It’s one of those moments that perfectly explains why The Carol Burnett Show remains one of television’s greatest treasures. In the classic sketch “Tim Conway Treats Mrs. Wiggins to Lunch,” two comedic heavyweights collide — and what unfolds is pure, slow-burning brilliance.
Tim Conway, playing the endlessly patient Mr. Tudball, decides to take his delightfully clueless secretary Mrs. Wiggins (Carol Burnett) out to lunch. What begins as a courteous gesture quickly descends into chaos, thanks to Mrs. Wiggins’ famous slow-motion walk, her wide-eyed confusion, and her ability to turn even the simplest task — like reading a menu — into a test of human endurance.
Conway’s Tudball tries his best to maintain composure, but every pause, every sigh, every tight smile threatens to give him away. Meanwhile, Burnett’s Mrs. Wiggins remains blissfully unaware, floating through the lunchroom with her trademark vacant stare and sugary voice. Watching these two play off each other is a masterclass in physical comedy and timing.
Fans often say the magic of this sketch isn’t in the dialogue, but in everything that doesn’t happen:
– the long, tension-filled silences
– Conway fighting back frustration
– Burnett reacting a beat too late
– the subtle glances, freezes, and stumbles that send the audience into hysterics
At one point, Conway delivers a line so dry, and Burnett responds with such unflappable obliviousness, that the studio audience absolutely erupts — and even crew members can be seen doubled over, wiping away tears of laughter.
Decades later, clips of this sketch are still thriving on YouTube. Comment sections overflow with people reminiscing about watching the show with parents and grandparents, all of them united in fondness for Conway’s escalating exasperation. As one viewer put it, “They don’t make comedy like this anymore. You can feel the joy behind every giggle they tried to hide.”
More than just a sketch, “Treats Mrs. Wiggins to Lunch” is a reminder of what timeless comedy looks like — clever, innocent, endlessly rewatchable, and built on two performers whose chemistry was unmatched. Conway and Burnett didn’t just make people laugh; they created moments that continue to live on, proving that true comedy never ages.
