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- Television show featuring skits by Carol Burnett and her comedy troupe.
- A Wild West cow town is starving for entertainment, and it falls upon Calamity Jane, a rowdy, gun-toting, jeans-wearing tomboy, to go to Chicago to bring back a famed stage actress. She brings instead the star's maid, who settles in the town, but Jane's love interest falls for her.
- A fabulous collection of sketches and songs. Zero Mostel performs If I Were a Rich Man from Fiddler on the Roof. The program was written by Nat Hiken (Sgt. Bilko, Car 54 Where Are You)
- Carol's series premiere guest is Jim Nabors. Highlights of this inaugural edition include: a "V.I.P." interview with Shirley Dimple; Jim and Carol as two misfit skiers in "The Ski Lodge"; the first "Carol and Sis" sketch; and a Broadway medley. Jim sings "You Don't Have to Say You Love Me" in Italian, and Carol as the Charwoman sings "Georgy Girl".
- 1967–19781hTV-G8.0 (67)TV EpisodeGuests Jonathan Winters and Barbara Eden join Carol in this show; a "V.I.P." interview segment with Jonathan as Santa Claus; Carol and Vicki in a sketch about a surprise party; guest Leonard Nimoy in a sketch about "Mrs. Invisible Man.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.2 (66)TV EpisodeHighlights of this show with guests Mickey Rooney and John Davidson include: "The Rat Race" (a spoof of "The Dating Game"); and "The Funn Family".
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.4 (48)TV EpisodeHighlights of this Christmas edition include: guest Sid Caesar demonstrating self-defense; Carol and Sid as a couple who quarrel on Christmas night; Sid, Carol and Harvey in a sketch that takes place in ancient Rome; guest Ella Fitzgerald sings "A Foggy Day" and "Always True to You in My Fashion"; Carol performs "Bare Necessities", and as the Charwoman sings "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas; and a cameo by Jonathan Winters.
- 1967–19781hTV-G6.8 (60)TV EpisodeCarol's guest Lana Turner sings "Heavenly Music" while dancing with the Ernie Flatt troop. Frank Gorshin does impressions then becomes Bluebeard with Carol his 13th wife. Carol and Harvey are a bickering couple on a game show.
- Highlights include: "The Swinging 6 O'Clock News"; a "V.I.P." interview with the wife of the Jolly Green Giant; and musical numbers from guests Trini López ("Sally Was a Good Old Girl" and "Sonny") and Ken Berry ("Mack the Knife"); and a takeoff of "Show Boat".
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.4 (57)TV EpisodeGuest, Shirley Jones and George Chakiris
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.9 (59)TV EpisodeJonathan Winters joins with Carol in a couple of skits while Dionne Warwick performs the theme from the Valley of the Dolls.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.9 (96)TV EpisodeHighlights include: a "V.I.P." interview sketch satirizing Luci Baines Johnson; Carol and Vicki do a "Sleeping Beauty" skit; guest Sid Caesar as a father awaiting the birth of his child; Carol and Lyle do a "How Tall Is Your Announcer" segment; a parody of "Star Trek"; guest Liza Minnelli performs "The Debutante's Ball", and duets with Carol on a medley of songs including "Just In Time"; and Sid and the cast in a spoof of the Ziegfeld Follies.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.3 (51)TV EpisodeHighlights include Liza Minnelli singing "Butterfly McHeart" and "The Happy Time"; Carol, Liza, and the dancers perform "Big Beautiful Ball" with all dressed as clowns.
