The air in the room seemed to vibrate with nostalgia as Tim Conway and Harvey Korman reunited at the Motion Picture & Television Fund home. It was more than just a meeting — it was a return to the golden laughter that once filled millions of living rooms across America.
Longtime colleagues Conway and Korman bring their ‘traveling …
Decades after their unforgettable partnership on The Carol Burnett Show, the two comedy legends proved that genuine chemistry — the kind that could make cameras shake with laughter — never fades. The sound of their laughter filled the room, warm and familiar, echoing the years they spent perfecting their timing, trading pranks, and sharing that unspoken bond that made them one of television’s most beloved duos.
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Even within the quiet halls of the home, their spark was unmistakable. Tim’s playful grin, his signature twinkle of mischief, still sent Harvey into fits of uncontrollable laughter. Staff members and visitors couldn’t help but smile, captivated by the simple joy radiating from the pair. Each gesture and glance felt like a tribute to their past — to the years of sketches, inside jokes, and the shared rhythm that made them legendary.
This reunion wasn’t about the applause or the spotlight. It was about connection — two friends finding each other again through laughter that had outlasted fame and time. A small prank would ignite a chain of laughter; one story would turn the quiet room into a live sketch once more. The spark between them made the years vanish, leaving only the timeless joy of two men who truly loved what they did — and each other’s company.
See also Tim Conway’s “sentient plant” sketch on The Carol Burnett Show is comedy chaos at its finest — a slow-motion meltdown that left even Carol Burnett helpless with laughter. Conway strolls in to return a defective talking plant, only for the bit to spiral into pure absurdity. Every rustle, sigh, and leaf twitch sends the audience into hysterics, while Conway’s deadpan calm makes it even funnier. It’s vintage Conway — mischievous, unflappable, and brilliantly timed — the kind of sketch that proves why no one could survive sharing a stage with him.
Watching Conway and Korman together again felt like witnessing the rebirth of Hollywood’s golden humor. Their laughter reminded everyone present that comedy, at its heart, is about humanity — spontaneous, heartfelt, and beautifully imperfect. Some laughter, it seems, never grows old.