.

- That's the first
sensible thing I've heard

anybody said since I got here.

- Well in that case do I
hear a motion to adjourn?

(pig oinking)

Arnold just made a motion.

- No he didn't, he just
wants his 40 cents.

- Well in that case,
meeting is adjourned.

(fire truck horn blaring)

- How much time Mrs. Douglas?

- 20 seconds.

- Hi.

- Hello, how was your meeting?

- Do you know what
they want to do?

- Can you tell it to
us in 10 seconds?

- No, I...

- Well then it'll
have to wait till later.

Come on Eb.

- You wanna finish this?

- No thanks, I...
- Well come on Eb!

- Where you two going?

- The commercial is almost over,

then the picture is
going to start again.

Come on.

- [Announcer] In the back
stretch is Plumber's Helper,

in front by two legs.

Marsupan is second on the rail,

Black Fern is third,
Helley Cloy is fourth,

Humpy Harry is fifth and

treading the field
is Fish Mouth.

- Come on Plumber's Helper.

- No no we want
Fish Mouth to win.

- Oh yeah, come on Fish Mouth!

- Fish Mouth?

- He's the star of the picture.

- [Announcer] Coming
around the last turn is

Plumber's Helper by three legs.

Black Fern is second to him,

Marsupan filling the
void, Humpy Harry,

and trailing the field by
nine links is Fish Mouth.

- Come on Fish Mouth!

You gotta win!

Mom and me and all the
people of South Ashburyville

are counting on you.

- Who's she?

- She's the horse's
granddaughter.

- The horse's grand...

- We'll explain it to you later.

Come on Fish Mouth!

- [Announcer] At the top of
the stretch is Plumber's Helper

by six legs, Pipeline
is second, Marsupan,

Helley Cloy, Humpy Hairy,

and Fish Mouth
is last by 22 legs.

- Come on Fishmouth,
you gotta win.

Mom and me and all the
people of South Ashburyville

are counting on you.

- Is that all she says
in the whole picture?

- Will you be quiet.

- [Announcer] They're
now coming down

to the line of scrimmage
and the winner is Fishmouth.

- Yay he did it, he did it.

He won!

- How could?

He was 22 legs behind!

- That's what they
call dramatic license.

- Be quiet, I want
to see the end.

- Grandpa, you won!

You won for mom and me,

and all the people
of South Ashburyville.

- Oh wasn't that patchy.

- Yeah, they don't make
pictures like that anymore.

- They wouldn't dare.

- I'll explain the story to you.

- No don't bother.

- Don't you want to
know how the little girl's

grandfather became a horse?

- No not particularly.

- It was all done
by re incarceration.

- Re incarceration?

- That means when you
past on to the great beyond,

and you come back as an animal.

- I believe the word
is reincarnation.

- No no no that is when
you come back as a flower.

- As of...

- Her grandfather was re
incarcerated as a horse.

- You see her grandfather

was a jockey in
South Ashburyville.

- Oh that explains the
kid with the one line.

- Oh she didn't always
just have one line,

she was a very
happy little girl,

except for her mother had a
big mortgage on their house.

- But her grandfather
was gonna pay it off,

by winning the big race.

But these bad guys...
- Bad guys?

- There the ones
in the black hats.

The good guys wear white hats,

that's the code of the movies.

- Oh look I'm...

- Anyway the bad guys
wanted the grandfather,

who was a jockey at that time,

to throw the race,
and he said to him,

"I don't care what
color your hats are,

I'm not going to
do me something",

so they did it.

- They did it to
the wrong fellow.

They should've
done it to the writer.

- Anyway, just before he
went on to that big pasture

in the sky, he
promised the little girl,

her mom,

and all the people
of South Ashburyville,

who had bet
everything that they had,

that he'd come back
as a race horse and win.

- You saw the finish, do
you have any questions?

- Yeah,

where's the booze?

Reincarnation.

- Well it works.

- What works?

- That people come
back as animals.

- Have you ever
known anybody that did?

- Yes my uncle Rudall.

- Your uncle Rudall?

- You met him, the goat.

- The goat?

- Don't you remember we
went over there to visit them

and the goat came
out to meet us?

- Oh yeah, I thought
that was your aunt.

- No, it was my uncle.

- Look Lis...
- My aunt said it was.

She knew it was him
because in real life,

he couldn't stand her cooking,

and then he came back as a goat.

He wouldn't eat
anything she made.

- You can't ask for a
better explanation than that.

- Explanation?

That...
- Don't you believe in it?

- I'm afraid not.

- The gypsies do.

- Good for them.

- Don't you want to
come back as something?

- Yes.

Howard Hughes.

- When my time comes,

I'd like to come back as a dog.

Dog's have an easy life.

All they do is lie around all
day and scratch themselves.

- That's all you do now.

- You will make a
very nice dog Eb.

- Thank you.

What would you like to be?

- Let me see.

I think I would like.