- Reporter interviews "Queen Elizabeth"; Betty performs "Hello, Dolly!" in barn dance motif; "As the Stomach Turns"; "Carol and Sis" visited by aunt and uncle; Carol and Martha duet on "Just One of Those Things" "That Old Gang of Mine"
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.7 (51)TV EpisodeMartha Raye and Betty Grable guest in the soap opera spoof "As The Stomach Turns." And a "Beautiful Legs" contest reveals stiff completion from an unlikely competitor. All this, and Carol's Q&A too.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.5 (46)TV EpisodeHighlights include: Gary singing "The Most Beautiful Girl in the World"; in "Science Fiction Playhouse," two Martians come to Earth to learn about the new "secret weapon" of television; "That Wonderful Year," reenacting key moments from the year 1937; Gary sings "The Night is Young and You're So Beautiful"; the Broadway musical "Golden Boy" is parodied, featuring a powerful boxer with very poor aim; a parody of South-Sea island melodramas in which Burnett is a captured island native set to be sacrificed.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.4 (46)TV EpisodeCarol and guest Imogene join together to portray Congressional wives, astronauts in space still dealing with earthly romances and Olympic athletes with different approaches concerning men. Korman is the neglectful husband Dracula. Mel solos "That's All"
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.3 (46)TV EpisodeNewlywed sketch; Miss Loring sings "Little Girl Blue" and "Don't Tie Me Down." Soupy Sales is featured in a musical comedy production number, built around "Real Live Girl".
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.0 (39)TV EpisodeHighlights include Conway playing an Apache chief, the first Indian president of the United States; Shani Wallis and Miss Burnett appear as bloomer girls in song-and-dance production "Good Enough for Grandma's Fancy"; Miss Wallis sings "It Had To Be You"; Miss Burnett sings "Meantime"; Burnett and Korman play a 90-year-old couple taking an after-dinner breather on their patio.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.3 (40)TV EpisodeHighlights of this edition with guests Sid Caesar and Barbara McNair include: a feminine spoof of "I Spy"; Sid, Carol and Harvey as gypsies attempting to untangle various personal complications; Harvey interviewing silent movie stars Pico and Rivera; Carol and Harvey as soap opera stars plagued by a drunken sound effects man; and musical numbers including Carol as the charwoman singing "If I Ruled the World", and Barbara performing "I've Grown Accustomed to Your Face" and "The Second Time Around".
- 1967–19781hTV-G8.1 (128)TV EpisodeCarol and Sis sketch centers around Roger and Carol having surprise visitors - old friends whose names they cannot remember.
- 1967–19781hTV-G8.3 (140)TV EpisodeHighlights include: two women (Carol and guest Lucille Ball) go to the "Café Argentine" whose staff includes a goose-stepping maitre d' (Harvey); Carol as a housewife fighting off a recalcitrant washing machine and attacking pigeons, only to end up impaled by a medieval lance; "Carol and Sis" sing a rendition of "I Dig Rock and Roll Music"; guest Tim Conway plays a bumbling TV news anchor; two rent-a-car employees (Carol, Lucy) vie for the attentions of a traveler (Tim); guest Gloria Loring performs "Goin' Out of My Head" and "Try to Remember"; a woman (Carol) experiences the downside of marrying a superhero (Harvey); and Carol and Lucy sing and dance to a barroom medley.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.6 (64)TV EpisodeHighlights include: a "V.I.P." sketch about Miss America; Carol, Harvey and guest Imogene Coca perform a coffee commercial sketch; guest Lainie Kazan performs a "Sunnyside"/"Silver Lining" medley, and duets with Carol on "Watch What Happens"; Carol and Harvey as "Bonnie and Clod"; a "Little Pianos" production number with the cast and dancers; and the Charwoman does a striptease pantomime and sings "There's No Business Like Show Business".
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.7 (74)TV EpisodeDr. Jekyll and Mrs. Hyde; a routine from guest Phyllis Diller; musical numbers from guests Gwen Verdon and Bobbie Gentry; Carol and Vicki in a foreign exchange sketch; and a 'Sgt. Pepper' production number.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.8 (69)TV EpisodeHighlights of this show with guests Nanette Fabray and Sonny & Chér include: a "V.I.P." interview sketch with Carol as a nudist; an office triangle sketch; Chér performs "You Better Sit Down Kids", and Sonny & Chér sing "Living for You"; and a sketch about different airlines in different countries.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.9 (77)TV EpisodeHighlights include: Carol and guest Richard Chamberlain attempt to make Lyle jealous; an airport interview with a "Mother of the Year"; musical numbers from Carol and the dancers ("Everybody's Gotta Be Someplace"), Richard with the dancers and singers ("Lazy Day"), and guest Gloria Loring ("A Taste of Honey" and "I've Gotta Be Me"); Carol and Vicki perform "Sisters Galore" sketch, and they and the dancers perform "Ballin' the Jack".
