In the annals of television comedy, there are moments you laugh at⌠and then there are moments you remember for the rest of your life. The Carol Burnett Showâs sketch âDr. Noseâ falls squarely into the latter category. What looked like a harmless bit of âdoctor helps a patient with a giant noseâ quickly spirals into a tornado of timing, improvisation, and pure comedic genius â led, brilliantly, by Tim Conway.
The scene opens with Conway playing the titular Dr. Nose, a surgeon so preposterous heâs already lost the audience before he says a word. His entrance â arms spread wide, gait wobbly, eyes darting â sets the tone. And then he starts speaking. Every line clicks. Every gesture rips a layer of dignity away. The audience starts to laugh. They know theyâre in safe hands.
Tim Conway Has to Stop Dr. Nose | The Carol Burnett Show â YouTube
Then, something remarkable happens. mid-sketch, his co-actor slips. A prop goes wrong. Conway sees it, freezes for half a second, then uses it. A new joke is born.
This switch â from rehearsed to spontaneous â is the sketchâs secret weapon.
The show rolls on, laughter builds, cameras catch every crack in the facade. But by the time the ânoseâ gag enters its final act, the studio audience is clapping on their seats, the laugh is uncontrollable, and one man is contagious: Harvey Korman, who tries desperately to stay in character, fails, and then collapses laughing.
People who were there say the entire room shook with laughter. Crew members confess they had to step out for fresh air. Decades later, the clip still spreads online with dozens of comments like:
âI cried laughing so hard I missed half the jokes.â
âThis is the apex of sketch comedy.â
Tim Conway Has to Stop Dr. Nose | The Carol Burnett Show
But what makes âDr. Noseâ more than just a funny sketch is the humanity behind it. Tim Conway, by letting things fall apart, told the audience it was okay to break. To slip. To laugh at the absurdity of it all. And for viewers, that became a relief, a moment of release â especially in a time when television was so often polished and perfect.
And when that last gag landed, and Conway held up the comically enormous nose, the applause didnât just happen⌠it roared.
The Carol Burnett Show wasnât just aired that night.
It was etched into television history.