During rehearsals, everything felt safe. Tim Conway moved fast — quick, clean, controlled. The fall landed, the joke worked, and everyone relaxed. It was done. Then came taping night. One step. A pause. Another step. Time seemed to slow as Tim walked onstage as the “world’s oldest doctor,” every movement heavier, longer, more deliberate. Seconds stretched. Silence tightened. The room leaned in. Harvey felt it building. He tried to fight it. He didn’t win. Carol broke. The cast followed. The audience exploded. What started as scripted comedy turned into something else entirely — pure, unfiltered laughter, unfolding live in front of everyone. That wasn’t chaos. That was craft. Because great comedy isn’t about rushing the moment — it’s about knowing exactly when to slow down and let the room do the rest.

There are comedy moments you laugh at… and then there are moments that completely demolish you. For Harvey Korman, that moment had a name — Tim Conway.
On *The Carol Burnett Show*, Conway didn’t just deliver jokes. He engineered slow-motion chaos with a precision no one could defend against. And nowhere was that more obvious than in the legendary sketch where he played *The Oldest Man* — a character who moved so slowly it defied logic, patience, and the laws of television timing.

Harvey Korman was supposed to be the steady one. The professional. The man who held every scene together. But the second Conway slid into frame, dragging one foot behind the other like a rusty door hinge, Harvey’s fate was sealed. He could barely get through his lines. His shoulders would start to twitch. His lips would fight a losing battle against a grin. And then came the moment he completely lost it — head on the table, gasping for air, whispering through tears, *“I swear, he’s trying to kill me.”*

The audience exploded. Carol Burnett, sitting just off-camera, was already covering her face because she knew where it was heading: Conway was about to stretch the bit even further. A slower step. A longer pause. A half-second blink that felt like it took a full minute. He wasn’t trying to be funny — he was trying to see how far he could push everyone else before they cracked.

And it worked every single time.

What made Conway’s slow-motion torture so unforgettable wasn’t the silliness of the character — it was the joy behind it. He didn’t break Harvey to be cruel. He broke him because the two of them shared a chemistry that no script could ever replicate. Pure, childlike mischief met the helpless laughter of a man who adored him.

Decades later, people still try to watch those sketches with a straight face. And decades later… they still fail.

Because once Tim Conway starts moving slow, everyone else falls apart fast.

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