

Jackson “have you, I repeat, applied to your butcher,-to your baker-pshaw! absurd! I was about to say to your candlestick-maker? Let me correct myself. “What in the name of Newgate Market,” thought he, “can ‘my butcher,’ who cuts up beeves and sells them in detail, have to do with housekeepers in their integrity?” “Well, sir, and have you made application to your butcher?” “A comfortable body, certainly,” said Gipps “a comfortable body.” Well, sir, you want a respectable woman-a highly respectable woman-what I should call a comfortable body.” Jackson, a gentleman, by the by, whose narrow width of wisdom was eked out by a vast selvage of important gravity, “you want a housekeeper. Jackson out accordingly, and made known his wants and wishes-his doubts and his difficulties, Jackson, a gentleman who had seen a vast deal of the world, and under whose ken housekeepers, without doubt, must frequently have come? He sought Mr. He resolved to seek advice upon this head and who is so capable of giving, and happy to extend his advice, as his old friend Mr.
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How to get a housekeeper? Gipps had no more notion of the process by which so desirable an acquisition was to be procured, than he had of the method of calculating by fluxions. The earliest allusion that I have found to the butcher, the baker, the candlestick maker is from Wanted-a Widow, a short story by the English poet, novelist and dramatist Charles Whitehead (1804-62), published in Bentley’s Miscellany (London) of March 1841: The Butcher, the Baker, the Candlestick Maker, the Butcher the Baker the Candlestick Maker, and all of them gone to the Fair.ġ The nursery rhyme is titled Rub a dub dub on the front page, whereas Dub a dub dub is used as the title and in the lyrics inside the booklet.Ģ James Hook (1746-1827), English composer and organist Hook 2 (London, 1798):ĭub a dub dub, dub a dub dub, three Maids in a Tub, three Maids in a Tub, and who do you think was there, there, the Butcher, the Baker, the Candlestick Maker, the Butcher the Baker the Candlestick Maker, and all all all all all of them gone to the fair. This phrase alludes to the following nursery rhyme, first published in Second Volume of Christmas Box Containing the Following Bagatelles for Juvenile Amusement: High ding a ding, Christmas comes but once a Y r, Little Tom Tucker, Little Robin Red-breast, Rub a dub dub 1, I’ll sing a Song of Sixpence, Little Boy Blue, Gooseberrys Grow on an Angry Tree, When I was a Little Boy, Robin a Bobin a Bilberry Hen, There was an Old Woman living, There were Two Blackbirds. Unbelievable.The phrase the butcher, the baker, and the candlestick maker denotes people of various trades or businesses, considered collectively it has also come to denote anyone at all. And Chris and I are like, ‘Now those should be the people that play Bill and Ted!’ And then we ended up on set for the first rehearsal and it was Alex and Keanu. “And then there are these two guys in front of us at McDonald’s just goofing off and talking to each other.


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“We were in Arizona when the movie was about to shoot and we were in line at McDonald’s and we were actually complaining to each other, ‘I bet whoever they cast won’t be able to do it the way we hoped,’” Solomon said. Solomon said “it was hard for us to imagine who would take the characters over and we were not involved in the casting process or anything.” Solomon recalled an anecdote about how they found out who did end up landing the title roles. While the younger Matheson and his writing partner Solomon may have been the first to “play” Bill and Ted, they would not, of course, end up portraying their creations on the big screen. His seminal post-apocalyptic novel I Am Legend has been filmed for the silver screen three times, most recently in 2007 with Will Smith. His works were adapted for the big and small screen, including The Twilight Zone, Real Steel, The Legend of Hell House, The Box, Stir of Echoes, Somewhere in Time, and What Dreams May Come. “It was actually my dad - who was Richard Matheson, who wrote I Am Legend and (The Incredible) Shrinking Man - and I sort of ran it by him and he said, ‘You could make a whole movie out of that.’ And so we started looking at it that way.” The late Richard Matheson was the author of many classic sci-fi, horror and fantasy novels and short stories.
