A good puzzle has an entertaining, preferably novel, theme, well realised (a vague term that encompasses other features, such as, for aesthetic reasons, a symmetrical grid and a short straightforward preamble), with sound, preferably amusing, clues. [Others may disagree or have additional criteria.] But for me a really good puzzle has something extra. It is one that perhaps reminds me of something important or introduces me to something that I didn't know or a book/film etc that I haven't read/seen or would enjoy experiencing again. This puzzle made the grade for me. I was therefore disappointed at jim360's insouciant remark that he felt "very underwhelmed" when he first heard the story. Those of us who watched the drama unfold felt as if we were about to be distinctly overwhelmed. What other stories are underwhelming? The Great War? The Holocaust? Hiroshima and Nagasaki? It is important to be reminded from time to time, even (or perhaps especially) through such a trivial medium, of such dramas. And yes, em_and_em, one wouldn't want this sort of reminder too often.
Apologies for sounding off like that. On a necessary lighter note, anyone for a puzzle celebrating the Second Vatican Council (October 1962)? Something about converting from Latin to the vernacular. There is still plenty of time: Vatican II didn't close until December 1965.