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Life & Mortality Quote by Groucho Marx

"Either he's dead or my watch has stopped"

About this Quote

Groucho’s line is a perfect little machine for turning anxiety into insolence. On its face, it’s a banal troubleshooting checklist: if someone hasn’t shown up, there are two possibilities. But the punch is that one possibility is catastrophically out of proportion to the other, and Groucho delivers them with the same shrugging equivalence. Death and a faulty watch sit side by side like they’re equally likely, equally inconvenient. That’s the joke, and it’s also the worldview: treat the grand, melodramatic story with the same flat pragmatism you’d give a busted gadget.

The intent is to puncture the self-importance that tends to collect around absence. Instead of indulging worry or sentimentality, he sprints past it into comic denial. The subtext is almost hostile: if you’re late, you’ve forced me to imagine extremes, and I’m going to make that your problem. It’s a social reprimand disguised as a gag, using exaggeration not to heighten emotion but to drain it.

Contextually, it belongs to the Marx Brothers’ broader persona: urbane chaos, quick pivots, jokes that refuse sincerity on principle. In an era when polite conversation often performed concern as etiquette, Groucho weaponized impatience and disbelief. The line also sneaks in a modern note: time is mediated by objects, and our trust in them is shaky. When reality feels unreliable, he suggests, laugh first, diagnose later.

Quote Details

TopicWitty One-Liners
Source
Verified source: A Day at the Races (1937) - Quotes (Groucho Marx, 1937)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Either he's dead, or my watch has stopped.. This line is spoken by Groucho Marx in character as Dr. Hackenbush in the 1937 film A Day at the Races. The wording is often repeated without the comma/line break. A transcription of the dialogue appears on Script-O-Rama. This is strong evidence for the film as the original context, but it is not itself an authoritative production document. To verify a true PRIMARY source for “first published/spoken,” the best target would be an original MGM script/continuity or the film itself as exhibited in 1937. Many secondary references (e.g., IMDb and Wikiquote) also place the line in A Day at the Races, but they are not primary documentation. If you need the earliest *printed* primary source, you’d likely need access to an MGM screenplay/continuity draft or a published script edition (if any) held by archives/libraries; I did not locate an openly accessible scan with page numbering in this search.
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Marx, Groucho. (2026, February 11). Either he's dead or my watch has stopped. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/either-hes-dead-or-my-watch-has-stopped-31379/

Chicago Style
Marx, Groucho. "Either he's dead or my watch has stopped." FixQuotes. February 11, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/either-hes-dead-or-my-watch-has-stopped-31379/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Either he's dead or my watch has stopped." FixQuotes, 11 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/either-hes-dead-or-my-watch-has-stopped-31379/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Either He's Dead or My Watch Has Stopped - Groucho Marx
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About the Author

Groucho Marx

Groucho Marx (October 2, 1890 - August 19, 1977) was a Comedian from USA.

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