Even in a solo show, Carol Burnett shares the spotlight.

The comedian, poised and classy, led 90 minutes of good-natured memories and fun Tuesday night in her “Laughter and Reflection” show at the King Center for the Performing Arts in Melbourne.

At 77, she has plenty of memories to share — but the Q&A format means audience members with questions are part of the show, too. At the King Center, they praised her, thanked her, got choked up, sang songs and provoked laughter on more than one occasion

Burnett also shared the spotlight with the “Carol Burnett Show” repertory performers and guest stars, through video clips that elicited “ahs” and “I remember that” and even a “Those were the days” from the folks sitting near me. (Betty White looked so young! Cher looked so … un-plastic!)

Yes, some of what you’d expect was there: The Tarzan yell, the “curtain-rod dress” scene from “Went With the Wind.” Proving her enduring appeal, Burnett was asked to sing a bit of “I Made a Fool of Myself Over John Foster Dulles,” the comedy song she recorded in 1957 — and was also asked to sing a bit of the song she performed this season on TV’s “Glee.”

The fun was watching her share some her best stories like a pro, while mixing it up with whatever offbeat questions people had. (One woman wanted to know what kind of shoes she was wearing.)

My favorite tale? A story about a practical joke gone awry that ends with Burnett and Julie Andrews in sleepwear in a hotel hallway pretending to make out, only to be surprised by first lady Ladybird Johnson. (The mental image alone is priceless.)

She praised Harvey Korman, who died in 2008, saying he “made my game better.”

She cracked about her age, when asked to recall a song from her elementary-school days: “I was 6 years old … that was just a few years ago.”

She joked about her looks, when asked if anything makes her laugh: “Every time I look in the mirror, honey.”

Nothing risque or off-color (well, besides the faux makeout session with “Mary Poppins”). The closest it came to that was a giggly admission after being asked what’s on Burnett’s bucket list: “George Clooney.”

It was just a packed house of fans — some who spoke movingly of relying on her show to help them through bad times in their childhood — and a warm night of fun from a beloved American treasure.