William Shakespeare, the first man in the world to publicly get the COVID-19 vaccine, died of an unrelated illness

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William Shakespeare, the first man in the world to publicly get the COVID-19 vaccine, died of an unrelated illness
An image showing William Shakespeare, 81, getting the Pfizer coronavirus vaccine on December 8, 2020, (L) and an image of English playwright and poet William Shakespeare (R.)Stock Montage/Getty Images/JACOB KING/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
  • William Shakespeare, the first man to get publicly vaccinated for COVID-19, has died.
  • He died of an unrelated illness, according to the BBC.
  • Shakespeare was 81 years old.
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The first man to get publicly vaccinated for COVID-19 died of an unrelated illness last Thursday, the BBC reported.

The man, named William Shakespeare, was the second person to receive Pfizer BioNTech's COVID-19 vaccine out of clinical trials. He received the first dose of the two-shot vaccine in early December at University Hospital in Coventry, Warwickshire.

Shakespeare, who went by Bill, received the vaccine not long after 90-year-old Margaret Keenan received the first shot at the same hospital.

At the time of his vaccination, Shakespeare said he was "pleased" and praised staff at the hospital, Insider previously reported.

Shakespeare was 81.

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Coventry councillor Jayne Innes, his friend, said the "best tribute to Bill is to have the jab," according to the BBC.

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