- Look will you excuse me,

I've gotta throw some
hay down for Eleanor.

- I wonder if she was anybody
before she became a cow.

- Well, she might
have been a movie star.

- Instead of guessing,
why don't I ask her.

(thunder)

- How do you think I look?

- You look fine Eb.

- Here comes Mr. Neat,

let's get his opinion.

- Mr?

- How do you think I look?

- Fine if you're
going clam digging.

- I'm going to Pixley to have
supper at Lorelei's house.

Then we're going for a
ride on my motor scooter.

- Why don't you take our car.

- Lisa.

- Thanks anyway but it's
more fun on my motor scooter.

That way Lorelei has to put
her arms around me to hang on.

- Yeah yeah well.

- That's the way it
is with chicks today,

you have to out think em.

See you later.

(loud engine)

- You dimwit!

- Oliver, Oliver, why don't
you buy a motor scooter,

then I could hang on.

- We don't need a
scooter for that, come on.

(thunder)

- Oh.

What the?

- Oliver, Oliver I'm frightened?

- Lisa it's nothing to
be frightened about,

we're warm and
dry and safe in here.

That darn roof!

- Oliver!

- No no, relax, relax.

- I can't I just
heard on the radio

that this is the worst one
they ever had around here.

The bridge on the road to
Pixley has been washed out.

- They'll fix it.

- Oliver, that's where Eb went.

Do you suppose something
terrible has happened to him?

- Oh no no, of course not,

he's at Lorelei's house.

- Then why don't
you call and see.

- Me climb that pole
in the rain like this?

(phone ringing)

- While you're up there,

won't you please call Lorelie?

- Hello.

Yes this is Mr. Douglas.

Well hello Lorelie.

He isn't?

He shoulda been there by now.

Yes I heard about the bridge.

Well look, I'm
sure he's alright.

Just don't worry.

- Don't worry!

- I'm sure he's alright.

- How can you say
that when he was

on the bridge when
it was washed out?

- He wasn't on any bridge.

- Yes he was.

It's just like in the dream.

- What dream?

- The one I'm going
to have tonight,

while he's floating
down the river.

Oliver please you got
to go and look for him.

- Lisa it's...
- Oliver please.

- Alright I'll look for him.

(thunder)

- I found this near
the washed out bridge.

- I knew it, I knew it.

- Oh now calm down this
doesn't mean anything.

When he saw the
bridge was washed out,

he probably started out on foot

to look for some
place to keep dry.

- We'll never see him again.

- Stop talking like that.

I'll go out and look some more.


- What time is it Sam.

- I...
- No don't tell me,

I wanna see if
my watch is right.

- Oh Hank.

- He should of called by now.

- He had no
intention of calling.

- Oh Mr. Drucker.

- You were supposed
to call by eight.

- Call?

- Don't you remember
your assignment?

This was the night you were
supposed to go out and get lost.

- Oh, Mr. Drucker,
I'm looking for Eb,

has he been in here tonight?

- Yeah he was here
a couple of hours ago.

Said he had a date with Lorelei.

- He never got there.

I found his scooter near
the washed out bridge.

- Wasn't there any sign of him?

- No I'd better keep
looking for him.

- I'll go with ya.

- One moment gentlemen.

You seem to forget
that we have a unit

which is trained to
search and rescue people.

Well it's not trained.

- Come on Mr. Drucker.

- Mr. Douglas, on a
stormy night like this,

I think we can use all
the help we can get.

- Good, I'll go to the station

and tell the train crew to boop.

How many times are
we sposed to boop?

- Three!

(train horn blaring)

- What are we waiting for?

- Fred.

- Why do we have
to wait for him?

- Well he's got the
key to the fire engine.

- That's not locked.

- It isn't?

Well that's a pretty sloppy
way to run a fire department.

I mean somebody
can come in and steal...

- Can we please get
this thing organized,

my wife is sitting
home frantic with worry.

- I'm frantic with worry.

I know something terrible
has happened to Eb.

I'll never see him again.

(Knock on the door)

- Who's there?

Oh a dog, where
did you come from?

- [Eb] If I ever come
back, I'd like to be a dog,

and lie around all day,
and scratch myself.

- Eb!

You've come back!

- Haney, you cover the
north part of the woods.

Sam you try Simpson's Swamp.

No, Mr. Douglas you
better cover Simpson's,

you're more of a swamp man.

- I'm not a...

- And don't forget to keep
in touch by walkie talkie.

- Well give me one.

- Well this the only one I got.

- Then how can I keep in touch?

- Well I'll talk loud.

- Look gentlemen just follow me,

we'll meet down by the bridge

and we'll fan off and search.

(phone ringing)

- Volunteer fire department.

Yes ma'am, just a second.

It's your misses.

- Oh, hello?

What?

Oh wonderful!

Oh I'll be right there.

Gentlemen, we can call
off the search, Eb's home.

