The Carol Burnett Show’s “Butler and the Maid” Is Going Viral Again — And It’s Still Comedy Gold
Some sketches age well… and then there are the ones that somehow get funnier with time. One of the latest Carol Burnett Show clips resurfacing online is the brilliantly absurd “Butler and the Maid,” and fans young and old are rediscovering just how unmatched this cast’s comedic timing truly was.
Set in a lavish Victorian dining room, the scene opens with Lance Croft (Harvey Korman) and his dramatic wife Evelyn (Vicki Lawrence) being spoon-fed like oversized infants by their endlessly patient servants — Benchley the butler (Tim Conway) and Louella the maid (Carol Burnett). From the first few seconds, it’s already ridiculous, and the laughter only grows from there.

What begins as a genteel lunchtime chat quickly spirals into marital chaos. Evelyn questions her husband’s loyalty; Lance fires back with suspicions about her rumba lessons. Through it all, Benchley and Louella maintain their overly formal composure while feeding, wiping, primping, and attending to their masters like it’s the most normal job in the world.
But as the Crofts begin to argue in earnest, the servants aren’t just witnesses — they become participants. Ordered to “fight on behalf of their employers,” Louella gives Benchley a slap, he returns a gentle punch, and the absurdity builds until the entire stage dissolves into a Victorian soap opera gone completely off the rails.
The highlight comes when Evelyn announces she’s about to throw a tantrum — and Louella dutifully throws herself to the floor, pounding, screaming, and even slamming her head into the wall on command. Tim Conway’s deadpan reactions throughout are priceless, and Harvey Korman’s barely-contained laughter is the cherry on top.
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<p>Eventually, things reach full melodrama when the couple threatens to end it all, dragging their horrified servants into the plot. In true Carol Burnett fashion, the moment escalates to utter ridiculousness… before abruptly calming as the Crofts reconcile as if nothing happened.</p>
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Exhausted and rumpled, Benchley and Louella ask, “Will that be all?”
Their employers answer with the perfectly polite, “Yes, thank you,” and the sketch snaps closed with a final wave of laughter.
It’s everything The Carol Burnett Show was loved for — fearless slapstick, exaggerated characters, razor-sharp timing, and the magical chemistry of a cast that routinely made each other break on live television. Conway’s quiet mischief, Burnett’s total commitment, Korman’s barely-held composure… it all adds up to one of the funniest sketches of the era.
