“Good girls go to heaven, bad girls go everywhere.”
Katharine Hepburn (1907–2003) film, stage, and television actress
Source: Me: Stories of My Life
Archive of American Television interview (24 September 2002) http://www.emmytvlegends.org/interviews/people/dennis-weaver <br class="br">Context: The basic message of Gunsmoke was that there's going to be the bad and there's going to be the good. And most of the time, the good will win out. That's an old theme. There are no new themes, it's just the way you do them. It's the way you bring fresh characters to that theme.
“Good girls go to heaven, bad girls go everywhere.”
Katharine Hepburn (1907–2003) film, stage, and television actress
Source: Me: Stories of My Life
“good girls go to heaven and bad girls go everywhere”
Helen Gurley Brown (1922–2012) American author, editor, publisher, and businesswoman
Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge (1982) Wife of Prince William, Duke of Cambridge
First post-engagement interview (2010)
Orson Scott Card (1951) American science fiction novelist
Source: The Tales of Alvin Maker, Alvin Journeyman (1995), Chapter 14.
“Jiry, don't worry about anything. Go out and have a good time.”
Richard Feynman (1918–1988) American theoretical physicist
Source: No Ordinary Genius (1994), p. 252, last words to his artist friend Jirayr Zorthian, as recalled by Zorthian in "No Ordinary Genius" (1993): video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fzg1CU8t9nw&t=1h33m22s
Keith Ellison (1963) American politician and lawyer
Interview with Chris Hayes, November 14, 2016. http://www.msnbc.com/transcripts/all-in/2016-11-14
“When good Americans die, they go to Paris"
"Where do bad Americans go?"
"They stay in America”
Oscar Wilde book The Picture of Dorian Gray
Act I.
A Woman of No Importance (1893)
Source: The Picture of Dorian Gray
Context: Mrs. Allonby: They say, Lady Hunstanton, that when good Americans die they go to Paris.
Lady Hunstanton: Indeed? And when bad Americans die, where do they go to?
Lord Illingworth: Oh, they go to America.
“To be good is to be forgotten. I'm going to be so bad I'll always be remembered.”
Theda Bara (1885–1955) Silent film actress
As quoted in "The Confessions of Theda Bara" http://books.google.com/books?id=634NAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA57 by Agnes Smith, Photoplay Magazine, Vol. 18 No. 1 (June 1920), pp. 57–58, 110–111