HE SAID HE FORGOT HIS LINES — BUT WHAT HE DID NEXT BROKE THE SHOW. 🎭 During rehearsal, Tim Conway calmly announced he had completely forgotten his script. Across from him, Harvey Korman froze. “What are you planning to do on stage then?” he asked, already spiraling. Tim’s answer was almost casual. “You just perform like normal. I’ll… walk across.” That night on The Carol Burnett Show, he did exactly that. Three times. No punchlines. No exaggerated expressions. No wink to the audience. He simply walked across the stage as if he had somewhere else to be. The first time, the crowd chuckled. The second time, they caught on. By the third pass, the laughter was uncontrollable — not because of what he did, but because of what he refused to do. Silence became the joke. Restraint became the weapon. And Harvey? He lost composure completely, dissolving into laughter so real he forgot his own lines. Tim hadn’t forgotten anything. He had engineered the moment.

Some of the greatest moments in comedy aren’t written. They happen in the uncomfortable space where something goes wrong — or appears to go wrong — and instinct takes over.

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During one rehearsal, Tim Conway casually announced that he had forgotten all his lines. No drama. No apology. Just a simple statement delivered with that familiar calm that usually meant trouble was coming.

Across from him stood Harvey Korman, a master of precision, timing, and carefully built reactions. Harvey panicked.
“What are you going to do on stage?” he asked, already imagining disaster.

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Tim thought for a moment, then answered honestly:
“You just perform like normal. I’ll… walk across.”

It sounded ridiculous. And vague. And dangerous.

That night, the sketch began as planned. Harvey launched into the scene, committed and serious, delivering every line with professional focus. Then, without warning, Tim Conway calmly walked across the stage. He didn’t speak. He didn’t gesture. He didn’t acknowledge anyone. He simply passed through the scene like a man who had wandered into the wrong room.

The audience laughed.

Tim Conway Cracks Up Harvey Korman in 'Dog's Life' Sketch on the Carol  Burnett Show | SeniorResource

A few minutes later, Tim did it again. Same walk. Same silence. Bigger laughter.

By the third time, the crowd was roaring. Harvey tried to hold it together — shoulders shaking, eyes watering, every ounce of discipline being tested. Eventually, he lost the battle. He laughed so hard that he forgot his own lines, collapsing into the very chaos he had feared.

And that was the brilliance of Tim Conway.

Sad to read of the passing of Tim Conway. Both Tim AND Harvey Korman  couldn't have been any nicer AND funnier. Now together again making each  other laugh. RIP

He understood something rare: that comedy doesn’t always come from doing more. Sometimes it comes from doing less. From patience. From silence. From allowing the other performer — and the audience — to fill in the absurdity themselves.

Harvey Korman once admitted that Tim was the most dangerous partner he ever worked with. Not because Tim tried to steal scenes, but because he dismantled them quietly, one innocent step at a time.

In that moment, “forgetting the script” wasn’t a mistake.
It was the joke.

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