Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Trending
    • Destroying Our Historic Family Tree Earned My Neighbor A Permanent Lesson
    • My Husband and I Divorced After 36 Years – at His Funeral, His Dad Had Too Much to Drink and Said, ‘You Don’t Even Know What He Did for You, Do You?’
    • How Your Seat at the Table Can Shape Connection and Conversation!
    • My Son Built a Ramp for the Boy Next Door – Then an Entitled Neighbor Destroyed It, but Karma Came Faster than She Expected
    • Who could be drafted? Inside US draft rules if global war breaks out!
    • 90s Heartthrob with Eyes Like ‘Crystals’ Has Aged Naturally with Gray Hair at 62—Why He Moved Away from Hollywood
    • What Happened at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner With President Donald Trump & Wife Melania Trump — Details on Everyone’s Lips
    • My ex-husband’s 26-year-old wife arrived at my door with eviction papers and a smug smile, convinced my mansion now belonged to her father’s company.
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Daily Stories
    • Home
    • News
    • Conservative
    • Magazine
    • Health
    • Animals
    • English
    Daily Stories
    Home » Tim Conway’s “35-Year-Old Orphan” Skit Completely Destroys Harvey Korman And Carol Burnett On Live TV
    News

    Tim Conway’s “35-Year-Old Orphan” Skit Completely Destroys Harvey Korman And Carol Burnett On Live TV

    Kelly WhitewoodBy Kelly WhitewoodDecember 17, 20253 Mins Read

    Tim Conway Plays a 35-Year-Old Orphan — And Leaves Harvey Korman and Carol Burnett Helpless With Laughter

    Few things in television history are as reliably funny as Tim Conway deciding to go off-script. In one of The Carol Burnett Show’s most beloved sketches, Conway appears as a 35-year-old “orphan” hoping to be adopted — and within minutes, he has Harvey Korman and Carol Burnett fighting for their composure, losing that battle more than once.

    The sketch begins innocently enough: Carol Burnett and Harvey Korman play a married couple visiting an adoption agency. They explain that they’ve always dreamed of bringing a little boy into their family. What they don’t expect is the “child” who walks through the door — Tim Conway, fully grown, suit and tie, embodying a desperate 35-year-old who still longs for a mom and dad.

    And from the moment he speaks, the scene is over.

    Conway plays the role with earnest sincerity, pleading his case with a wide-eyed charm only he could pull off. He assures Carol and Harvey that he desperately wants a family, a home, and parents who will love him. He explains how he plays catch by himself, tossing the ball into the air because he has no one to throw it to. By the time he’s finished telling his tragic backstory, Carol and Harvey are visibly shaking with laughter, unable to look him in the eye.

    Midway through the sketch, it becomes clear that Conway has slipped into one of his favorite pastimes: testing how long his castmates can keep a straight face. Harvey Korman especially — famous for breaking whenever Conway pushed him — reaches the brink more than once, turning away, covering his mouth, and doing everything humanly possible not to erupt in laughter in front of the cameras.

    This is the magic of Conway’s comedy: the slow builds, the absurd sincerity, the pauses that stretch just a hair too long. And as always, watching Korman try — and fail — to resist him is almost as funny as the sketch itself.

    For fans of The Carol Burnett Show, this orphan sketch sits right alongside classics like “The Oldest Man” and “Clock Repair,” where Conway’s commitment to the bit turns an ordinary scene into timeless comedy. It’s living proof that the funniest moments aren’t always written — sometimes they happen when a cast is simply trying to survive Tim Conway.

    And in this sketch? They absolutely do not survive. Not even close.

    Previous ArticleTexas Country Legend Aaron Watson Publicly Slams Warren Zeiders After Explosive Onstage Meltdown
    Next Article Joe Ely d**s at 78 as Texas country-rock icon who bridged punk, rock, and roots leaves a massive legacy

    Related Posts

    Destroying Our Historic Family Tree Earned My Neighbor A Permanent Lesson

    April 26, 2026

    My Husband and I Divorced After 36 Years – at His Funeral, His Dad Had Too Much to Drink and Said, ‘You Don’t Even Know What He Did for You, Do You?’

    April 26, 2026

    How Your Seat at the Table Can Shape Connection and Conversation!

    April 26, 2026
    Search
    Categories
    • Conservative (1)
    • English (5)
    • Health (1)
    • Magazine (3)
    • News (6,160)
    Categories
    • Conservative (1)
    • English (5)
    • Health (1)
    • Magazine (3)
    • News (6,160)
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service
    Copyright © 2026, News24. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.