HIS LAST WORDS WEREN’T A JOKE, THEY WERE A THANK YOU. 🎙️❤️In what would become one of his last intimate conversations on camera, Tim Conway didn’t perform. He didn’t slip into a character. He simply talked. The legendary comedian looked back on his quiet beginnings in Ohio, long before bright studio lights and roaring audiences. He remembered writing jokes no one heard, chasing small opportunities, and even the moment he decided to change his name — not for fame, but for a chance. “I just wanted to make people laugh.” Delivered softly. No punchline attached. And somehow, it says everything. What lingers most isn’t the comedy that made him famous — it’s the humility behind it. The warmth. The quiet reminder that the man who gave decades of laughter cared far more about bringing joy than collecting applause. The full interview captures a side of Tim Conway few ever saw — reflective, sincere, and deeply human. Watch the complete video in the link in the comments below. This one stays with you.

He was the serious actor. He was the chaotic genius. Together, they created the most beautiful mess in television history.

If you look at the history of comedy, you see partners who rehearsed until they were perfect. They memorized every beat, every pause, every breath.

And then, there was Tim Conway and Harvey Korman.

They didn’t strive for perfection. They strove for something much more dangerous: The break.

For over a decade on The Carol Burnett Show, millions of Americans tuned in not just to see a sketch, but to witness a game. A game played by two grown men in front of a live audience. The rules were simple: Harvey tries to remain a professional, serious actor. Tim tries to destroy him.

The Serious Actor vs. The Agent of Chaos
To understand the magic, you have to understand Harvey Korman. Harvey was a trained, legitimate actor. He wanted to be dignified. He respected the script. He wanted to deliver the lines exactly as they were written on the page.

Tim Conway, on the other hand, saw a script as a mere “suggestion.”

Tim knew a secret that Harvey refused to admit: Harvey Korman was a ticking time bomb of laughter waiting to explode.

“Harvey was the perfect victim,” Tim once said. “He had this desperate need to be professional, which made it so much funnier when he fell apart.”

The Day the Script Disappeared
The legend of their friendship is best summarized in one specific moment: The Dentist Sketch.

It is widely considered one of the funniest moments in TV history. But what many don’t know is that the sketch you see on YouTube was not what was rehearsed.

In the dressing room, the script called for a simple interaction. But right before the cameras rolled, Tim whispered to the stage manager, “Watch this.”

As the scene began, Tim (playing the incompetent dentist) didn’t just numb the patient’s mouth; he accidentally numbed his own hand. Then his leg. Then his mind.

Harvey sat in the dentist’s chair, helpless. You can see it in his eyes. He isn’t acting anymore. He is a man fighting for his life against the urge to scream with laughter. He covers his face. He bites his lip until it turns white. He looks away.

But Tim wouldn’t let him hide. Every time Harvey composed himself, Tim would do something smaller, quieter, and deadlier. A squeak of a shoe. A confused glance.

When Harvey finally broke—exploding into that wheezing, tear-filled laughter—the audience didn’t feel like they were watching a mistake. They felt like they were in on the joke. They were watching two best friends having the time of their lives.

The Anchor and The Sail
Why did it work? Why didn’t Harvey just get angry?

Because beneath the torture was a profound respect. Tim Conway was a comedic hurricane, spinning wild ideas and physical comedy that defied logic. But a hurricane needs an ocean to spin over.

Harvey was Tim’s ocean. He was the anchor. Without Harvey’s grounding presence—without his attempts to be serious—Tim’s silliness would have just been noise. Harvey gave Tim’s comedy weight.

Tim knew this. He wasn’t performing for the millions watching at home. He wasn’t performing for the critics. He was performing for an audience of one. If he could get Harvey to crack, he knew the sketch was a success.

The Silence After the Applause
When the show ended, the lights went down, and the years rolled on, the dynamic didn’t change.

As they aged, the sketches stopped, but the connection deepened. They toured together not for the money, but because they simply liked sitting next to each other.

There is a poignant story often told about their later years. They were sitting in a quiet room, waiting for an event. Both were older now. The energy was lower. But Tim, ever the mischief-maker, leaned over and whispered something to Harvey.

It wasn’t a joke for the microphone. It wasn’t a line for a sitcom. It was just a mumble, a quiet observation.

