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Carol Burnett Interview: Overcoming Rejection Finding Success u0026 Becoming a Comedy Legend

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Life Stories

Carol Burnett recalls falling in love with Hollywood as a child, catching the acting bug while attending UCLA, deciding to leave college, and moving to New York City to pursue her aspirations of performing in musical comedies on Broadway. Burnett discusses how she dealt with rejection in show business, her first big break, how she eventually got her own selftitled television show, lessons she learned as a performer, and how she maintained a work and family balance.

Carol Creighton Burnett was born on April 26, 1933, in San Antonio, Texas, to Joseph and Ina Louise Burnett. After her parents divorced in the late 1930s, Burnett moved with her grandmother, to a small apartment in Hollywood, California. She attended Hollywood High School, graduating in 1951. After studying theater arts and English at the University of California, Los Angeles, as an aspiring playwright, Burnett left school early and made her way to New York City in hopes of breaking into acting. Burnett made her first television appearance in the early 1950s with a short stint on The WinchellMahoney Show, a children's TV program. Soon after, she began costarring with Buddy Hackett on the sitcom Stanley (195657). In 1959, Burnett became a regular on The Garry Moore Show. Over the years, she was also featured on occasional CBS specials. Already a popular performer, she got her own comedyvariety show, The Carol Burnett Show, in 1967. The show ran for 11 seasons, leaving the air in 1978. In addition to her hit television show, Burnett has appeared in a number of feature films, including Pete 'n' Tillie (1972), The Front Page (1974), Annie (1982), Noises Off (1992) and Post Grad (2009). She made her Broadway debut in the musical Once Upon a Mattress in 1959 and went on to appear in a few other Broadway shows, including Moon Over Buffalo (19951996) and Putting It Together (19992000). Her 1986 autobiography, One More Time: A Memoir, provided the source material for the play Hollywood Arms, which was performed on Broadway from October 2002 to January 2003. Burnett cowrote the piece with her oldest daughter, Carrie Hamilton. Over her decadeslong career, Burnett has won numerous honors, including American Comedy Awards, Emmy and Golden Globe awards, the 1980 Women in Film Crystal Award, the 2006 Presidential Medal of Freedom and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

From the 2013 PBS Documentary “Makers: Women Who Make America”, examines how women have helped shape America over the past 150 years, striving for a full and fair share of political power and economic opportunity.

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Carol Burnett, Actress, Comedian, Singer, and Writer

Chapters:
00:00 Intro
00:09 Early childhood
02:07 Parents
03:53 Childhood dreams
06:16 First taste of comedy
07:33 UCLA
09:50 Hollywood dreams
11:36 Drive to succeed
17:10 New York City
21:49 Big break
26:26 Chutzpah
27:23 The Carol Burnett Show
42:40 National Enquirer
45:52 The women’s movement
49:44 Ambition
50:32 Focus
51:44 Marriage
57:26 Selfperception
59:54 Worklife balance

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