Harvey Korman’s Legendary Fight to Stay in Character
Harvey Korman was a professional. A veteran. A man who had survived countless unpredictable Tim Conway ad-libs before.

But no amount of experience could save him from this one.
Every slow inhale, every exaggerated tip of Conway’s hat, every deliberate shuffle pushed Harvey closer to the edge. You can actually see him shaking with suppressed laughter — teeth clenched, eyes watering, face turning red.
By the time Conway pauses mid-sentence for what feels like an eternity, the audience is gone. The cast is gone. And Harvey? He’s mere seconds away from complete collapse.
It’s the kind of raw, unscripted moment that made The Carol Burnett Show timeless: performers who were so genuinely funny that even the people paid to keep a straight face couldn’t do it.
Why This Clip Still Hits Just as Hard Today
Comedy evolves, trends change, and television moves forward — but this sketch remains iconic because it captures something rare:
Pure, unfiltered comedic chemistry.
Conway’s masterful slowness
Korman’s barely contained laughter
The audience roaring as the scene spirals
The unpredictability that made live TV magic
It’s a moment that reminds viewers what made the show legendary: not just the jokes, but the joy shared between the cast and the audience. A kind of laughter that feels contagious even decades later.
And There’s One Moment in the Sketch Fans Still Talk About…
Near the end of the routine, Conway delivers a final, drawn-out line that pushes Harvey past the point of no return — a moment so perfectly timed that it still circulates online as one of the greatest comedy breaks in television history.
It’s the exact second where the scene officially becomes too funny to control.
The moment the entire cast gives up.
The moment everyone watching — then and now — loses it.