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Secretly Wealthy: Difference between revisions

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== [[Literature]] ==
* ''[[Discworld]]'':
** In ''[[Discworld/The Truth|The Truth]]'', William DeWorde has had a falling out with his family and lives on around $50 a month, although since ''[[Discworld]]'' is a pastiche of Middle Ages/Renaissance fantasy, 50 Ankh-Morpork dollars ($AM) a month is a fair amount of money. (For comparison's sake, members of the Watch, the police force, make 30 dollars a month and are considered reasonably well paid.) William gets his income from various rich and powerful individuals outside Ankh-Morpork who pay him for writing to them about the general goinggoings-onson of the city. He figures out that the rich do not really want to see a member of their class live in poverty so they support him under this pretense. Only later does he realize how powerful what he does can be.
** Susan Sto Helit is technically a Duchess, but has no patience for the job, and instead takes jobs like governess and school teacher. Her employers when she was a governess, a wealthy couple in their own right, were rather shocked to discover they one of their servants was more posh than them.
** A minor [[Running Gag]] in Discworld is that the ''really'' rich can afford to act poor. Those who are only pretty rich will buy fancy clothes and jewelry and homes to try to make themselves seem much richer, but those who are supremely wealthy don't need to. Why buy new furniture when the stuff your grandparents bought was so good that it has lasted all these years? Why dress nicely when you don't need to work so you can devote all your time to messy hobbies like raising swamp dragons? And ironically, this allows them to ''stay'' rich. Sybil Ramkin is the best example, but Lady Margolotta and the Dowager Duchess of Quirm also qualify. And Sybil's husband Sam Vimes was born poor, but is now the richest man in the city. So naturally he prefers dented armor and cheap boots to the finery his station allows.
* In ''[[Percy Jackson and The Olympians]]'', [[Full-Name Basis|Rachel Elizabeth Dare]] is pretty much an enigma, but one time she walks up to a random chauffeur, says a few things, and suddenly he ditches his customer and takes the Olympians where they want to go. Turns out she's this trope
* In ''Fear Nothing and Seize The Night'' by [[Dean Koontz]], Christopher Snow's best friend Bobby is this.
* This genre convention was mocked in ''[[The Grapes of Wrath]]''. Two Okies discuss a Broadway play about a rich man and a rich woman who pretend to be poor in order to find true love. The entire premise confuses the heck out of the second Okie, who doesn't understand why a rich person would screw out with such a ridiculous [[Zany Scheme]]. There's a depression going on, and the Okies are standing in line hoping to get work so they don't starve to death. The second Okie explains, very annoyed, that if he were rich he'd just sit in his penthouse eating steaks all day and he's incredulous that an actual rich person would do anything different.
* In the Soviet/Russian novel ''[[The Little Golden Calf]]'' Alexander Koreiko is hiding his millions because he can't use his money in the Soviet Union and so he lives as a poor man (almost bordering on poverty), working on extremely -low -pay job, and basically all his possessions are two iron kettlebells to keep himself in good health — all to live for the day the Soviet regime falls. [[The Soviet Twenties|The book is set in 1920s]].
 
== [[Live-Action TV]] ==
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