Fleabag’s Phoebe Waller-Bridge Responds To Criticisms About How ‘Posh’ The Show Is

Phoebe Waller-Bridge has responded to critics of her show Fleabag, who suggested the series was unrelatable because of how “posh” the central character and her family are.

Earlier this year, Phoebe co-wrote and starred in the second series of Fleabag, which raised lots of interesting discussions about everything from complicated family relationships to slightly inappropriate crushes.

Amid the conversations was a piece published in The Guardian in April, titled “Fleabag Is A Work Of Undeniable Genius. But It Is For Posh Girls.”

Phoebe Waller-Bridge in the series finale of Fleabag

The article, written by journalist Ellen E Jones, suggested that the show wasn’t quite as relatable as some of the media would have us believe, due to the show’s creator, and its titular heroine, being “posh”.

Asked for her thoughts on this during an interview on the podcast How To Fail, Phoebe acknowledged she was “perfectly set up to have success in the world”, noting: “I really know that I am [posh]. I mean, my God.”

However, she did stick up for the show itself, saying: “To criticise a story on the basis of where the author had come from, or how privileged the author is, undermines the story.

“It’s not like my privilege created Fleabag. I created Fleabag, but from a point of place in my life where I was able to sit and write.”

Phoebe at the TV Baftas earlier this year

Phoebe continued: “I like to think that whatever life I’d lived, wherever I’d been born or brought up, I would still have written if I had been given the encouragement.

“And that’s the thing that I care about, encouraging people to do it.”

During the same interview, Phoebe admitted she regretted not being better prepared for how the effect that Fleabag’s success would have on her family, and the inevitable questions that would come their way.