HE WROTE SKETCHES IN PENCIL — SO HE COULD ERASE THEM LIVE. Every Monday morning at CBS Television City, Tim Conway showed up with the same thing in his pocket. A number two pencil. Worn down. Never a pen. The writers’ room thought it was a quirk. It wasn’t. Tim rewrote his own lines between dress rehearsal and taping. Sometimes between takes. Sometimes mid-sketch. A word crossed out here. A new punchline scribbled there. By Friday night, his script looked like a battlefield. He kept every one of them. Forty years of pencil marks. Forty years of second thoughts that became the version America remembers. After he died in 2019, one of those scripts surfaced at auction. The bidding started quiet. It did not stay quiet. What it sold for — and who bought it — still surprises people who knew him.
He Wrote Sketches in Pencil — So He Could Erase Them Live Every Monday morning at CBS Television City, Tim…