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.4 (48)TV EpisodeJim and Carol sketch the clumsy date of a couple too proud to wear their glasses. Then they team up for a musical-comedy graduation ceremony. Harvey Korman spoofs political candidates. Vicki is back for the weekly "Carol and Sis" sketch.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.3 (38)TV EpisodeImogene Coca and Vic Damone guest tonight as Carol spoofs airline family rates, motorcycle gangs, and commercials on taboo subjects.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.8 (48)TV EpisodeSegments include: Q and A; a presidential fireside chat with his family (and look for Isabel Sanford); a song by Eileen Farrell; a skit with Carol as an interviewer interviewing Lyle Wagonner as a famous actor; an operatic song (in Italian) by Marilyn Horne; a musical skit based on The Three Little Pigs; another musical skit with Eileen, Marilyn and Carol singing "Big Spender" and ending with a Christmas carol medley.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.4 (43)TV EpisodeNancy Wilson and Mickey Rooney join in the music and comedy. Nancy and Carol get their parts confused during an audition. Carol, as the outgoing First Lady, gives her successor a tour of the White House. "Boys' Town" sketch with Rooney. Amnesia victim Carol doesn't remember husband Harvey.
- Highlights include: a daytime soap-opera spoof; Miss Burnett does an interview with a fashion designer about his annual worst-dressed list; a social chat between two housewives doing their weekly wash in an automatic laundry room; a "Carol and Sis" sketch finds Carol under a lingering hypnotic spell, which causes her to act amorously toward any man who says the word "February" -- this proves somewhat embarrassing when her husband invites an accountant over to help figure his income tax; Berry performs "Feather in My Shoe"; Berry joins Miss Burnett in a three-song duet, "Home," "Way Back Home" and "Love in a Home." Miss Jones sings "I Gotta'Be Me" in her solo spot.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.5 (50)TV EpisodeMiss Channing sings and plays a gold digger out to nab wealthy old Harvey Korman while nurse Burnett looks on. Martin Landau plays a presidential nominee and his wife checking out Southern governor Korman and mate Carol Burnett for the vice presidential spot on the ticket. The whole cast appears in an astrology sketch on the sign of Taurus with Carol as movie-land's favorite authority.
- 1967–19781hTV-G8.5 (113)TV EpisodeHighlights include: guest Tim Conway introduces his onetime comic partner (and future series announcer) Ernie Anderson in the audience during the opening question-and-answer segment; Tim as a rookie dentist who gets into a series of misadventures while attempting to treat a patient (Harvey); Carol, Vicki and guest Ethel Merman in a backstage sketch about an understudy attempting to sabotage the star before a performance; Tim, Carol, Vicki and Lyle are among relatives gathered at a haunted house for the reading of a will, and dead bodies show up everywhere; Vicki performs with the dancers; and Ethel sings "Elusive Butterfly", and for the close duets with Carol on a medley which includes "Everything's Coming Up Roses" and "I Get a Kick Out of You".
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.4 (49)TV EpisodeImogene Coca and Miss Burnett play American school teachers in Rome, rhapsodizing to "If Love were All". The main sketch is a fairy tale spoof with Carol Burnett as Cinderumplewhite. Imogene Coca is the wicked witch and Robert Goulet is the handsome prince. Harvey Korman and Lyle Waggoner play the two-headed dragon that Goulet battles. Goulet solos "Didn't We" and Miss Cora sings "If Love Were All".
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.0 (34)TV EpisodeHighlights include Harvey singing a comic version of "They Call The Wind Maria."
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.4 (33)TV EpisodeA newly taped segment is inserted into this repeat of the October 21, 1968 episode, where Rodgers sings his new hit record, "Today," and discusses his new series, "Carol Burnett Presents the Jimmie Rodgers Show," which premiered Monday, June 16, 1969.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.1 (44)TV EpisodeHighlights include: Five-year-olds discussing their parents and the world in general; Peyton Place spoof; Trini Lopez in production number of "Mountain Dew"; Lopez kids Western musicals and joins Carol in a fast-paced "Sunny Side of the Street".
