词条 | The Carol Burnett Show | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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}}{{Use mdy dates|date=June 2012}}{{Infobox television | show_name = The Carol Burnett Show | image = The Carol Burnett Show.jpg | genre = Comedy-Variety | camera = Multi-camera | audio_format = Monaural | runtime = 54 minutes | location = CBS Television City Hollywood, California | executive_producer = Bob Banner Joe Hamilton | company = Burngood, Inc. (1967–1972) (seasons 1-5) Punkin' Productions, Inc. (1972–1976) (seasons 6-9) Whacko, Inc. (1976–1978) (seasons 10-11) | distributor = The C.B. Distribution Company (1977-1978) CBS Television Distribution (2018-present) | starring = Carol Burnett Harvey Korman Vicki Lawrence Lyle Waggoner Tim Conway Dick Van Dyke | opentheme = "Carol's Theme" by Joe Hamilton[1] | country = United States | language = English | network = CBS | first_aired = {{Start date|1967|09|11}} | last_aired = {{End date|1978|03|29}} | num_seasons = 11 | num_episodes = 279 | followed_by = Carol Burnett & Company Eunice Mama's Family }}The Carol Burnett Show (also Carol Burnett and Friends in syndication) is an American variety/sketch comedy television show starring Carol Burnett, Harvey Korman, Vicki Lawrence, and Lyle Waggoner. In 1975, frequent guest star Tim Conway became a regular after Waggoner left the series.[2] In 1977, Dick Van Dyke replaced Korman but it was agreed that it was not a match and he left after 10 episodes.[3] The show originally ran on CBS from September 11, 1967, to March 29, 1978, for 279 episodes, and again with nine episodes in the fall of 1991. The series originated in CBS Television City's Studio 33, and won 25 primetime Emmy Awards, was ranked number 16 on TV Guide's 50 Greatest TV Shows of All Time in 2002,[4] and in 2007 was listed as one of Time magazine's 100 Best TV Shows of All Time.[5] In 2013, TV Guide ranked The Carol Burnett Show number 17 on its list of the 60 Greatest Shows of All Time.[6] BackgroundBy 1967, Carol Burnett had been a popular veteran of television for 12 years, having made her first appearances in 1955 on such programs as The Paul Winchell Show and the sitcom Stanley starring the comedian Buddy Hackett. In 1959, she became a regular supporting cast member on the CBS-TV variety series The Garry Moore Show. Departing the Moore Show in the spring of 1962, she pursued other projects in film, Broadway productions, and headlining her own television specials. Burnett signed a contract with CBS for 10 years which required her to do two guest appearances and a special a year. Within the first five years of this contract, she had the option to "push the button", a phrase the programming executives used,[7] and be put on the air in 30 one-hour variety shows, pay-or-play. After discussion with her husband Joe Hamilton, in the last week of the fifth year of the contract, Burnett decided to call the head of CBS Michael Dann and exercise the clause. Dann, explaining that variety is a "man's genre", offered Burnett a sitcom called Here's Agnes. Burnett had no interest in doing a sitcom, and because of the contract, CBS was obliged to give Burnett her own variety show.[8] ProductionIn addition to Carol Burnett, the cast consisted of:
Comedic actor Harvey Korman had done many guest shots in TV sitcoms. From 1963 to 1967, he had been a semi-regular on the CBS variety series The Danny Kaye Show. When Kaye's program ended in the spring of 1967, Korman was immediately hired for The Carol Burnett Show. Lyle Waggoner, who was sometimes used to play the handsome man for Burnett to fawn over, was hired as the show's announcer in addition to playing in sketches. Vicki Lawrence, a young singer from The Young Americans wrote a letter to Burnett when she was 17, remarking on their physical resemblance. This led to her audition and getting hired to play Burnett's kid sister in numerous "Carol and Sis" sketches. Jim Nabors was the guest star on every season premiere of the show. Burnett considered Nabors to be her good luck charm. In addition, several notable actors were used in the comedy sketches in featured roles, especially in the first season, such as William Schallert, Isabel Sanford, and Reta Shaw. The popular variety show not only established Burnett as a television superstar, but it also made her regular supporting cast household names, with such sketches as "As