FoxTrot Classics by Bill Amend for January 27, 2014

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    Templo S.U.D.  over 10 years ago

    I thought Lear was the name of a man in The Beatles’ “Paperback Writer” song.

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    GSJohnson  over 10 years ago

    Naming The Scottish Play is only bad luck if you happen to be onstage.

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    Zarus  over 10 years ago

    This someone who finds reading the TITLE of a book a two-day challenge.

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    phoenixnyc  over 10 years ago

    Richard Armour once noted that the speech that follows “Brevity is the soul of wit” is neither brief nor particularly witty.

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    Doctor11  over 10 years ago

    Ain’t gonna work this time, Peter.

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    Stephen Gilberg  over 10 years ago

    I consider “King Lear” the more cursed of the two, given what happens so often to the main actor.

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    jimboylan  over 10 years ago

    They both tell about a dead king, but a different one in each play. However, you’d have to at least skim through the notes about each to know this.

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    phoenixnyc  over 10 years ago

    Armour also penned the classic line, “Hamlet is a man who can’t act (unfortunately, also true of many who play Hamlet).”

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