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.1 (46)TV EpisodeGobel and Miss Burnett, posing as the Duke and Duchess of Wormser, are subjects of a "V.I.P." interview conducted by Harvey Korman. In another sketch, a housewife chats with a neighbor about husbands and politics. In the" "Carol and Sis" spot, Carol goes all out to downgrade her house when husband Roger (Korman) tries to sell it to a couple of potential buyers. In another sketch, a colonial couple watches television in the year 1776. Their selections include a late-night talk show and a newscast offering gossip of the colonies. Bobbie Gentry solos "Sweet Peony", and duets "Little Green Apples" with George Gobel. Miss Burnett, as the charwoman, sings "I've Gotta Be Me."
- Edie Adams livens and lovelies up The Carol Burnett Show, appearing with the star as two mothers-in-law contemplating their kiddies' wedding. They also team up with Vicki Lawrence and The Ernie Flatt Dancers for a bouncy rendition of "Those Were the Days," and Miss Adams sings "I Stayed Too Long At The Fair" on her own. Tim Conway is also featured in several skits, including one that features him as a nervous holdup man on his first job.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.6 (70)TV EpisodeCarol's guests are Lucille Ball, Eddie Albert, and Nancy Wilson. Harvey joins her for "The Old Folks." Roger brings home his new boss, a health fanatic, and forces Carol to act like she exercises. Carol and Lucy are popular funeral attendees in "As the Stomach Turns," Eddie is an undertaker, and Nancy integrates Canoga Falls. Nancy sings "The Folks Who Live on the Hill," teams with Carol for "The Other Man's Grass Is Always Greener," and Eddie sings "Father of Girls." The finale is a tribute to the astrological sign Leo.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.5 (67)TV EpisodeHighlights include a salute to Tin Pan Alley.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.3 (48)TV EpisodeSkits: "Carol and Sis: PTA Show"; "Classic Movie Theatre: Mrs. Magnificent." Songs: Day In, Day Out; Skylark and The Trolley Song.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.7 (54)TV EpisodeMiss Burnett welcomes two old friends, Garry Moore and Durward Kirby, for a nostalgic (and funny) repetition of some of the comedy sketches that made them all famous. In one sequence Moore interviews Carol who's playing a dignified princess rehearsing a television toast to a noted humanitarian.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.3 (52)TV EpisodeJim Nabors, a Burnett good luck charm, helps Carol kick off the new season. Jim plays a bachelor dating neighbor Carol whose apartment is fortified with burglar alarms. Nabors also sings "Turn Around, Look at Me" and joins Carol and associates in "The First Day at School". Carol revives her Fireside girl, Alice Portnoy, and her Charwoman, and appears in a house-moving skit with Harvey Korman and Vicki Lawrence.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.4 (39)TV EpisodeThe accent is on the holiday season when Carol Burnett's old friends Garry Moore and Durward Kirby drop In for their annual visit. Carol and Harvey play the old folks as they reminisce about their marriage. Moore and Kirby play opposing attorneys in the courtroom trial of Mrs. Peter Piper, whose husband picked a peck of pickled peppers. Miss Burnett recites an original Christmas-poem and solos "Make Your Own Kind of Music" and later joins the Bob Mitchell Boys Choir in singing "Do You Know How Christmas Trees Are Grown?" Garry Moore assists Durward Kirby in delivering some "commercials" merchandising gifts for kids. In the "Carol and Sis" sketch, Carol throws a tantrum when husband Korman hosts his poker club.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.4 (36)TV EpisodeHighlights include a salute to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
- 1967–19781hTV-G7.6 (48)TV EpisodeHighlights: First "Mrs. Wiggins" sketch, Steve Lawrence sings "In The Still of the Night," tribute to Glenn Miller with "Moonlight Serenade" and "Pennsylvania 6-5000".