the Stomach Turns", (a parody of As the World Turns) and "Went with the Wind!" (a spoof of Gone with the Wind), "Carol & Sis", "Mrs. Wiggins", and "The Family" (which led to a made-for-TV movie titled Eunice, as well as a spin-off television series titled Mama's Family), "Nora Desmond" (Burnett's send-up of Gloria Swanson's character Norma Desmond in Sunset Boulevard), and "Stella Toddler". A frequent repeated segment was "Kitchen Commercials", in which cast members parodied TV commercials that drove a woman (Burnett) crazy. The long-running show was frequently nominated for Emmys for best variety series and won three times. A favorite feature consisted of an unrehearsed question-and-answer segment with the audience in CBS Studio 33 (now Bob Barker Studio) lasting about three to four minutes at the start of most shows. Burnett stated that she borrowed the concept from Garry Moore, who did the same on his variety show, but never taped it.[9] Burnett asked for the lights to be turned up ("let's bump up the lights") and then randomly picked audience members who raised their hands. Burnett often ad-libbed funny answers, but occasionally ended up as the straight (wo)man. For example: Young woman: "Have you ever taken acting lessons?" Carol: "Yes, I have." Young woman: "Do you think it did any good?" The show was rehearsed each day until its two Friday tapings. Differently colored cue cards (black, blue, green, and red) were used for each major performer ("Carol Burnett: Bump-Up the Lights"). The second taping was fairly routine until Tim Conway came aboard as a guest star. As a recurring guest star from the show's launch and later a regular cast member, Conway provided unrehearsed bits to sketches that became known to the staff as "Conway's Capers". Conway would play the first taping straight, but (if the sketch had played well in the first taping, and could be printed) would ad-lib bizarre scenarios during the second. Some notable clips included Conway as a Nazi interrogator berating an American captive (Lyle Waggoner). Using a Hitler puppet and a pencil as a "club", Conway sang three verses of "I've Been Working on the Railroad" as Waggoner tried in vain to ignore him. Some, like the Hitler puppet, made it into the final broadcast; others, like a notably convoluted story about Siamese elephants joined at the trunk (ad-libbed during a 1977 "Mama's Family" sketch), were edited, the uncensored version only appearing years later on CBS specials. Conway's favorite victim was Harvey Korman, who often broke character reacting to Conway's zaniness, such as when Conway played a dentist misusing Novocain or the recurring role of "The Oldest Man" – an elderly, shuffling, senile man who slowly rolled down stairways and fell prey to various mechanical mishaps (including an electric wheelchair and an automated dry-cleaning rack). The show also became known for its closing theme song, written by Burnett's husband, with these lyrics:[10] I'm so glad we had this time together Just to have a laugh or sing a song Seems we just get started and before you know it Comes the time we have to say, "So long." At the close of each episode, Burnett tugged her ear. This silent message was meant for her grandmother, who raised her, and meant she was thinking of her at that moment. After her grandmother's death, Burnett continued the tradition. When The Carol Burnett Show made its network debut on CBS-TV in September 1967, it was scheduled on Monday nights at 10:00 pm opposite NBC’s I Spy and ABC’s The Big Valley. At the end of its first season and through the spring of 1971, it consistently ranked among the top-30 programs. (For the 1969–70 season, it posted its highest rating ever, ranking at number 13.) For season five, CBS moved the show to Wednesday nights at 8:00 pm, where its chief competition was NBC’s Adam-12 and the ABC sitcoms Bewitched and The Courtship of Eddie's Father. Despite the schedule change, the show continued to do well until the fall of 1972, when the ratings slipped. In December 1972, CBS again moved The Carol Burnett Show to Saturday nights at 10:00 pm (EST) where, for the next four years, it not only received solid ratings, but was also part of a powerhouse Saturday-night lineup of primetime shows that included All in the Family, M*A*S*H, The Mary Tyler Moore Show, and The Bob Newhart Show. In the 1973–74 season, the "Family" sketches (with Burnett as