A Classic Returns: Tim Conway’s “Oldest Man” Steals the Show Again
The Sketch: “The Galley Slaves”
In the unforgettable Carol Burnett Show sketch “The Galley Slaves,” Tim Conway revived his legendary slow-moving, mumbling “Oldest Man” character — the one fans could recognize instantly from his wild white hair, shuffling steps, and endless, nonsensical muttering.
This time, Conway found himself chained to none other than Harvey Korman as two exhausted rowing slaves aboard an ancient ship. And from the very first beat, it was clear the sketch was headed straight into comedy history.
Conway’s Slow Motion Madness
Conway’s genius was in the delay.
Every movement — especially dipping his oar into the water — happened at a speed that felt like it defied physics. As he mumbled about his aches, the weather, and whatever else his wandering brain invented, the audience could already see it coming:
Harvey Korman was about to lose it.
Harvey Korman’s Legendary Breakdown
Korman’s reaction was the heart of the sketch.
He tried desperately to keep up the rowing rhythm, to stay in character, and to keep the scene from derailing… but Conway dragged it out until Korman crumbled.
He doubled over, shoulders shaking, tears in his eyes — fully breaking on live television as Conway continued the slowest oar stroke ever performed in history.
It was perfect.
It was chaos.
It was Conway and Korman at their finest.
A Duo That Defined Television Comedy
By the time the sketch hit its final punchline, Harvey Korman was barely usable — and the audience was roaring.
“The Galley Slaves” remains one of the best demonstrations of why this pair worked so brilliantly:
Conway: the unpredictable chaos-creator
Korman: the poor victim who could never hold it together
Their chemistry turned even the simplest premise into comedy gold — and this sketch stands as one of their greatest moments.
