“Mr. Tudball and Mrs. Wiggins”: The Office Sketch That Became a Comedy Classic

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Among the many unforgettable sketches from The Carol Burnett Show, few are as beloved as the recurring office scenes featuring Mr. Tudball and Mrs. Wiggins. Performed by Tim Conway and Carol Burnett, the sketch became one of the show’s most recognizable comedy segments, celebrated for its impeccable timing, absurd dialogue, and the frequent moments when the actors could barely keep from laughing.

A workplace built on comic chaos

Tim Conway as Mr. Tudball Takes Mrs. Wiggins Out For a Hilarious Lunch

The premise is deceptively simple. Mr. Tudball, played by Tim Conway, is a small-business owner attempting to run a serious office. His secretary, Mrs. Wiggins, played by Carol Burnett, is cheerful, polite—and completely incompetent at nearly every task assigned to her.

The comedy comes from the clash between Tudball’s strict expectations and Wiggins’s bewildering behavior. While Tudball tries to maintain professionalism, Wiggins constantly misunderstands instructions, answers phones incorrectly, and performs office duties in ways that make no logical sense.

One of the recurring gags involves Wiggins answering the phone with a deliberately awkward greeting:

“Mrs. Wiggins speaking.”

Her slow delivery and unusual tone often drive Tudball to visible frustration.

Conway’s deadpan frustration

The Carol Burnett Show - The Intercom (the first Mr. Tudball and Mrs. Wiggins)

Tim Conway played Tudball with absolute seriousness, which made the absurdity of the situations even funnier. Rather than shouting wildly, Tudball typically tries to stay calm, only to grow increasingly exasperated.

In one memorable moment, Tudball asks Wiggins to type a simple letter. When she returns, the page is filled with random letters and spacing errors. Tudball pauses, stares at the page, and slowly asks:

“Mrs. Wiggins… what is this?”

Without hesitation, Wiggins replies cheerfully that it is the letter he requested.

The humor relies heavily on Conway’s ability to hold a straight face while Burnett delivers lines with complete innocence.

Physical comedy and timing

Although much of the sketch is dialogue-driven, it also includes physical comedy. Wiggins often:

struggles to use office equipment
types extremely slowly
places papers in the wrong place
walks into the room at the wrong moment

These small movements add to the sense that the office is perpetually on the edge of disaster.

Conway often reacts by freezing in disbelief, staring at the audience or shaking his head slowly—reactions that became a hallmark of the character.

A sketch famous for breaking character

Tim Conway as Mr. Tudball Has Intercom Issues with Mrs. Wiggins

Like many segments on The Carol Burnett Show, the Tudball and Wiggins sketches are remembered for moments when the cast nearly lost control of the scene. Conway was famous for improvising lines or altering the timing of jokes to catch his fellow performers off guard.

Carol Burnett later recalled that Conway sometimes added unexpected pauses or odd phrasing simply to see whether the other actors would break character.

Even when the performers managed to stay composed, the tension of trying not to laugh became part of the humor for the audience.

A signature pairing of the show

The Tudball and Wiggins sketches appeared multiple times during the show’s run and became one of its most recognizable recurring routines. The pairing worked because of the contrast between the two performers:

Conway’s rigid, deadpan authority
Burnett’s sweet but utterly inept secretary

Together they created a style of comedy that combined verbal wit, physical humor, and subtle improvisation.

A lasting legacy

Decades after the show originally aired, the office sketches featuring Mr. Tudball and Mrs. Wiggins remain among the most frequently replayed clips from The Carol Burnett Show. Fans often cite them as perfect examples of how the series blended scripted comedy with spontaneous performance.

More than anything, the sketches demonstrate the chemistry between Tim Conway and Carol Burnett—two performers whose ability to balance precision and chaos helped define one of television’s most enduring comedy programs.