Times When A-Listers Guest-Starred On Corny Sitcoms
Hollywood’s biggest names have always had a soft spot for sitcoms, and some guest spots are pure gold. One week, they’re commanding red carpets, the next, they’re delivering cheesy punchlines between canned laughter, awkward gestures, and silly pauses.
Awkward entrances, over-the-top antics, and lines that make little sense somehow seemed like a good idea. These moments show that stardom doesn’t prevent anyone from tripping over a laugh track, forgetting cues, or getting hilariously lost on set while the crew scrambles.
Watching these episodes now, you can’t help but smile at the charm, cringe at the timing, and laugh at the absurdity of stars embracing the ridiculous world of sitcoms.
Steve Martin – The Muppet Show (1977)
Martin juggled balloons and banjos, making every gag land with impeccable absurdity.
Phil Silvers – Gilligan’s Island (1966)
Silvers nearly stole the island spotlight, his scheming antics drowning in slapstick.
Desi Arnaz – The Mothers-In-Law (1968)
Arnaz directed and appeared, reminding viewers that his comedic timing was still top-tier.
Cesar Romero – Bewitched (1968)
The Joker himself showed up as a warlock, bringing mischievous magic to Samantha’s household.
John Wayne – I Love Lucy (1955)
Wayne kissed Lucy, botched lines, and proved even cowboys can’t resist sitcom chaos.
Carol Burnett – Gomer Pyle, U.S.M.C. (1964)
Burnett belted out songs, cracked up Gomer, and made the Marines look musical.
Joan Collins – Roseanne (1991)
Collins appeared as a dream cameo, serving Dynasty-level sass in a sitcom nightmare.
Tony Curtis – The Flintstones (1965)
As “Stony Curtis,” Tony made Bedrock’s celebrity culture collapse into prehistoric fandom.
Gene Kelly – The Muppet Show (1980)
Kelly danced with puppets, somehow blending timeless elegance with felt-covered chaos.
Burt Reynolds – Golden Girls (1986)
The girls swooned over a fake invite to Burt’s party, proving mustaches can fuel entire plots.
Diahann Carroll – A Different World (1989)
Carroll’s elegance on campus gave Whitley a crash course in pure sophistication.
Bob Hope – The Golden Girls (1988)
Hope guest-starred at a talent show, teaching Blanche and company how to milk cornball laughs.
Elizabeth Taylor – Here’s Lucy (1970)
Taylor guested with Richard Burton, diamonds, and drama, proving sitcoms could handle Hollywood egos.
Cher – Will & Grace (2000)
Jack’s ultimate diva fantasy came true when Cher turned up, delivering sass with glitter.
Don Rickles – The Dick Van Dyke Show (1964)
Insults flew faster than jokes, as Rickles roasted Rob and Buddy into absolute oblivion.
Milton Berle – Here’s Lucy (1971)
Lucy met “Mr. Television” himself, and the result was pure slapstick wrapped in old-school vaudeville.
William Shatner – The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (1996)
Shatner’s larger-than-life cameo left Will and Carlton fangirling harder than a Trekkie at Comic-Con.
Vincent Price – The Brady Bunch (1972)
Vacation went south fast when Price popped up in Hawaii, making tiki statues seem almost normal.
Raquel Welch – Mork & Mindy (1979)
Raquel dropped in as Captain Nirvana, battling aliens with fashion and sparkle instead of logic.
Sammy Davis Jr. – All in the Family (1972)
Archie Bunker’s cab got the surprise of his life when Sammy planted a kiss right on him.