It depends on where your concern lies.
If ease of handling events is your main concern, the gridview with viewstate enabled is your guy. It has great hook-ins for all kinds of actions the user may take. It does, however, come with the viewstate bandwidth cost you mentioned. But if you're audience uses relatively good connections and you need to get up and running fast, this can be a good alternative.
If bandwidth is your main concern, the repeater/literal approach will definitely save you some, but you'll have to write all your event logic yourself. The running of the same query for each postback is really redundant, but would in reality probably not take up that much perf, because of the db's caching mechanisms. However, you would still be sending back the complete table after each postback. The best bandwidth saving scenario, in my opinion, would be sending the complete table only once on load, and after that handle all table events with web service calls (you can use ASP.NET's Web-API framework for that). That way, only any actual changes would be sent over the wire.