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  1. Apr 21, 2024 · I would rather be living in Philadelphia. This was an epitaph Fields proposed for himself in a 1925 article in Vanity Fair. It refers to his long standing jokes about Philadelphia (his actual birthplace), and the grave being one place he might actually not prefer to be.

  2. I’d Rather Be in Philadelphia” cemented the city’s image in American pop culture as a dreary haven for corrupt politics well past the death of W. C. Fields. In response, city marketing and tourism groups combatted this portrayal with their own campaigns.

  3. It has been claimed that Fields's grave marker is inscribed, "I'd rather be in Philadelphia". The legend originated from a mock epitaph written by Fields for a 1925 Vanity Fair article: "Here Lies / W. C. Fields / I Would Rather Be Living in Philadelphia".

  4. Everyone has a plan 'till they get punched in the mouth. Mike Tyson. "On the whole, I'd rather be in Philidelphia." - W. C. Fields quotes from BrainyQuote.com.

  5. Mar 16, 2022 · W.C. Fields’ famous quote about what he’d put on his tombstone fits the dark comedy of our age.

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  7. May 17, 2014 · W.C. Fields, who was born in Philadelphia, used to make fun of his birthplace as a staid and boring place by threatening to have the line, “All things considered, I’d rather be in Philadelphia,” as the epitaph on his gravestone.

  8. Dec 26, 2011 · Almost everyone has heard of the churlish wag who insisted that he spent a fortnight in Philadelphia one Sunday and who described the city as “a cemetery with lights.” In 1957 a version of the joke using the nickname “Philly” was printed in the book “Our Philadelphia: A Candid and Colorful Portrait of a Great City” [PSOP]:

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