Eunice, Korman as her husband Ed, and Lawrence as Eunice's mother) were introduced and the "Carol and Sis" segments were phased out. At the end of that season (the series' seventh), after having been with The Carol Burnett Show from the beginning, Lyle Waggoner left the series to pursue other acting opportunities. The following season, Waggoner's spot as a supporting regular remained vacant. Don Crichton, the lead male dancer on the show, began to inherit some of Waggoner's duties. Then in season nine, because of his many popular guest appearances on the series, Tim Conway was signed as a full-time regular, joining Korman and Lawrence. In November, 1976, the series' tenth year, The Carol Burnett Show presented what would become one of its best-known and most well-regarded sketches: "Went with the Wind!," a parody of the 1939 film Gone with the Wind, which had its television debut on NBC the week before. After the 1976-77 season ended, Harvey Korman decided to leave the series. After a decade of working with Burnett and winning several Emmy Awards, Korman had been offered a contract by ABC to headline his own series. Also, the ratings had begun to decline. Nevertheless, CBS renewed Burnett's show for an 11th season. Dick Van Dyke, fresh from headlining his own short-lived Emmy-winning variety series, Van Dyke & Company, was brought in to replace Korman. However, his presence did not help stem the sagging ratings, as the show faced new competition in ABC's The Love Boat. After three months, Van Dyke departed the show, and CBS, in a desperate attempt to save the series, moved The Carol Burnett Show from Saturday nights at 10:00 pm to Sunday nights at the same hour, beginning in December 1977. Regular guest stars Steve Lawrence and Ken Berry were brought in to fill the void left by Korman and Van Dyke. The ratings improved considerably. CBS wanted to renew the show for another year, but by this time, Burnett had grown tired of the weekly grind and wanted to explore acting roles outside of the comedy genre, despite her success in it. With the changes in cast along with the mediocre ratings, she felt that television was undergoing a transition and that the variety series format was on its way out. Therefore, Burnett decided to end the series on her own rather than be canceled later. Thus, on March 29, 1978, in a special two-hour finale entitled "A Special Evening with Carol Burnett", The Carol Burnett Show left primetime television after 11 years, finishing its last season in 66th place. Reruns were aired during the summer of 1978. Notable characters/sketches
Movie parodiesA notable sketch was the 1976 parody Went with the Wind!, in which Scarlett O'Hara must fashion a gown from curtains; Burnett, as Starlett, descends a long staircase wearing a green curtain complete with hanging rod. When Starlett is complimented on her "gown", she replies, "Thank you. I saw it in the window and I just couldn't resist it." The outfit, designed by Bob Mackie, is now on display at the Smithsonian Institution.[22] In addition to Gone with the Wind, The Carol Burnett Show featured many movie parodies. These included take-offs of, for example, Airport, Babes in Arms, Beach Blanket Bingo, Born to Be Bad, Caged, Dangerous When Wet, Double Indemnity, The Enchanted Cottage, From Here to Eternity, The Heiress, Jaws, The Little Foxes, Back Street, Little Miss Broadway, Love Story, Mildred Pierce, National Velvet, One in a Million, The Petrified Forest, Pillow Talk, Random Harvest, Rebecca, The Roaring Twenties, Rose Marie, San Francisco, Show Boat, The Scarlet Pimpernel, So Proudly We Hail!, Stella Dallas, A Stolen Life, Sunset Boulevard, Torch Song, and When My Baby Smiles at Me. After the seriesContinuations and revivals{{refimprove section|date=July 2018}}In the fall of 1977, while the series was still running in prime time, the comedy sketches of the show were re-edited into freestanding programs; the resulting show enjoyed success for many years in syndicated reruns (as Carol Burnett and Friends, a half-hour edition of selected 1972–77 material). In the spring of 1979, a year after The Carol Burnett Show left the air, Burnett and her husband Joe Hamilton were dining in a restaurant with friends, including Tim Conway. At that gathering, Burnett got wistful and started reminiscing about the show and making suggestions to Conway concerning sketches that she wished they could