YOU ARE HERE: WDW  >  W.C. Fields  >  Trivia

W.C. Fields

Main Details

Other Details

ญญญญญ

Career

Media

Publicity

Community

Features

Edit Information Add Photos

W.C. Fields Trivia



« Previous | 1 | 2 | Next »

Interred at Forest Lawn, Glendale, California, USA, in the Great Mausoleum, Holly Terrace entrance, Hall of Inspiration.

He was the second choice to play the title role in The Wizard of Oz (1939). There are still some arguments as to why he turned the part down. Some sources say that he refused to play "The Wizard" because MGM wouldn`t pay the salary he wanted, but according to Doug McClelland, author of "Down The Yellow Brick Road", Fields was too busy writing and acting in his latest film for Universal Pictures - You Can`t Cheat an Honest Man (1939) - to be loaned out to MGM to play the part.

Had a lifetime disdain for music; this he attributed to having to hear his father`s singing day and night as a child, loudest when "the old patriarch" was drunk (companion Carlotta Monti claimed Fields once hit her with a cane, to stop her humming with a guitar). When expected to sing in a role, he almost always made a complete farce of both the lyrics and his performance.

Pictured on a 15ข US commemorative postage stamp in the Performing Arts and Artists series, issued 29 January 1980 (100th anniversary year of his birth).

Grandfather of Ronald J. Fields, who edited a biography titled "W.C. Fields by Himself". The book dispelled many longstanding stories about Fields, including ones of his living for years on the street. Young Fields did indeed run away from home after fights with his father, but usually no farther than his grandmother`s, and he would return home the next day. He stayed with his grandmother just before beginning his professional career as a juggler.

Enshrined in the Juggling Hall of Fame.

The lawyer Larsen E. Pettifogger in the comic strip "Wizard of Id" is drawn to look like him.

While stories of Fields` alcohol consumption (and the consequences thereof) were a regular part of his act, and he was rarely seen without a drink at hand, nobody could recall ever actually seeing him drunk, or out of control.

Stopped drinking for over a year during his career, when a friend died of alcohol-related causes, but eventually went back to it.

Fields` wife Hattie became his partner in his juggling act after their marriage; he sent her home to his parents when she became pregnant. After Fields returned from the road, they discovered they`d grown apart, but Hattie wouldn`t give him a divorce, and when Fields refused to "find a regular job", she began badmouthing him to their young son, William Jr.. Fields predicted that the boy would grow up to see the truth of the situation (Fields never failed to support his family, however much or little he was earning)... and it happened. While father and son rarely saw each other over the years, Fields was proudly introduced to his firstborn grandson (W.C. Fields III) before his death.

Could juggle or balance practically anything he could lift or carry; Fields unnerved his despised mother-in-law by keeping a lit cigar, a candle (in holder), or a beer bottle balanced atop his head at mealtimes, never seeming to notice its presence.

Although one of his most famous quotes is "Never work with animals or children." he secretly admired children.

Biography in: "Who`s Who in Comedy" by Ronald L. Smith, pg. 160-163. New York: Facts on File, 1992. ISBN 0816023387

Has a medical syndrome named after him - `W.C. Fields syndrome`, characterized by rhinophyma (rosacea of the nose) associated with alcoholism.

His wife was born in 1878. She died November 7, 1963.

His son, with wife Hattie, William C. "Claude" Dukenfield,was born on July 28, 1904. He had another son, born on August 15, 1917, with girlfriend Bessie Poole, named William Rexford Fields Morris.

Grandchildren: Ruthie, Everett, and Bill.

Appears on sleeve of The Beatles` "Sgt Pepper`s Lonely Hearts Club Band".

According to film historians, he performed in only one film exactly according to script and as directed. That one was MGM`s The Personal History, Adventures, Experience, & Observation of David Copperfield the Younger (1935), in which he co-starred with Freddie Bartholomew, who was only ten years old. Fields admired the Charles Dickens book and wanted desperately to play Mr. Micawber in the movie, so he agreed to forego his usual ad-libs and put aside his distaste at working with child actors.

Slipped a dose of gin into Baby LeRoy`s milk bottle during a movie shoot, when the set nurse left for a bathroom break; production had to stop for a day until the child could sober up (Fields reportedly sent money later to LeRoy`s family, after the boy`s screen career ended and they had financial trouble).

Usually wrote or co-wrote the screenplays to his movies; the aliases he used ("Mahatma Kane Jeeves", "Otis Criblecoblis", etc.) for the writing credits came from the unusual names he encountered on the road, in his vaudeville days.

Legend has it that on the set of You Can`t Cheat an Honest Man (1939), a stagehand was cleaning out Fields` dressing room and accidentally bumped into a table on which Fields had placed a bottle of whiskey. He caught the bottle before it hit the floor, but the cork had popped out and he couldn`t find it. He placed the bottle back on the table and left. Later Fields came back to the dressing room, and a few minutes afterwards stormed out, roaring "Who took the cork out of my lunch?"

It was generally assumed that his prominent proboscis was the result of his drinking, an assumption he himself fueled in his comedy. However, it is believed to have actually been a physical characteristic inherited from his mother`s side of the family.

