Rearranging the letters of 'Othello by William Shakespeare' gives:
A Moor's play with a belle he ... likes?
(by Mike Mesterton-Gibbons by hand) (2010) (pending approval)
Bah! Moor kills a sweetie. He'll pay!
(by Mike Mesterton-Gibbons by hand) (2006) (pending approval)
Other related anagrams without their own page:
"The Immortal Bard, William Shakespeare" -> "Aha, British male-writer maked all poems!" (by Aronas Pinchas) (2008) (pending approval)
"The Immortal Bard, William Shakespeare" -> "Aha, Will (real British master) maked poem!" (by Aronas Pinchas) (2008) (pending approval)
"The Immortal Bard, William Shakespeare" -> "This admirable writer shall make a poem." (by Meyran Kraus by hand) (2007) (pending approval)
"'Othello, the Moor of Venice' by William Shakespeare" -> "Ebony hero (he was epic lover), aims to kill hot female." (by Aronas Pinchas) (2009) (pending approval)
"'Othello, the Moor of Venice' by William Shakespeare" -> "The ebony asocial hero kills white female over mop." (by Aronas Pinchas) (2009) (pending approval)
"'Othello, the Moor of Venice' by William Shakespeare" -> "Aha, here ebony lover, top male, comes to kill his wife!" (by Aronas Pinchas) (2009) (pending approval)
"'Othello, the Moor of Venice' by William Shakespeare" -> "Hoar macho, ebony lover, kills his petite female. Woe." (by Aronas Pinchas) (2009) (pending approval)
"'Othello, the Moor of Venice' by William Shakespeare" -> "All real tale? Ebony hero chokes his wife. Motive - mop." (by Aronas Pinchas) (2009) (pending approval)
"The Complete Works of William Shakespeare" -> "Pick Marlowe, ask if he wrote all these poems." (by unknown) (2011) (pending approval)
"The dramatist William Shakespeare" -> "Was a peak. Theatres still admire him." (by Pinchas Aronas) (2008) (pending approval)
"The dramatist William Shakespeare" -> "His art made him as star. We keep it all." (by Pinchas Aronas) (2008) (pending approval)
"Othello" -> "Hell, too." (by Stanley Accrington by hand) (2008) (pending approval)
"The William Shakespeare anagram" -> "I leak a phrase: A shrew-taming male!" (by mick Tully using Anagram Genius) (2007) (pending approval)
"William Shakespeare The Bard of Stratford on Avon" -> "Bravo! Don's wild personal affairs make hot theatre." (by Jim Colles by hand) (2004)
"William Shakespeare, The Bard of Avon" -> "Abrasive alpha male of the worse kind!" (by Wayne Baisley) (2004)
"William Shakespeare, The Bard of Avon" -> "As I live and breath, Mel's a heap of work." (by Wayne Baisley) (2004)
"William Shakespeare, The Bard of Avon" -> "He of silken phrase, at a live drama. Bow." (by Mick Tully using Anagram Genius) (2007) (pending approval)
"'Romeo and Juliet' by W. Shakespeare" -> "A rimjob? Oh yes! Up a wanted sleeker." (by Chris by hand) (2007) (pending approval)
"W. Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet" -> "I am a jokeless, wanted super-hero." (by Knut Nilsen using Anagram Genius) (2006) (pending approval)
"'Romeo and Juliet' play" -> "All enjoy prude 'Ti amo!'" (by Aronas Pinchas ) (2010) (pending approval)
"Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet" -> "The personal joke eased us, Mira." (by Dylan Hope by hand) (2010) (pending approval)
"'Romeo and Juliet' story" -> "O, just dry real emotion!" (by Aronas Pinchas) (2010) (pending approval)
"'Romeo and Juliet' story" -> "Read to 'motley' juniors." (by Aronas Pinchas) (2010) (pending approval)
"A tender age for boys" -> "Teen bards are goofy." (by Jim banholzer) (2017) (pending approval)
"A manically presage William Shakespeare" -> "I am a especially weakish anagram speller." (by Jim Banholzer) (2018) (pending approval)
"Poet William Shakespeare" -> "Marlowe is the lapse, I - Peak!" (by Aronas Pinchas) (2009) (pending approval)
"Hamlet by William Shakespeare" -> "A play I am asks me whether I'll be." (by Mike Mesterton-Gibbons by hand) (2017) (pending approval)
"Hamlet by William Shakespeare" -> "A sample: I'll ask whether I may be." (by Mike Mesterton-Gibbons by hand) (2010) (pending approval)
"Macbeth by William Shakespeare" -> "A witch bespeaks liberal mayhem." (by Mike Mesterton-Gibbons by hand) (2010) (pending approval)
"Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare" -> "Beware as jackals lie, easily usurp him." (by Mike Mesterton-Gibbons by hand) (2010) (pending approval)