be creating if the show were still running. Hamilton suggested to Burnett that she do a summer series. Taking that idea, Burnett and Hamilton approached CBS about doing a four-week program in the summer of 1979. CBS already had its schedule filled for the summer months and rejected the idea. However, ABC was interested, and as a result, four postscript episodes of The Carol Burnett Show were produced. Under the title Carol Burnett & Company, the show premiered on Saturday, August 18, 1979, and included many favorite sketches such as "Mr. Tudball and Mrs. Wiggins", "The Family", "As The Stomach Turns", and Burnett doing her impersonation of Queen Elizabeth II. Its format was very much similar to Burnett's series, with two exceptions. Due to the unavailability of Harvey Korman (who, ironically, had been under contract to ABC since he had left Burnett's show in 1977), comic actors Kenneth Mars and Craig Richard Nelson were added to the supporting cast, joining Lawrence and Conway. Ernie Flatt, who had been the choreographer on Burnett's show for its entire 11-year run, was replaced by the show's lead dancer Don Crichton. The guest stars in that four-week period were (chronologically) Cheryl Ladd, Alan Arkin, Penny Marshall, and Sally Field. The reviews of the series were very favorable, with several critics heartily welcoming Burnett back to weekly television, albeit on a limited basis. The ratings also were respectable and plans were announced for the program to become a yearly summer event, but it never happened. The "Family" sketches led to a 1982 CBS made-for-television film called Eunice starring Burnett, Korman, Lawrence, Betty White, and Ken Berry. The success of this program spawned a spin-off sitcom entitled Mama's Family, starring Vicki Lawrence and Ken Berry, which ran from 1983 to 1990. It occasionally featured Burnett and Korman guest-starring as Eunice and Ed Higgins. In the first year and a half of the show's run, Korman also appeared as narrator Alastair Quince, introducing each episode (a parody of Alastair Cooke hosting Masterpiece Theatre) and he also directed 31 episodes of the series. NBC aired a comedy half-hour repertory series called Carol & Company that premiered in March 1990. It proved to be moderately successful in the ratings and was renewed for a second season. The regulars on the show included Peter Krause, Jeremy Piven, Terry Kiser, Meagen Fay, Anita Barone, and Richard Kind (and occasional guest stars, including Betty White and Burt Reynolds); each week's show was a different half-hour comedy play. This program lasted until July 1991. CBS brought back The Carol Burnett Show for another run in the fall of 1991; new regulars included Meagen Fay and Richard Kind (brought over from the NBC show), and Chris Barnes, Roger Kabler, and Jessica Lundy. However, the times had changed and Burnett's humor was tame compared to the edgier comedy popular in the 1990s. The series failed to catch on with the public and only nine episodes of this revival were aired. In 1994, reruns of the syndicated Carol Burnett and Friends package aired on Nick at Nite. The show also aired on The Family Channel in 1996 and on TV Land as part of that network's inaugural lineup. Beginning in January 2015, the show airs on Me-TV at 11:00 PM ET.[23] SpecialsThe cast of The Carol Burnett Show was reunited on four CBS television specials:
List of guest starsNote: only the first appearance by the guest star is listed. Season 1 (1967–1968){{div col|colwidth=18em}}
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Season 11 (1977–1978){{div col|colwidth=18em}}
LegacyConsidering her large body of work, and due in great part to this TV show, Burnett received Kennedy Center Honors in 2003, and was awarded the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor in October 2013.[25] In 2009, TV Guide ranked "Went with the Wind" number 53 on its list of the 100 Greatest Episodes.[26] On September 13, 2016, Burnett released her memoir about the show titled In Such Good Company: Eleven Years of Laughter, Mayhem, and Fun in the Sandbox. The book, full of anecdotes about the 1967–1978 variety series, covers the history of how Burnett created the show, how she cast her co-stars, the co-star she once fired (and quickly rehired), and all of the show's memorable characters.[27] The audio format of the book, which she narrated, won a Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album.