Attending Your Own Funeral: Difference between revisions

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{{trope}}
[[File:Attending Your Own Funeral 9959.jpg|link=Spamusement|frame|[[Sesame Street|HELLO ME NOT DEAD]]]]
 
 
{{quote|'''Priestbot''': "We are gathered here to mourn the death of Calculon; industrialist, private eye... friend."
'''Calculon''': "Mind if ''I'' give the eulogy?"
'''Monique''': "Calculon, you're alive!"|''[[Futurama]]''}}
|''[[Futurama]]''}}
 
A character shows up alive to his or her own funeral, whether through [[Faking the Dead|faking it]], [[Back from the Dead|resurrection]], or [[Time Travel]]. The [[Not Quite Dead]] character may either reveal him/herself to be alive or attend the funeral in disguise and leave with no one the wiser. Or sometimes the character won't even know they've been presumed dead until they walk through the door...
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{{deathtrope}}
 
{{examples}}
 
== Advertising ==
* A recent commercial for whiskey tells the story of a man, John Jameson, who dived into the ocean to rescue one of his kegs and presumably died. The next scene shows his funeral with the narrator telling us "All of [[Oireland|Ireland]] was in attendance, including... John Jameson." Jameson is then seen walking up the beach front holding the keg.
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* In ''The Death of Groo,'' [[Groo the Wanderer]] goes to his own funeral, expecting there to be much sadness at his demise. There isn't. Everybody at that funeral had had endless trouble from him, and they were all delighted at his "death."
* [[Deadpool]] did this in spirit form. He found that he was able to possess people and had no end of fun causing trouble, culminating in a giant brawl between Juggernaut, Wolverine, T-Ray, and pretty much every other minor character to appear in Deadpool's book up to that point.
 
 
== Fan Work ==
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* The essay, "Dead at 17" (frequently known as "Please God, I'm Only 17"), was written by New Hampshire resident John J. Berrio, after the teen-aged son of a close friend died in a 1967 car accident. The story – a cautionary tale imploring that teenagers adopt safe-driving habits – is told from the point-of-view of a teen-ager who drove recklessly, was involved in a major car accident and suffered fatal injuries. The story begins with hindsight ("I was too cool for the bus" and "All the kids drive"), then progresses as the protagonist's car is involved in the deadly collision, then is examined by on-scene medics and police officers, brought to the morgue to be identified by his shocked parents and then to the visitation (where his grieving friends and family pass by his open casket). The final scene sees the teen-ager protesting in vain being placed in the ground, pleading for a second chance and promising to be a safer driver.
** On an almost annual basis, readers of Dear Abby and Annie's Mailbox (previously Ann Landers) will request that Berrio's essay be republished, hoping teen-agers who are newly licensed will read it and decide to adopt safe driving habits.
* Likely [[Trope Maker]] and [[Older Than Radio]] example: [[Mark Twain]]'s novel ''[[The Adventures of Tom Sawyer]]''. The main character and his two friends -- erroneously believed drowned in the river -- watch their own funeral and then enter dramatically through the door.
* [[Raffles]] did this, as part of a gambit to throw a too-persistent ex-girlfriend off his trail; it was the second time he'd been thought to be dead, but the first funeral. The other time, he'd jumped from a ship in the Mediterranean, and been mistakenly reported to have washed up dead on shore.
* ''[[Rumpole of the Bailey]]'' lets it be thought that he is dead, partly to lure a solicitor that owes him a great deal of money out of hiding and let She-Who-Must-Be-Obeyed pwn him good and gets to hear Judge Bullingham giving an eulogy for him, which he greatly enjoys hearing.