(thunder)

- Are you hungry Eb?

(dog barking)

Hot cakes are ready.

I'll cut it for you,
just wait a minute,

wait a second.

Alright Eb, there you are.

Sorry this had to happen to you,

but at least we have you
back one way or another.

Come on.

- [Oliver] Lisa!

- In here.

- Where's Eb?

- This is him.

- This is a dog!

- Don't you remember
what Eb said?

That if anything happens to him,

he would like to
come back as a dog.

He could lie around
and scratch himself.

- Lisa were you struck
by lightning tonight?

- I don't think so.

Eb, do you want
another hot cake?

That outta convince you.

Eb is the only one around
here who likes my hot cakes.

- Lisa that isn't
Eb, it's a mutt.

(dog barks)

- That's telling him Eb.

- Lisa do you realize
you've wasted valuable time?

When you said Eb was
home I called off the search.

- But he is home.

- Lisa this is not him.

- You still don't believe
in re incarceration.

- No I don't.

- Well what about my uncle
Rudall that came back as a goat?

- With your family,
anything is possible.

- Where are you going?

- I'm gonna call the sheriff

and get him to help look for Eb.

- Alright Eb don't worry.

I'm going to give you
a nice bowl of milk,

and then I put you to bed.

That's a good Eb.

(thunder)

Sleep tight Eb.

You had a busy day.

- I called the sheriff
he said he sent...

What are you doing?

- Tucking Eb in.

- Lisa will you
stop this nonsense.

Get that mongrel out of our bed.

- Oh but Oliver.

- Come out!

Out!

- Now you did it,
you chased him out.

- I didn't he did.

- I heard the saying
you can't put a dog out

on a night like this,

but you're the first person
I ever met who did it.

- Lisa I'm not...

- Oliver you better find Eb.

- What do you think
I'm trying to do?

- I wonder if I should
report him to the SPCA.

(knock on door)

- Who's there?

- Deputy Carlton.

Misses Douglas.

- Yes, come in come in.

- Thank you.

- Oh the rain has stopped.

- Yes ma'am.

Say I got a call on my radio,

somebody missing here?

- Yes, our hired hand Eb.

- Oh.

Eb what.

- No.

Eb Dawson.

- Dawson, age?

- He's in his twenties.

- Height?

- Now or then?

- Well now.

- Oh, about this tall.

- And he's in his twenties?

- Oh he used to
be over six feet,

but something happened to him.

- Oh.

Any identifying marks?

- Well I think he had a
white mark on one of his feet.

- Which foot.

- It wasn't on the front one,

it must've been on the back one.

- The back?

- The one thing he
had was a beautiful tail.

- Beautiful.

Lady are you describing a dog?

- He is now, but
he wasn't always.

In real life he was
a nice young man.

Then he had this accident,

and he came back as a dog.

- Oh.

- He was re incarcerated.

- Too bad he didn't come
back as a horse huh?

Then he coulda
won the big race for

me and my mom and all the
people of South Ashburyville.

- Wasn't that a good picture?

- Lady, we get dozens
of emergency calls,

and you waste my
time on a missing dog?

I outta run you in.

- Cossack.

- [Eb] What's the matter?

- Oh that deputy.

Eb!

Oh you're you again.

We've been so worried about you.

Mr. Douglas has been
out all night looking for you.

What happened?

- Well the bridge went out,

my scooter stalled,
so I started walking,

cut across the fields until
I got to Ben Miller's house.

He gave me these overalls,

and I stayed there
until the rain stopped.

- Well why didn't you call us?

- Mr. Miller's phone was out.

- Oh I'm so glad you're alright.

Well you better hang your
clothes in front of the stove.

- Yes ma'am okay.

- Oliver!

- Hi, here's your Eb.

- That's not Eb.

- You mean I found
the wrong dog?

- No no it's the right dog,

but the wrong Eb.

- Oh.

- Eb is in the kitchen.

- As what?

- Hi Mr. Douglas.

- Oh, where have you been?

I've been looking
all over for ya.

- I been over at.

Who's that?

- It used to be you.

- Me?

- Yes you see Mr. Douglas
found your motor scooter

and we thought something
terrible had happened to you.

- Oh and you thought
I came back as him.

Re incarcerated.

- I'm going to bed, here.

- What you want
me to do with him?

- Well won't you keep him around

for your next re incarceration.

- Well that was
some storm last night.

- Yes, but it's a
beautiful day today.

- Yeah why do you have
to spoil it with those?

- Oh Oliver.

(Knock on door)

I'll get it.

- Here boy.

Here.

(dog barks)

You liked them last night.

- Oliver, we got company.

- Who?

- Uncle Rudall.

(goat bleating)

Where are you going?

- Out.

I'm sure you and your
uncle have a lot to talk about.

- I'm sorry Uncle Rudall,

but he had a bad night.

(green acres theme music)

This has been a Filmways
presentation darling.
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