Las parodias de Carol Burnett y sus compañeros de comedia.Las parodias de Carol Burnett y sus compañeros de comedia.Las parodias de Carol Burnett y sus compañeros de comedia.
- Ganó 25 premios Primetime Emmy
- 41 premios y 69 nominaciones en total
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The opening, with Carol spontaneously joking with the audience, is the funniest part. Burnett even did a popular tour just before the pandemic, recreating that.
Conway remains the next most reliably funniest part of the show. There are also some amazing guest stars like Steven Martin and Robin Williams very early in their careers.
Some parts have aged poorly, the musical numbers that were already corny in the 70s. Some of the guest stars like Ken Berry seem trapped in that time.
But the crown jewels in the series were all the Eunice and Mama's Family skits. Somehow, in an at times corny show, the most popular characters were like watching Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolf. Abrasive and raw, a deeply dysfunctional family tearing each other apart, yet still funny and touching.
Can you imagine an audience watching an old time musical number suddenly hearing a woman telling her mother that she married her husband because she "had to"? That she got pregnant. And her mother answering "Welcome to the club." And the most midde America audience laughing loud, in recognition of how many of them it happened to.
Conway remains the next most reliably funniest part of the show. There are also some amazing guest stars like Steven Martin and Robin Williams very early in their careers.
Some parts have aged poorly, the musical numbers that were already corny in the 70s. Some of the guest stars like Ken Berry seem trapped in that time.
But the crown jewels in the series were all the Eunice and Mama's Family skits. Somehow, in an at times corny show, the most popular characters were like watching Who's Afraid of Virginia Wolf. Abrasive and raw, a deeply dysfunctional family tearing each other apart, yet still funny and touching.
Can you imagine an audience watching an old time musical number suddenly hearing a woman telling her mother that she married her husband because she "had to"? That she got pregnant. And her mother answering "Welcome to the club." And the most midde America audience laughing loud, in recognition of how many of them it happened to.
This was definitely the finest variety show of the 1970's. The thing that made it great besides the cast were the various recurring sketches that were very expertly created. Sketches like Tudball and Wiggins, the Old Folks, As the Stomach Turns, the kid sister and, of course, Eunice, which was the inspiration for the series "Mama's Family", helped to make this variety hour a classic. Besides "Mama and Eunice" any one of these shows could have become a series on its own. The only thing that caused the show to go downhill though was when Harvey Korman left. He was probably the best player among the supporting cast and when he left the show declined from there. Still, Saturday nights for me would always climax with this classic show.
I loved the Carol Burnett show when I was a child. It was in half-hour reruns. After spending the last weekend watching TV Land marathon, I just learned why. It was one of the most entertaining experiences in television history. This was a great cast of highly talented people not just the beloved star, Carol Burnett. Her former husband Joe Hamilton produced the show. Her friends like Harvey Korman, Tim Conway, Vicki Lawrence, and Lyle Waggoner were all uniquely talented and gifted. We can see why this show thrived. Most of the cast were there from beginning to end. After 11 years of superb Emmy winning and golden globe episodes, the show is available on DVD and can be seen on TV Land where it belongs with some of television's classics. It is still a classic. Sometimes Saturday Night Live and MAD TV can embrace the wholesome comedy as a risk in itself.
The jewel in the crown on CBS's Saturday night comedies. In one night you saw All in the Family, MASH, Mary Tyler Moore, bob Newhart, and Carol Burnett. There was never that much great comedy on one evening, before or after. Must-see TV years before NBC. Me and my family stayed glued to the set from 8 to 11. A great cast and consistently funny; I found out later that several Mad magazine writers were on the staff. I did get tired of Harvey Korman breaking up very week... but opposite Tim Conway, who could resist? I remember a sketch where Harvey was in a dentist chair; Tim was the dentist. All was going well... until Tim injected the Novocaine into himself and not his patient. Various parts of his body went numb. I remember him slapping his dangling right hand with his left--the numb hand swung back and forth like a half-filled water balloon. Then the left half of his face went slack. Then the right. The his right leg gave out and he had to sit on the chair with Harvey. I don't think I've ever laughed so hard, and poor Harvey almost slid out of his chair with laughter. A class act, all the way. It's a shame Harvey Korman never went on to comedy stardom, when marginally talented folks like Adam Sandler became millionaires.
The Carol Burnett Show, a.k.a. Carol Burnett and Friends, is my favorite show in TV history, without question. It made me laugh endlessly with its sketch comedy. For me, the best comedy revolves around lines that often seem ad libbed; the spontanaety often results in some of the best humor around. What also made this show special was Tim Conway's deliberate ad libbing of lines and actions to try to make the other actors bust up laughing. A classic example of this is when Conway, playing a NAZI officer in one sketch, tries to interrogate a POW (Lyle Waggoner) with an Adolf Hitler Puppet doll.
Whether its Tim Conway as Uncle Waldo, Carol Burnett as "Missus Uh-Wiggins" or "Eunice", Jim Nabors as Yung Fool, or Vicki Lawrence as Mama Harper, this show's absolutely priceless.
Whether its Tim Conway as Uncle Waldo, Carol Burnett as "Missus Uh-Wiggins" or "Eunice", Jim Nabors as Yung Fool, or Vicki Lawrence as Mama Harper, this show's absolutely priceless.
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- CuriosidadesTim Conway improvised during much of his appearances on the show which would cause the other cast members - especially Harvey Korman - to laugh during taping. The cast breaking character became a popular part of the series.
- Citas
as Thelma "Mama" Harper: You ain't playing with a full deck, Eunice. I think somebody blew your pilot light out!
Carol Bradford: Oh, boy. That's a new one, Mama!
as Thelma "Mama" Harper: You wait, there's more, Eunice!
Carol Bradford: Oh, no!
as Thelma "Mama" Harper: You know what? You've got splinters in the windmills of your mind! You're playing hockey with a warped puck!
- Créditos adicionalesIn the closing credits, the charwoman (an animated caricature of Carol Burnett) is seen in the bottom left-hand corner of the screen mopping the floor. As the credits roll she suddenly turns and notices them and for the rest of the sequence she leans on her mop and watches them move from bottom to top (except for a brief pause to scratch her behind).
- Versiones alternativas1972-78 episodes were re-packaged in a half-hour format (with the comedy sketches ONLY) and sold to local stations in syndication as "Carol Burnett and Friends."
- ConexionesEdited into Diagnóstico asesinato: Comedy Is Murder (1997)
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By what name was Carol Burnett (1967) officially released in India in English?
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