Only 405 years after his death, Mr William Shakespeare of Warwickshire, England has taken a tremendous step forward for mankind, (and so he should after what he did with THAT play.)

In all seriousness, though, on December 8th , Mr William Shakespeare, a gentlemen who is indeed from Warwickshire, was the second person and first man in the UK to receive the new Coronavirus vaccine from Pfizer, other than those who participated in the drug trials.

Quite spookily, Mr Shakespeare actually bears some resemblance to The Bard, and with his surname and location, I would not at all be surprised if a good genealogist could tease out a family link between him and the original Mr Shakespeare.

Of course, a number of puns on the names of Shakespeare’s plays are now in order:

Two Gentlemen of Corona

Much Aflu About Nothing

Taming of the Flu

Much Achoo About Nothing

Shaky Takes His Shot

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  1. […] is worth mentioning that he was a patron of Shakespeare, running a company of players called “Strange’s Men” – Lord Strangee being […]

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  2. […] the rather bad poem beneath the picture tows the usual line, no doubt influenced by a certain Mr William Shakespeare’s then fairly new play, the drawing itself, although not terribly flattering,  does not  show the […]

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  3. […] use of strawberries in the works about Richard III written by Thomas More, Edward Hall, and William Shakespeare has always been puzzling to me, and I suspect, many others. The fact that strawberry are given such […]

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  4. […] “The Gentle Villainy of Richard III, Troubler of the Poor World’s Peace,” an adapation of William Shakespeare’s “Richard III” running April 21-May 1 at the Outcalt […]

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  5. […] had no idea the Bard  could have been a secret Catholic who wanted the return of the old faith. Nor did I know that the […]

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  6. […] Richard portrayed here was definitely not Shakespeare‘s, although a few of the Bard’s ‘inventions/exaggerations’ were still […]

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  7. […] role in that he is male, disabled (in a subtle way) and was only thirty when chosen by the Royal Shakespeare Company, as was Richard III in June 1483 when chosen by the Three Estates. He isn’t an […]

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  8. […] Richard III as he really looked and behaved is The Lost King. Nearly all the rest are his gross Shakespearean persona….or make him look as old as his own grandfather!More, this new production is going to […]

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  9. […] afraid that I’m not a lover of Shakespeare’s works. I think the blame for this can be laid squarely at the feet of ‘O’ English […]

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