When Conway Unleashed His Ridiculous Accent and Those Iconic Striped Underwear, the Entire Studio Imploded in Tears of Laughter – A Legendary, Unscripted Chaos That Remains Unmatched

“The exact second Tim Conway opened his mouth… Harvey Korman lost all control.” That single sentence has become comedy scripture, describing the infamous 1977 The Carol Burnett Show “Dentist Sketch” that fans still hail as the funniest live breakdown in television history. What began as a routine dentist-office skit spiraled into pure, unscripted anarchy the moment Conway, playing a bumbling novice dentist, strolled in with a ridiculous accent, a glint of mischief in his eye, and an arsenal of improvised chaos that shattered Korman – and the entire cast – into helpless, tear-soaked laughter. When Conway finally exposed those iconic striped boxer shorts, the audience screamed, Korman folded in half, and the sketch ceased to exist. It wasn’t comedy anymore – it was legendary, lightning-in-a-bottle madness that TV has never dared recreate.

The episode (Season 11, Episode 2) aired live-to-tape on September 24, 1977. The premise was simple: Harvey Korman as a pompous patient, Carol Burnett as the receptionist, and guest star Dick Van Dyke as the dentist. Conway’s role was small – just a few lines as the dentist’s inept assistant. But Conway, the show’s resident prankster, had other plans. “Tim came in that week and said, ‘I’m gonna break Harvey,’” Burnett later recalled in her memoir This Time Together. “We all knew it was coming – we just didn’t know how bad.”

It started innocently. Conway shuffled in wearing an oversized white coat, speaking in a thick, nonsensical accent (“I am Dr. Von Schtupp’s new assistant… from the old country”). Korman, already fighting a smirk, lasted exactly six seconds before his lip twitched. Conway escalated: fumbling syringes, mispronouncing “novocaine” as “nova-cane,” and dropping tools with cartoonish clumsiness. Then came the underwear reveal – Conway “accidentally” hiking his pants to expose bright red-and-white striped boxers while pretending to pick up a scalpel. Korman lost it completely, collapsing over the dental chair, pounding the armrest, tears streaming as he wheezed for air. Van Dyke followed, then Burnett – the entire cast reduced to sobbing wrecks.

The cameras kept rolling. Director Dave Powers later admitted: “We couldn’t cut – it was too good.” The live audience roared for nearly four minutes, some literally falling out of seats. Conway, stone-faced, just kept going, ad-libbing lines like “I once pulled the wrong tooth… belonged to the mayor!” until Korman was on the floor, begging off-camera for mercy.

The sketch became instant legend. Clips have amassed over 100 million views across platforms, spawning memes, reaction videos, and endless “greatest TV moment” lists. Burnett called it “the night comedy broke.” Conway, who passed in 2019, said in a 2015 interview: “Harvey was the best straight man ever – I just had to push until he popped.”

Forty-eight years later, the “Dentist Sketch” remains untouchable – raw, unscripted, and gloriously chaotic. As one viral comment sums it up: “They don’t make TV like this anymore… because nobody could survive it.”

Watch the full meltdown below – and try not to lose it like Harvey did.