[28] Home mediaIn the early 2000s, certain full-length episodes of The Carol Burnett Show were released on VHS and DVD by Columbia House on a subscription basis (now discontinued). Guthy-Renker released another DVD collection, The Carol Burnett Show Collector's Edition. In August 2012, Time–Life released The Carol Burnett Show - The Ultimate Collection on DVD in Region 1. This 22-disc set features 50 episodes from the series, selected by Burnett. It also contains bonus features, including interviews with the cast, featurettes, sketches that were never aired, and a 24-page commemorative booklet. In August 2015, Time–Life released The Carol Burnett Show - The Lost Episodes on DVD in Region 1. This 22-disc set features 45 episodes from the series' first five years (1967–72), selected by Burnett. It also contains bonus features, including interviews with the cast, featurettes, and a 24-page commemorative booklet.[29] Previously, due to an ongoing legal battle with the production company Bob Banner Associates, the episodes from those seasons had never appeared in syndication nor been released on home media.{{dubious|date=August 2015}}[30]{{Failed verification|date=August 2015}} Nielsen ratings/broadcast schedule
References1. ^{{cite web | title=The Carol Burnett Show (sitcom) | url=http://www.classicthemes.com/50sTVThemes/themePages/carolBurnettShow.html | work=ClassicThemes.com | publisher=The Media Management Group | year=2008 | accessdate=April 28, 2008}} 2. ^{{cite news |url=http://articles.latimes.com/2000/jun/13/local/me-40531 |title='Carol Burnett Show' Alumnus Lands Big Role in Film Trailers |first=Kathleen |last=O'Steen |authorlink= |work=Los Angeles Times |accessdate=April 12, 2017 |date=June 13, 2000}} 3. ^https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=3bEvAAAAIBAJ&sjid=A_kDAAAAIBAJ&pg=6821,1431347&dq=nielsen+ratings&hl=en 4. ^{{cite news| title=TV Guide Names Top 50 Shows| url=http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2002/04/26/entertainment/main507388.shtml| work=CBS News| accessdate=August 19, 2011| date=February 11, 2009}} 5. ^{{cite news |url=http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/article/0,28804,1651341_1659192_1652529,00.html |title=The 100 Best TV Shows of All-TIME |first=James |last=Poniewozik |authorlink=James Poniewozik |work=Time |accessdate=March 4, 2010 |date=September 6, 2007}} 6. ^{{cite journal |last=Fretts |first=Bruce |last2=Roush |first2=Matt |date= |title=The Greatest Shows on Earth |url= |journal=TV Guide Magazine |publisher= |volume=61 |issue=3194-3195 |pages=16–19 |doi= |accessdate=22 December 2013}} 7. ^{{cite book |last= Burnett|first= Carol|date= 2016|title= In Such Good Company: Eleven Years of Laughter, Mayhem, and Fun in the Sandbox|url= |location= New York City|publisher= Crown Archetype|page= 4|isbn= 978-1101904657|author-link= }} 8. ^{{cite web| url=http://www.emmytvlegends.org/interviews/people/carol-burnett#| title=Interview: Carol Burnett| publisher=Archive of American Television| date=29 April 2003| last=Herman| first=Karen}} 9. ^"The Florence Henderson Show" RLTV, 2009 10. ^{{cite web| last=Bell| first=Warren| title=Have a Laugh and Sing a Song| url=http://old.nationalreview.com/bell/bell200511090809.asp| accessdate=August 19, 2011| date=November 9, 2009}}{{dead link|date=May 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} 11. ^{{cite book| first= Wesley| last= Hyatt| year= 2006| title= Emmy Award Winning Nighttime Television Shows, 1948-2004| edition=| publisher= McFarland & Company| location=| pages= 239| isbn= 978-0786423293}} 12. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.emmytvlegends.org/interviews/people/vicki-lawrence#|title=Vicki Lawrence|work=Archive of American Television|accessdate=9 January 2017}} 13. ^{{cite book| first= Wesley| last= Hyatt| year= 2006| title= Emmy Award Winning Nighttime Television Shows, 1948-2004| edition=| publisher= McFarland & Company| location=| pages= 240| isbn= 978-0786423293}} 14. ^{{cite book| first= Wesley| last= Hyatt| year= 2006| title= Emmy Award Winning Nighttime Television Shows, 1948-2004| edition=| publisher= McFarland & Company| location=| pages= 240| isbn= 978-0786423293}} 15. ^{{cite book| first= Wesley| last= Hyatt| year= 2006| title= Emmy Award Winning Nighttime Television Shows, 1948-2004| edition=| publisher= McFarland & Company| location=| pages= 240| isbn= 