Fans of country music icon Dolly Parton have been crediting her with saving the world from the raging coronavirus ever since the drugmaker Moderna reported the positive results of their vaccine trials.
Parton's name is featured in the preliminary report on the Moderna vaccine among sponsors like the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, headed by the nation's foremost infectious disease expert Dr Anthony Fauci, and Emory University.
The musician donated $1 million to the Vanderbilt University Medical Centre in honour of her friend, Vanderbilt professor of surgery Dr Naji Abumrad, back in April, less than a month after the WHO declared the coronavirus a pandemic.
"When I donated the money to the COVID fund I just wanted it to do good and evidently, it is! Let's just hope we can find a cure real soon", the singer and philanthropist, who just released her 47th solo album, "A Holly Dolly Christmas", tweeted, sending crowds of netizens into exultation.
"I would like to officially nominate Dolly Parton for Time's Person of the Year", one posted, with another weighing in along the same lines:
"And a Presidential Medal of Freedom".
"Shakespeare may have written King Lear during the plague, but Dolly Parton funded a COVID vaccine, dropped a Christmas album, and a Christmas special", the author Lyz Lenz posted in admiration.
Many more echoed the stance, referring to the 74-year-old singer as "an angel walking the Earth", "sweet Dolly", "true icon and hero", and lauding the way such hefty donations would help scientists arrive at an appropriate vaccine and effective COVID therapy.
Dolly, I just had to thank you for all you do for humanity sake. I have loved you for your songs, and acting for many years, but your gift to Covid 19 vaccine research tops it all. You are truly one of Gods gifts to this crazy world. So thank you so much for all you do.
— Ralph E. Huber (@RalphHome1) November 18, 2020
You are a true icon and hero. Thanks for all the good you do. Did you know you were cited in the @NEJM - seriously, that's so very cool. pic.twitter.com/TN6zANr5vN
— Sed8 Doc. (@Sed8Doc) November 17, 2020
You are a truly lovely person from everything I know, current donation included.
— Kindergirl 🇨🇦🏳️🌈🇺🇸 (@Kindergirl7) November 17, 2020
I am old enough to remember all the jokes and the mean comments of yore. And you still remained kind, pleasant, humble. pic.twitter.com/1U2oMOFSFk
Parton's contribution, which is now referred to as the Dolly Parton COVID-19 Research Fund, helped cover the expenses for the first part of the vaccine research. Although the federal government then pumped another $1 billion into the creation of the vaccine, leading researcher Dr Mark Denison stressed it was Ms Parton's investment that funded the "critical" early stages of his team's work.
The US drugmaker Moderna, which reported a vaccine breakthrough after Russia's Gamaleya Centre and American firm Pfizer announced theirs, said on Monday citing early data that their vaccine is 94.5% effective against coronavirus. It said it was aiming to produce 1 billion doses of the medication by late 2021 and is now applying for Emergency Use Authorisation (EUA) with the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA).