Much of Tim Conway’s most loved work came from his long run on The Carol Burnett Show, where he appeared for 11 unforgettable years. Long before Saturday Night Live reshaped sketch comedy, Carol Burnett was hosting the most popular comedy show on television—and Conway quickly became one of its essential pillars. Working alongside Harvey Korman and Vicki Lawrence, Conway helped create moments that remain timeless. His unique timing, quiet mischief, and ability to throw an entire scene off balance made every sketch unpredictable and unforgettable. Today, many of the show’s greatest moments are available to watch online, allowing new audiences to rediscover why Conway’s performances still resonate. Below are some of his best sketches from the show—starting with a classic that perfectly captures his legendary chemistry with Korman.

Tim Conway, who passed away yesterday at the age of 85, used to feel ubiquitous. Between his long tenure on The Carol Burnett Show, his series of films with Don Knotts, and regular guest appearances all over the TV dial, he was one of the most recognizable comedians of the ‘60s, ‘70s and ‘80s. He was also one of the most consistent, a consummate pro who could reliably wring laughs out of any audience with his deadpan charm and thorough commitment to silliness. He was a comic kids and adults could love and laugh at, and it’s sad to see him go.

His most beloved work was on The Carol Burnett Show, which he appeared on for 11 years, and which remained in syndication into the ‘90s. Before Saturday Night Live injected sketch comedy with underground energy, Carol Burnett hosted the most popular sketch show on TV, and Conway was a crucial cast member, alongside Harvey Korman and Vicki Lawrence. Fortunately many of the show’s best sketches are streaming at the official Carol Burnett Show YouTube page. Here are some of Conway’s best sketches from the show, starting with a fairly famous sketch featuring some of his best work with Korman.

“The Dentist”

Conway plays a nervous dentist on his first day who tries to talk his patient (Korman) out of the appointment and then lets loose a stream of increasingly incompetent (and hilarious) behavior. This is a perfect Conway role: he’s incredibly polite and well-meaning, but also clearly over his head. Still, he tries his best, to disastrous results.

“Sleep No More My Lady”

Conway was an all-around performer, gifted at character work, verbal dexterity, and slapstick. Here’s a showcase for his physical skills, as he tries to quietly prepare breakfast and fails about as massively as possible.

“Vacuum Salesman”

Here’s another great example of Conway’s skills as both a physical comedian and actor, as he plays a seemingly hapless door-to-door salesman who tricks Vicki Lawrence into doing his job for him—and keeps the change, to boot.

“Tough Truckers”

Conway and Korman once again show why they were a comedy duo for the ages, both seamlessly switching between sexist macho bluster and abject misery as a couple of divorced yahoos trying to act tough and manly.

“Airline Security”

Airports weren’t perfect before the TSA, no matter how wistful old-timers get about the good old days of flying. In this sketch Conway plays an incredibly slow and confused airline security guard opposite an increasingly angry Korman. It’s another showcase for Conway’s brilliant deadpan and understated delivery, with some great gags, like having to stamp the ticket with every individual letter in “Los Angeles.”

“Mrs. Wiggins: The Vacation”

This recurring sketch might be named after Burnett’s secretary character, but Conway reliably stole the show as her Romanian boss Mr. Tudball. In this installment he tries to teach Wiggins how to play blackjack before her upcoming trip to Vegas. You can probably guess that it doesn’t go well for Mr. Tudball.

“The Interrogator”

In this long sketch Conway plays a not particularly threatening—or competent—Nazi interrogator who does more damage to the room he’s in than the prisoner. His co-star Lyle Waggoner cracks about halfway through; if you thought Jimmy Fallon was bad about losing it on SNL, you might not be able to handle The Carol Burnett Show, where cracking was pretty much a constant.

“The Oldest Man: The Captain”

Probably Conway’s most popular character, the Oldest Man shows off Conway’s unique ability to enliven broad concepts, ridiculous situations and physical stunts while still being understated and somewhat nuanced in his performance. The Oldest Man is a buffoon and a clown, and Conway goes big with his physical antics, but the actor disappears more into the role than you’d expect with something so absurd. That might have been Conway’s greatest strength of all—making the ridiculous feel real and normal.