978-0786423293}} 16. ^{{cite interview |last=Burnett |first=Carol |subjectlink= |interviewer=Carol Burnett Show: The Lost Episodes Limited Edition (7 DVD Collection) |title=Featurette: Fabulous Firsts |url= |date= |work=Carol Burnett Show: The Lost Episodes Limited Edition (7 DVD Collection) }} 17. ^{{cite interview |last=Burnett |first=Carol |subjectlink= |interviewer=Carol Burnett Show: The Lost Episodes Limited Edition (7 DVD Collection) |title=Featurette: Fabulous Firsts |url= |date= |work=Carol Burnett Show: The Lost Episodes Limited Edition (7 DVD Collection) }} 18. ^{{cite journal| title=Harvey Korman of ‘Burnett Show’ Dies at 81| url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/30/arts/television/30korman.html| accessdate=December 5, 2016| work=New York Times| first=Bruce| last=Lambert| date=May 30, 2008}} 19. ^{{cite book| first= Zeke | last= Jarvis| year= 2006| title= Make 'em Laugh!: American Humorists of the 20th and 21st Centuries| edition=| publisher= Greenwood| location=| pages= 112| isbn= 978-1440829949}} 20. ^{{cite book| first= Wesley| last= Hyatt| year= 2006| title= Emmy Award Winning Nighttime Television Shows, 1948-2004| edition=| publisher= McFarland & Company| location=| pages= 239| isbn= 978-0786423293}} 21. ^King, Susan. "Tim Conway's life off script", Los Angeles Times, November 11, 2013. Accessed September 6, 2016. 22. ^{{cite journal| title=Carol Burnett—We Just Can’t Resist Her!| url=http://blogs.smithsonianmag.com/aroundthemall/2009/05/carol-burnett-we-just-cant-resist-her/| accessdate=August 19, 2011| work=Smithsonian| first=Jesse| last=Rhodes| date=May 14, 2009}} 23. ^MeTV Chicago Program Schedule WCIU.com. Accessed January 1, 2015 24. ^[https://variety.com/2017/tv/news/carol-burnett-50th-anniversary-special-cbs-ratings-1202629646/ TV Ratings: Carol Burnett 50th Anniversary Special Draws Over 15 Million Viewers on CBS], retrieved December 4, 2017. 25. ^{{cite news| url=http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-207_162-57585492/carol-burnett-to-win-top-u.s-humor-prize-in-dc/ | title=Carol Burnett to win top U.S. humor prize in DC| work=CBS News| date=May 21, 2013| accessdate=2015-03-11| agency=Associated Press}} 26. ^{{cite web|url=http://rev-views.blogspot.com/2009/06/tv-guides-top-100-episodes.html|title=TV Guide's Top 100 Episodes|publisher=Rev/Views|accessdate=July 4, 2016}} 27. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/books/carol-burnett-is-so-glad-we-had-this-time-together/2016/09/08/0901a8b2-7457-11e6-b786-19d0cb1ed06c_story.html?noredirect=on|title=Carol Burnett relives show’s comedic genius with ‘In Such Good Company’|last=Henderson|first=Amy|work=The Washington Post|date=2016-09-09|accessdate=2018-07-31}} 28. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.grammy.com/grammys/artists/carol-burnett|title=Artist Carol Burnett|website=www.grammy.com|accessdate=July 31, 2018}} 29. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Carol-Burnett-The-Lost-Episodes/21091 |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2015-08-04 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150804062334/http://www.tvshowsondvd.com/news/Carol-Burnett-The-Lost-Episodes/21091 |archivedate=August 4, 2015 |df=mdy-all }} 30. ^{{cite news| title=Carol Burnett Sued In Dispute Over Copyright And TV Show Revenue| url=http://www.deadline.com/2012/11/carol-burnett-sued-in-dispute-over-copyright-and-tv-show-revenue/| date=November 21, 2012| website=Deadline Hollywood| accessdate=2015-03-11}} 31. ^{{cite web|title=TV Ratings|url=http://www.classictvhits.com/tvratings/index.htm|accessdate=February 17, 2013}} Further reading
External links{{Commons category|The Carol Burnett Show}}
| title = Awards for The Carol Burnett Show | list ={{EmmyAward VarietyMusicComedy 1951–1975}}{{GoldenGlobeTVComedy 1969–1989}} }}{{DEFAULTSORT:Carol Burnett Show, The}} 12 : 1967 American television series debuts|1978 American television series endings|1960s American sketch comedy television series|1970s American sketch comedy television series|1960s American variety television series|1970s American variety television series|Best Musical or Comedy Series Golden Globe winners|CBS network shows|English-language television programs|Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Variety Series winners|Television series by CBS Television Studios|Carol Burnett |
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