And there it was. That laugh.

Harvey threw his head back, his shoulders shaking, wiping a tear from his eye. For a moment, they weren’t two elderly legends. They were two boys in a sandbox, giggling at a secret only they understood.

The Final Curtain
When Harvey Korman passed away in 2008, a part of Tim Conway went with him. The world lost a great actor, but Tim lost his “straight man.” He lost the only person who truly understood the rhythm of his madness.

Tim Conway lived for another decade, bringing joy to new generations. But those who knew them best say that Tim’s comedy was never quite as dangerous, never quite as sharp, as when he had Harvey sitting next to him, trying desperately not to laugh.

We watch their old clips today not just because they are funny. We watch them because they capture something rare: Pure, unfiltered joy between friends.

In a world that demands we be serious, professional, and perfect, Tim and Harvey taught us the most important lesson of all:

Sometimes, the best thing you can do is throw away the script, look your best friend in the eye, and just laugh until it hurts.

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The moment Harvey Korman quietly muttered, “Tim… please stop… I can’t breathe,” you could feel the sketch slipping out of control — and there was no bringing it back. Then Tim Conway walked in as “Dr. Nose,” completely unfazed, carrying that ridiculous prop like everything was perfectly normal. From that second on, the scene belonged to him. Harvey tried to hold it together — covering his face, biting his lip — but the damage was already done. When Conway leaned in and calmly said, “This might sting a little,” Harvey lost the battle. What followed wasn’t just laughter — it was total collapse. The audience exploded, and even the energy on stage shifted into something you could tell wasn’t planned anymore. That’s what made moments like this special. Nothing forced, nothing scripted — just timing, instinct, and two legends pushing each other to the edge without ever trying to.

There’s a reason many comedians hesitated before stepping on stage with Tim Conway. He didn’t just stretch the rules — he quietly stepped outside them. A sketch would move along exactly as planned, the timing steady and everything under control. Then Tim would add one small detail that seemed to come from nowhere. No setup, no explanation, just a perfectly misplaced moment. The instant Harvey Korman caught on, it was written all over his face — that split second of confusion, the silent attempt to stay composed while realizing the scene had taken a turn no one planned for. The laughter that followed wasn’t rehearsed. It was pure reflex. From that moment forward, the sketch belonged to chaos in the best possible way — driven by raw timing, genuine reactions, and a style of comedy that could never be duplicated the same way twice.

There was a quiet truth backstage on The Carol Burnett Show: if Tim Conway was in the sketch, no rehearsal truly mattered. The writers could polish every…

What starts as a simple hot dog vendor sketch quickly turns into total comedy chaos once Tim Conway gets involved. 😂 With that legendary slow delivery, perfectly awkward pauses, and the kind of confidence that makes everything even funnier, Tim completely takes over the scene without ever looking like he’s trying too hard. And poor Harvey Korman does everything he can to hold it together… but he never really had a chance. The real magic is watching Harvey slowly fall apart while Tim keeps pushing the sketch further and further off course with a perfectly straight face. It’s not over-the-top comedy — it’s pure timing, pure chemistry, and exactly why these two were television gold. Even decades later, fans still come back to this one for the same reason: watching Harvey lose it never gets old.

“The second Tim Conway opened his mouth… Harvey Korman was done.” Tim Conway didn’t just make Harvey Korman laugh — he completely unraveled him. One line. One look. One perfectly timed derailment, and Harvey collapsed into that uncontrollable, can’t-hold-it-together laughter fans still talk about decades later. The sketch turns into pure chaos: the script is useless, the actors are wheezing, the audience is roaring. No filters. No second takes. Just raw, unstoppable comedy from two legends at the top of their game.



No comedy duo has ever broken each other faster — but NOTHING prepares you for what happens when Harvey finally “gets his revenge” and Tim Conway completely falls apart. From the very first second, you can see Tim fighting a smile… and losing. By the time the “sewer shark” strikes, the bathroom door jams, and Harvey tries delivering one serious line, he’s already shaking so hard he can barely stand. And when the dynamite gag hits? The entire cast collapses, the audience screams, and the sketch spirals into one of the funniest on-set meltdowns The Carol Burnett Show ever produced.

EAR PIMPLE

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