Related Posts

“10 MILLION PEOPLE WERE LAUGHING… BUT ONLY ONE PERSON HAD TO SURVIVE TIM CONWAY.” Carol Burnett used to say she “loved” Tim Conway—but anyone who watched them knew the truth was a little wilder than that. The moment Tim stepped into a scene, everything changed. The set wasn’t a set anymore—it was his playground. Cameramen braced. Harvey Korman fought to stay composed. And Carol? She stood there, caught between laughter and survival, knowing exactly what was about to happen… and still unable to stop it. Rehearsals felt safe. Predictable. Controlled. But once the cameras rolled, Tim rewrote everything. New lines. New timing. New chaos. The audience collapsed in laughter. Harvey barely held on. And Carol kept it all moving forward—while Tim quietly turned every scene into something no one could prepare for… And that’s when it hits—she didn’t just perform alongside him… she endured him… and what really happened behind those moments of “breaking character” might be far more intentional than anyone ever realized…”

Few names in television history carry the weight of Carol Burnett. Over a career filled with iconic moments, unforgettable sketches, and cultural milestones, she has seen it…

“STOP LAUGHING OR I’LL WALK OFF THIS STAGE!” — What started as a simple comedy sketch turned into a LIVE TV meltdown that Hollywood still can’t believe happened. Carol Burnett, Tim Conway, and Harvey Korman didn’t just break character… they shattered the entire scene in front of millions.

DATELINE: HOLLYWOOD — It υsυally starts with a twitch. A tiпy, microscopic qυiver at the corпer of Harvey Kormaп’s moυth. Theп comes the wide-eyed look of a…

Tim Conway didn’t just walk onto that stage — he slid into it, slow enough to make time look impatient. And somehow, that tiny shuffle sent 200 people into total collapse. You can see Carol Burnett trying so hard not to fall apart she’s practically shaking. Every step he took felt like a dare, every turn so slow it made the whole cast lose control. It’s wild how one man, moving like a melting snowflake, could blow up a room like that. And now, 50 years later, millions are still replaying those six chaotic minutes… wondering how comedy ever got that perfect again

There are moments in comedy that feel almost impossible — the kind you watch once, laugh until you can’t breathe, and then immediately hit replay just to…

“HARVEY KORMAN WET HIS PANTS ON LIVE TV — AND 30 MILLION VIEWERS SAW IT HAPPEN.” 🤣 Nobody on that set was safe when Tim Conway started improvising. Not Carol Burnett. Not Vicki Lawrence. And definitely not Harvey Korman. The “Tough Truckers” sketch was supposed to be simple. A diner. A few lines. In and out. Then Tim walked in… and everything fell apart. Harvey bit his lip. Covered his face. Tried to hide behind his coffee cup. You can literally see him shaking, begging his own body not to laugh. But Tim just kept going. Slower. Quieter. Deadlier. Some people say this was the moment that broke Harvey for good. Others swear the real meltdown happened seconds before the cameras cut — the part audiences never saw. Which TV bloopers still make you laugh no matter how many times you watch them?

Harvey Korman, Tim Conway, and the Night a Simple Sketch Turned Into TV Chaos There are funny television moments, and then there are the moments that seem…

A GORILLA LAUGHED THAT DAY. AND SO DID EVERYONE WATCHING. In 2001, Robin Williams walked into a sanctuary in California to meet Koko — the gentle gorilla who understood over 1,000 signs in American Sign Language. Koko had been grieving for months. Her closest companion had passed away, and the caretakers said she hadn’t smiled since. Robin sat down on the floor beside her. He made a funny face. Then another. Within minutes, Koko was tickling him, stealing his glasses, pulling him into a hug like an old friend she’d been waiting for. And then — she laughed. A deep, rumbling, joyful sound no one had heard in a long, long time. Do you believe animals can truly feel the kindness of a human heart?

There are some moments that feel too simple to matter at first. No stage lights. No script. No applause. Just two living beings sitting on the floor…

It wasn’t acting. It was survival. Every time Tim Conway stepped into a sketch on The Carol Burnett Show, Harvey Korman braced himself — because he knew chaos was coming. Tim had that quiet grin, that dangerous glimmer in his eyes that said, “I’m about to ruin your composure on live television.”… From the iconic “Dentist Sketch”, where Tim accidentally injects himself with Novocain, to the absurd “Siamese Elephants” story, Harvey would try — desperately — to stay in character. But every pause, every sideways glance from Tim, was a countdown to Harvey’s total collapse. He’d start trembling, turning red, tears forming as the laughter consumed him. The audience wasn’t just watching a show — they were watching two masters lose control together. Even Carol Burnett, usually the queen of poise, couldn’t always hold it in. There were moments she’d bend over, clutching her stomach, unable to say her next line. “Those weren’t rehearsed laughs,” she once admitted. “That was real joy. Tim made all of us forget we were working.”

here are comedy duos… and then there’s Tim Conway and Harvey Korman, the unstoppable chaos engine that turned The Carol Burnett Show into a weekly laughter explosion….

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *