Carol Burnett has described a great many things throughout her legendary career — unforgettable sketches, iconic costumes, and the agony of spending eleven seasons in high heels — but nothing lights her up quite like talking about Tim Conway.
To Carol, Tim wasn’t simply funny. He was a one-man wrecking crew, a master of unpredictable comedy who treated every sketch as a personal challenge: How fast can I make Harvey Korman fall apart today?
Tim Conway: The Man for Whom Rehearsals Were Optional
According to Carol, rehearsals meant almost nothing to Tim. They were polite formalities, mild suggestions, or guidelines he might consider acknowledging in a different lifetime. She remembers the routine clearly: the cast would block the sketch, rehearse their lines, settle their timing, and feel completely confident.
Then the audience would sit down, the cameras would roll… and Tim Conway would transform into a force of pure comedic chaos.
Carol puts it perfectly: “He would blow into some bit of business we hadn’t even rehearsed… and there he’d be, doing things we’d never seen before.”
In those moments, cameramen scrambled to keep up, the director whispered prayers from the control booth, and the crew held onto set pieces for stability. Meanwhile, the studio audience was completely undone, helpless with laughter.
Carol remembers these moments as “pure gold.” Everyone else simply tried to brace themselves.
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Harvey Korman: Tim’s Favorite Target
Carol is candid about one thing: Tim had a particular mission when it came to Harvey Korman. If a sketch paired Tim and Harvey together, Tim saw it as an opportunity — a challenge to destroy Harvey’s composure.
Harvey was a committed performer. He believed in discipline, professionalism, and keeping a straight face. To Tim, that made him the perfect opponent.
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The moment a sketch began, Tim became the comedic equivalent of a loose raccoon in a supermarket, unpredictable and unstoppable. Harvey, meanwhile, became the nightly casualty of Tim’s wild improvisations. Carol summarized it perfectly: “He prided himself on being a very serious comedic actor… but he could not hold it together when Tim got going.”
Why It Worked: Tim’s Relentless Commitment to Going Too Far
Carol’s favorite thing about Tim wasn’t just his jokes — it was his unwavering commitment. He didn’t aim for a standard laugh. He aimed for the kind of laughter that left an audience gasping for breath, wiping away tears, clutching their ribs, and silently begging the sketch to pause so they could recover.
As Carol once said, “He would keep at it until the audience could no longer…” Even she didn’t need to finish the sentence; everyone who watched Tim Conway understood exactly what she meant.
And right behind the breathless audience was Harvey Korman, silently pleading for mercy that never arrived.
The Tim Conway Effect: Comedy in Its Most Unstoppable Form
What Carol fondly remembers as “pure gold” was Tim Conway’s unparalleled ability to send an entire production — cast, crew, cameras, and audience — into complete comedic freefall. He didn’t simply derail a sketch; he reshaped it in real time, bending it to his will and leaving everyone struggling to keep up.
Carol Burnett doesn’t just remember Tim Conway with affection. She remembers him the way survivors recall the friendly fire of a comedic genius — with awe, respect, and a level of laughter so intense it practically rearranges the spine.
Watch Carol Burnett Remember Tim Conway