I was a little creeped out at times.Am I right that Burnett didn't know who was going to come out at the end and she was taken by surprise?
Good physical comedy, yes, but a sketch about a wife being frightened by the behavior of her drunk, abusive husband is harder to laugh at today. And the best punch line by far is the first one (at 0:28), so it's all downhill from there.
(Speaking of physical comedy, she rolls down a staircase in that lengthy sketch. Twice.)
I'm sure he was quite capable of that; he's one of the few people who can make toon physics work in real life.That's nothing. Isn't there at least one sketch where Tim Conway rolls up a staircase?
Great work finding this clip.Photos of this have floated around for years, but here's the actual skit from December 4, 1967, during Star Trek's second season.
Man, Carol's physical comedy was great!
I know the abusive husband angle is bad but maybe now that he's visible he'll start acting like the fantastic Vulcan we know and love.![]()
I've used this site, but make sure that you have a spam and virus protector https://www.onlinevideoconverter.com/video-converterGreat work finding this clip.
I wish I knew how to save it and add it to my Star Trek collection..
Uh, it was never made explicit in canon whether "property of the victor" referred to all Vulcan wives being property of their husbands (in which case, why does T'Pau wield so much authority), or merely a consequence of invoking the Kal-if-fee.And who came from a culture where wives were apparently considered the property of their husbands?
Uh, it was never made explicit in canon whether "property of the victor" referred to all Vulcan wives being property of their husbands (in which case, why does T'Pau wield so much authority), or merely a consequence of invoking the Kal-if-fee.
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