Carol & Company began as a mid-season replacement from March 31 to June 2, 1990, and was subsequently picked up for a full season that ran from September 22, 1990, until July 20, 1991.
Unlike Carol Burnett's previous variety shows, Carol & Company was an anthology series that applied an unusual repertory approach to television comedy. Every week, Burnett and her fellow players (Krause, Piven, Fay, Kiser, Barone and Kind) performed a different half-hour comedy playlet. Only the performers remained the same from week to week; there were no ongoing characters or plots, although there were guest stars from time to time including Betty White, Christopher Reeve, Swoosie Kurtz and Burnett's daughter Carrie Hamilton. In 1991, Burnett's cohort, Tim Conway, made a cameo appearance as an audience member in the episode, "That Little Extra Something."
Shortly after the series' cancellation, Burnett switched back to her former network CBS to star in a short-lived revival of The Carol Burnett Show that aired from November 1 to December 27, 1991. It featured a new ensemble cast, including two Carol & Company players (Meagen Fay and Richard Kind) along with Jessica Lundy, Rick Aviles, Chris Barnes, Roger Kabler and weekly guest stars such as Vicki Lawrence, Martin Short, B.B. King and Jim Nabors. However, the series failed to catch on with the public and only nine episodes of this revival were aired.[2]
Lois Carlyle (Burnett) is a wife fed up with her cold, sexist philandering husband (Kind) who hires a hit-man named Brian Beckworth (Kiser) out of the phone book to kill him.
Georgette (Burnett) is a trans woman attending the 30th reunion at her high school. Swoosie Kurtz guest stars as Georgette’s ex-girlfriend from school.
A devoted mother (Burnett) is fed up with her two lazy, ungrateful adult offspring so she sues them for the money she spent on them throughout their adult lives.
Dr. Elaine Daniels (Burnett) learns that her ex-husband/co-worker, Dr. Arthur Daniels (Alex Rocco), is dating a younger woman and to make him jealous, she flaunts a much younger man under Arthur's nose.
Barbara (Burnett), a fading soap opera star who feels threatened by an up-and-coming actress, learns a painful truth from Sam (Robert Guillaume) the security guard.
Myna Bouleray (Burnett), a small town resident, heeds advice from an angel (Howie Mandel) who suggests that she gamble her life's savings in Atlantic City to save her nearly bankrupt church.
Babe and Baby Bicker (Burnett and daughter Carrie Hamilton), a mother/daughter singing duo, feel their act may be threatened when Bobby (Robert Urich) comes between them.
Sally Trickleson (Burnett) is an irate, love-sick listener who storms into a radio station and confronts the pop psychologist announcer Dr. Doris Kruber (Glenda Jackson) during a live call-in program.
Lillian Preskin (Burnett) is a frisky 82-year-old senior citizen who still has an eye for the gentlemen at her nursing home, much to the consternation of her daughter (Fay) who threatens to send her mother to a home run by nuns if she engages once more in sex with the residents.
Dorothy Tibbit has quite a day filled with unexpected difficulties when she tries to prepare a special meal for her husband's boss. This is the first of Dorothy Tibbit's three appearances.
Evelyn Sweets (Burnett) is featured in two separate episodes about her "Chapel of Romance": Evelyn is approached by a woman with a ventriloquist's dummy who pleads with her to marry them in "Dummy Dearest"; Evelyn is approached by Chester Neff, who assumes that her ad's tag I'll marry anyone means that she will become his wife in "Being Out There".
Lisa Baldwin (Burnett), a successful single businesswoman, is enchanted but unnerved when her son's college roommate, Patrick (Krause), expresses his admiration for her.
Trisha Durant (Betty White) is a college friend of Rosalind "Roz" Burke (Burnett) who comes to town and announces that she's taken the apartment next door to Roz – but Roz can't stand her.
Frank and Julia Miller (Kiser and Burnett) are a bickering couple applying for a loan who witness an unusual robbery – the bank is being held up by their son (Krause).
Arlene Harvey and Kate Benton (Burnett and Bernadette Peters) are songwriters who strike a sour note when Kate alone is offered an audition with a record producer.
Daisy Kornfeld (Burnett), a teacher, tries to talk her way out of a speeding ticket from a cop (Krause), her former student in whom she instilled a value system that doesn't bend the rules.
Veta Mae Klybocker (Burnett) is a spaced-out woman who prepares to rendezvous with aliens at a fishing dock and confronts Dakota (Nell Carter), a fisherwoman who resents having her solitude disturbed.
A former game-show producer (Barone) turns a serious news program into a popular entertainment type show with an audience that decides on which stories to hear, and its once-respected anchor Christine Hayward (Burnett) into a self absorbed clown.
A spoof of an old-fashioned murder mystery but complications ensue when Richard Kind's Aunt Wanda (Burnett) comes for a visit. Tim Conway makes a cameo appearance.
The eminent surgeon Doogie Howser (Neil Patrick Harris in a spoof of his TV show Doogie Howser, M.D.) is called in for a splinter removal from the toe of a recovering patient Dorothy Tibbit, whose character also appeared in the episodes Diary of a Really Really Mad Housewife and Driving Miss Crazy. This is the character's third appearance.
Hal Linden guest stars in a series of vignettes that take a musical look at intimate behavior in a café, an elevator, a support-group meeting, a dentist's office and an alley.
Myrna Fallows (Burnett), a postal worker, dreams that she gets to date her fantasy mailman (Christopher Reeve), but they are often interrupted by a co-worker (Kind).
In a sendup of 1940s gangster films, wealthy Agnes Pringle (Burnett) contemplates a lover's revenge while "Lefty" Malone (Kind) and "Dollface" (Barone) join in on the scheming on a cruise ship. A one-hour season finale.