Tim Conway took on a hilariously unforgettable mission as “James Blond” in one of The Carol Burnett Show’s most beloved sketches — a razor-sharp, good-natured parody of the iconic James Bond franchise. And while this 007 knockoff may not have the swagger, muscles, or smooth efficiency of the original, Conway’s version brings something even better: pure comedic brilliance.
Since 1962, the James Bond mantle has passed through seven major actors on the big screen — from Sean Connery to Roger Moore to Daniel Craig — each bringing their own spin to the legendary spy. But no portrayal has ever been as joyfully chaotic as Tim Conway’s intentionally un-suave “James Blond.”
The spoof begins with Lyle Waggoner introducing an episode of Midnight Theater — an “exciting, super spy adventure” that promises sex, brutality, nudity, violence, and double-crossing. Delivered in a deadpan tone, the joke lands perfectly because 1970s television was famously family-friendly. It was the show winking at its own innocence.
From there, viewers are taken into an over-the-top gold-gilded room, where Conway’s Blond is being adored by two glamorous women. One of them is played by guest star Eydie Gormé, who throws herself into the melodrama. In the middle of their romantic swooning, Blond keeps pausing to casually eliminate assassins with everyday objects — a lamp, a telephone — in a ridiculous exaggeration of Bond’s effortless cool. The sketch sets the tone early: this is pure, joyful silliness aimed at poking fun at spy-movie clichés.

Soon a contact arrives with urgent news. An evil mastermind is threatening to bomb major cities unless he receives $3 million — a clear nod to the Bond villain Dr. Julius No, cheekily renamed Dr. Nose. The script is filled with witty puns, exaggerated tropes, and delightful wordplay, capturing everything fans love about Bond movies while gently mocking them.
Enter Carol Burnett as Passion Plenty, Dr. Nose’s glamorous but dangerous assistant. Wearing gold hotpants and armed with sharp comic instincts, she challenges Blond to a hilariously absurd “kissing duel.” The two compare their sex appeal, then compete to see who can overwhelm the other with sheer romantic force. Blond wins — barely — and Carol collapses in a dazed heap of comedic defeat.
But the adventure is far from over. Blond infiltrates Dr. Nose’s laboratory, where he encounters four extravagantly dressed assistants and the villain himself. What follows is a whirlwind of nose jokes, plastic lips designed to block Blond’s charms, slapstick mishaps, and escalating chaos. Just when Blond is about to meet his over-the-top doom, Passion Plenty returns to save him — only for Conway’s wonderfully clumsy character to fumble his escape in classic Tim Conway fashion.
It’s the kind of humor that defined The Carol Burnett Show: clever writing, physical comedy, playful innuendo, and performers who knew that the best laughs come from commitment, not cruelty. No profanity, no malice — just comedy built on timing, chemistry, and imagination.
Decades later, this sketch still feels refreshing. In a world often filled with real-life villains and serious headlines, watching Conway bumble through a spy mission reminds us how timeless simple, innocent humor can be. As Ecclesiastes beautifully puts it, “A time to weep and a time to laugh, a time to mourn and a time to dance.”
And in this classic sketch, Tim Conway gives us a perfect time to laugh.