Grindl (1963)
Grindl
1963Grindl is an American situation comedy that began in the fall of 1963 on NBC, originally sponsored by Procter & Gamble. The show, starring Imogene Coca in the title role, lasted for one season.
Seasons & Episode
Grindl, who's working for the Hartmans, is very upset when Mrs, Hartman disappears and her suspicions mount when Mr. Hartman displays extreme sensitivity about a locked basement door.
Grindl is the babysitter of a 7-year old boy genius who is keeping a bottle of experimental rocket fuel in the refrigerator.
Grindl meets a handsome and eligible suitor through a marriage bureau, but before the wedding takes place, the bridegroom takes out a large insurance policy on Grindl's life.
Grindl goes to work in a bookstore unaware that it's being used as a front for a ring of counterfeiters.
Grindl gets an inside look at a male harem when she becomes a maid for glamorous Gloria Lanett.
Grindl has deadlocked the jury with her vote of not guilty. She feels the defendant's blue eyes are sufficient cause for reasonable doubt.
Grindl is keeping house for a man who is supposedly an invalid.
Grindl inherits a British estate and the title ""Lady Grindl."" She arrives at Dundstetter Moors to claim her inheritance, but three bent twigs on the family tree try to frighten her away.
The great bank robbery is what a group of thieves have been planning to pull but they are unable to find the bank's weak spot that is until Grindl is hired as a teller.
A magician known as The Great Schultz plans a pseudo-scientific act in which he seems able to change his wife into a rabbit and Grindl is mighty impressed.
Grindl watches TV's ""Dr. Wherton, Intern with a Cause"" and decides to become a nurse.
A superstitious gambler plays a long shot when he hires Grindl as a maid.
After watching a TV detective show, Grindl accepts a job as a maid for a private detective.
Grindl's day starts off as one of those days when she finds herself taking a shower in her pajamas.
Olaf, The Mad Bomber, who plants bombs that go off when the phone rings, makes a bad connection when he does the answering service where Grindl works.
Insurance investigators, hoping to recover some stolen money ask Grindl to impersonate a gunman's moll.
Grindl is mistaken for a professional killer.
In a socialite's household, Grindl spearheads a strike against a tyrannical butler.
Anxious to becomes her own boss, Grindl lets two con men talk her into selling vacuum cleaners.
Grindl unwittingly chooses a kleptomaniac to pose as her butler husband.
Grindl tries to prove an active retirement for an old railroad man.
Grindl recalls her World War II misadventures.
Grindl, working as a guide in a model home, decides to borrow it to help a young man impress his in-laws.
Grindl may be one of the few people to leave Las Vegas a winner, half of a gambling casino has been built on property she owns.
The Moon Killer is on the prowl and Grindl is alone and unprotected in her apartment.
While babysitting in a tough neighborhood, Grindl gets involved in a war between two teenage gangs.
Grindl is working as a housekeeper for a horticulturist and she'd like to know what became of her predecessors.
Some dogs have the biggest mouths and Grindl meets one, a talking dog that gives her the name of the gunman who shot his master.
Grindl thinks her cousin has left her a fortune but the legacy is something other than money.
Grindl is an American situation comedy that began in the fall of 1963 on NBC, originally sponsored by Procter & Gamble. The show, starring Imogene Coca in the title role, lasted for one season.