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Fleabag, Wyndham’s, London: Phoebe Waller-Bridge brings her show back to the stage – and it’s still brilliant

Jason Hetherington
Jason Hetherington

It all started here: one woman, on stage, telling a story. In 2013, Fleabag opened in a small, dank fringe space in Edinburgh, before Phoebe Waller-Bridge turned it into a beloved, era-defining TV comedy, the show that launched her career – and a thousand think pieces.

So of course, this limited and very sold out run in a West End theatre isn’t actually the same, not really. She probably wouldn’t have written this kind of show for this kind of big grand old space: it inevitably feels rather small, just Waller-Bridge sat on a tall stool on an empty stage. The piped-in sound effects and lop-sided pre-recorded conversations occasionally feel odd, especially when you’ve also seen them spoken by real people on TV.

Still, Waller-Bridge impressively manages to make matters feel remarkably intimate and conspiratorial, drawing you in with those judgemental eyebrow swoops and wicked grins. She’s working again with the original director Vicky Jones, who is also her best friend. Who the dead best friend in the show, Boo, was actually based on. Which is a kind of giddily bleak impetus for writing a play, even if it’s taken them both to giddy heights.

The fact that everyone in the audience also really knows the material has an impact. It’s a bit like watching Monty Python doing their sketches live: you feel the anticipation for the punchline. When Fleabag ponders the anal sex she had with a man with a big dick, Waller-Bridge holds the knowing pause for the line “Do I have a massive arsehole?” till the audience is giggling for it.

Is it worth seeing it live if you’ve loved the TV show? For sure. Waller-Bridge is a compelling performer, and a little over an hour in her company is a treat. She’s very good at orchestrating Fleabag’s little rug pulls on the expected behaviour of women, which feel springy even if we now know to expect them. There’s something in the way Fleabag tries to resist saying outrageous things to her sister, or her dad, or her hook-ups – and then says them anyway – that is deliciously, naughtily enjoyable to watch.

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The show also helped move the goalposts in terms of what we can expect to hear women say about sex, desire, their bodies, their guilt at being bad feminists, and so on and so on – but if anything, this original version is spikier and more uncompromising, sharp as cheap white wine. There are zinging one-liners that provoke delightedly outraged laughter, whether describing a handprint on the wall from the “lovely” threesome Fleabag had while on her period to recalling how her sexts look like someone has dropped a bat on the floor of a hairdressers. This Fleabag watches even more porn, masturbates even more spectacularly, drinks even disastrously, tries to shag even more inappropriate people.

It’s de rigueur for any solo female fringe show – sometimes fairly, more often not – to be compared to Fleabag now. But the script really is a cut above: the storytelling is carefully controlled, Waller-Bridge giving in such a short space of time a comparative depth of character. Her crippling take-downs of dreadful men are still the best in the business, but the love for a best friend ripples sadly through it all too. And the bald honesty of Fleabag’s perspective – as a young woman who can only see her own through the sexualised gaze of men, and who knows they’re not even meant to admit to that – still feels devastatingly acute and painfully familiar.

Oh, and there’s one emotional absolute gut-punch in the stage version that – presumably having been deemed just too upsetting for telly – may be new to much of the audience. Guinea pig lovers be warned: it destroyed me.

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