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UK actor Ian McKellen receives Covid-19 vaccine; Beatles legend Paul McCartney to follow

UK actor Ian McKellen receives Covid-19 vaccine; Beatles legend Paul McCartney to follow

“I would have no hesitation in recommending it to anyone. I feel very lucky to have had the vaccination,” says actor.
Updated 18 Dec, 2020

British actor Ian McKellen, who played the wizard Gandalf in the Lord of the Rings movies, said he was euphoric after receiving his first dose of the Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine and urged everyone who was offered the jab to accept it.

The state-run National Health Service (NHS), which is running Britain’s mass Covid vaccination programme, posted several pictures of McKellen, in a blue T-shirt and a rainbow striped scarf, giving a thumbs up as he received the shot.

“It’s a very special day. I feel euphoric,” McKellen, 81, was quoted as saying in one NHS post which he retweeted.

“I would have no hesitation in recommending it to anyone. I feel very lucky to have had the vaccination.”

Meanwhile, Beatles legend Paul McCartney also gave Britain’s Covid-19 vaccine rollout a big shot in the arm by vowing to be among the first global superstars to be inoculated, The Sun newspaper reported on Friday.

McCartney, 78, is among the third tier of people eligible to receive the jab alongside other over-75s, and said he believed the vaccine offers Britain a way out from the doom and gloom of the pandemic, The Sun said.

“The vaccine will get us out of this,” McCartney told The Sun in an interview. “I think we’ll come through it, I know we’ll come through, and it’s great news about the vaccine. I’ll have it as soon as I’m allowed.”

Nearly 140,000 people have received their first dose of the Pfizer vaccine in Britain since roll out began on Dec 8. People aged over 80 are in the highest priority group.

A star of British stage and screen since the 1960s, McKellen attained a new level of global fame in the 2000s when he appeared as Gandalf in the movies based on J.R.R. Tolkien’s novels and directed by Peter Jackson.

He was the latest British celebrity to go public about receiving the Covid-19 vaccine, part of a collective effort to reassure members of the public who may be harbouring doubts about the jab’s safety.

The chef and cookery writer Prue Leith, 80, who presents the high-ratings TV show The Great British Bake Off, also posted a picture of herself receiving the shot.

It is not known whether Queen Elizabeth, 94, and her husband Prince Philip, 99, have had the vaccine yet. The Times reported they may “let it be known” once they have.

The queen is highly respected in Britain and her backing would be a powerful message to counter anti-vaccination misinformation.

Comments

Dr. Salaria, Aamir Ahmad Dec 18, 2020 12:33pm
In order to encourage everybody in the world to get vaccinated against the ever growing, rapidly expanding, fleetingly growing and almost unstoppable coronavirus pandemic, all Hollywood actors, artists, producers, directors, distributers, musicians, singers, writers, poets and others must follow suit and emulate the brave, blazing, bold and brilliant move of British actor Sir Ian McKellen pertaining to publicly receiving a Covid-19 shot.
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