next to Sommers (
Psalter of Henry VIII) William Sommers made a number of appearances in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century drama and literature: for example,
Thomas Nashe's
Pleesant Comedie called Summers last Will and Testament (play first performed in 1592, published in 1600),
Samuel Rowlands'
Good Newes and Bad Newes (1622), and a popular account,
A Pleasant Historie of the Life and Death of William Sommers (reprinted 1794). See also
John Doran's History of Court Fools (1858).
Howard Goorney played Will Sommers in episodes 5 and 6 of the 1970 BBC mini-series
The Six Wives of Henry VIII. In
Margaret George's 1986 fictional
The Autobiography of Henry VIII, Will Somers protects the manuscript from Queen Mary, who would destroy it. "Somers" adds observations in his own hand that throw light on the old King's hypocrisies and failings. On 14 August 1995, comedian
Roy Hudd played Will Sommers in "Fourth Wedding and Some Funerals", the second episode of the
BBC Radio 2 series
Crowned Hudds; the episode and series have since been re-broadcast on BBC Radio 7 and
BBC Radio 4 Extra. Will Sommers has a major part in the plot of ''
The Queen's Fool'', a 2004
historical fiction novel by
Philippa Gregory. That book's protagonist is Hannah Green, a fictional jester at the court of
Mary I of England. Sommers is shown as Hannah's very sympathetic mentor, training her in the art of being a jester and unstintingly sharing his professional secrets with her.
David Bradley played Will Sommers in the fifth episode of the
third season of the Showtime series
The Tudors (2009). The real Sommers was younger than Henry VIII but in this series he is portrayed as an elderly and sardonic attendant who provides the grieving king with consolation following the death of
Jane Seymour. In April 2016, Ottawa actor and playwright Pierre Brault premiered his solo show entitled
Will Somers: Keeping Your Head, speculating on Sommer's life and the role of comedy has in speaking to power. Will Somers is the main character and narrator of the historical novels ''King's Fool
(1959, ) by Margaret Campbell Barnes, The Last of Days
(2013, ) by Paul C. Doherty and Fall of the House of Queens: Book One of The Shattered Rose Series'' (2017, ) by Shelly Talcott (in this fictional autobiographical account, while he is depicted as a hunchback [which historically he was not], he becomes a trusted confidant of not only Henry himself but also many of the important personages at court and all but one of Henry VIII's wives). ==References==