Through much of his early career, he was a silent juggler. It wasn`t until he was in his mid-30s that be began to add verbal comedy to his act

He said that The Marx Brothers were the only act he couldn`t follow on the live stage. He is known to have appeared on the same bill with them only once, during an engagement at Keith`s Orpheum Theatre in Columbus, OH, in January 1915. At the time the Marx Brothers were touring "Home Again", and it didn`t take Fields long to realize how his quiet comedy juggling act was faring against the anarchy of the Marxes. Fields later wrote of the engagement (and the Marxes), "They sang, danced, played harp and kidded in zany style. Never saw so much nepotism or such hilarious laughter in one act in my life. The only act I could never follow . . . I told the manager I broke my wrist and quit.".

Was an accomplished amateur cartoonist. He often provided his own illustrations for his publicity material during his vaudeville days, and sent sketches and self-drawn holiday cards to his friends, all his life.

Is portrayed by Chuck McCann in Mae West (1982) (TV) and by Rod Steiger in W.C. Fields and Me (1976)

Lived with Carlotta Monti for fourteen years.

Was good friends with John Barrymore

According to friends, the biggest laugh he ever got as a stage performer was when a monologue he was giving on-stage was interrupted by a long, loud crash of objects backstage. After the crashing stopped, and the audience was silent, Fields gave a one-word comment in a stage whisper: "Mice!"

Although his marriage to Harriet Hughes lasted until his death in 1946, they separated as early as in 1904.

Father of W. C. Fields, Jr. (b. 1903)

Although he is quoted as saying that he was "the best ballet dancer in the world.", secretly he was extremely jealous of Charles Chaplin, whom he had known when he was younger, for achieving worldwide fame and adoration.

Rock-and-roll legend Jerry Lee Lewis has said on several occasions that Fields is his favorite comedian.

Although well known for his addiction to alcohol today, Fields did in fact rarely touch alcohol until he was in his mid-30s. He began his career in vaudeville as a juggler, and with that profession he could not afford to drink a lot, as his act demanded precise coordination and concentration in order to succeed.

His father was a US Civil War veteran; "W.C. Fields by Himself" includes a photograph of his father wearing his old Army uniform.

The last movie he starred in, Never Give a Sucker an Even Break (1941), included a character he`d always wanted to have in one of his movies: a young woman (in this case his niece, played by Gloria Jean) who loved him unconditionally.

He admired African-Americans, and spoke out in favor of fairer treatment for them during the days of segregation in the US. He generously paid off the $4000 mortgage on the house of his African-American cook. He once ordered from his premises a man who used the "N-word" within earshot of his staff.

Fields always regretted not having more formal education. He traveled with a trunk of books, reading whenever he could, and thought for a time about hiring a tutor. He lavished praise on "Readers` Digest" magazine, in later years.

He was awarded 2 Stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for Motion Pictures at 7004 Hollywood Boulevard and for Radio at 6316 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California.

Inspired the character Captain Erasmus Mulligan in Morris` Lucky Luke graphic novel Western Circus.

Painter/artist John Dekker painted W.C. Fields as Queen Victoria of England.

His much-vaunted detestation of children is generally thought to have been largely put-on. Co-stars Freddie Bartholomew and Gloria Jean both recalled him as being warm and solicitous. Further evidence of this is the case of 18-month old Gregory Quinn. In 1941, the oldest son of Anthony Quinn and Catherine DeMille wandered off his maternal grandparents` (Cecil B. DeMille) property and onto Fields`s, next door. There, the youngster accidentally fell into Fields` fish pond and drowned. Fields was said to have been very much disturbed by this, and moved away shortly thereafter.

Although well known for his addiction to alcohol today, Fields did in fact rarely touch alcohol until he was in his mid-thirties. He began his career in vaudeville as a juggler, and with that profession he could not afford to drink a lot, as his acts demanded soberness in order to succeed.

Rock`n`Roll legend Jerry Lee Lewis has said on several occasions that W.C. Fields is his favorite comedian.

Although he is quoted as saying that he was "The best ballet dancer in the world.", secretly he was extremely jealous of Charlie Chaplin, whom he had known when he was younger, for achieving worldwide fame and adoration.

According to friends, the biggest laugh he ever got as a stage performer was when a monologue he was giving on-stage was interrupted by a long, loud crash of objects backstage. After the crashing stopped, and the audience was silent, Fields gave a one-word comment in a stage whisper: "Mice!"

Is portrayed by Chuck McCann in Mae West (1982) (TV) and by Rod Steiger in W.C. Fields and Me (1976)

Was an accomplished amateur cartoonist. He often provided his own illustrations for his publicity material during his Vaudeville days, and sent sketches and self-drawn holiday cards to his friends, all his life.

Fields said that the Marx Brothers were the only act he couldn`t follow on the live stage. He is known to have appeared on the same bill with them only once, during an engagement at Keith`s Orpheum Theatre in Columbus, Ohio, January 1915. At the time, the Marx Brothers were touring `Home Again`, and it didn`t take Fields long to realize how his quiet comedy juggling act was faring against the anarchy of the Marxes. Fields later wrote of the engagement (and the Marxes), "They sang, danced, played harp and kidded in zany style. Never saw so much nepotism or such hilarious laughter in one act in my life. The only act I could never follow...I told the manager I broke my wrist and quit."



« Previous | 1 | 2 | Next »




Who’s Dated Who? content is contributed and edited by our readers. You are most welcome to update, correct or add information to this page. Update Information


Join Now

Register to update information, save favorites, post photos, news stories and comments

Already A Member?

Email


Password


Quick Links