English actress, screenwriter and producer (born 1985)
Phoebe Mary Waller-Bridge (born 14 July 1985) is an English actress, screenwriter and producer. As the creator, head writer, and star of the comedy series
Fleabag (2016–2019), she won three
Primetime Emmy Awards , two
Golden Globes and a
British Academy Television Award .
[1]
[2] She received further Emmy and Golden Globe nominations for writing and producing the spy thriller series
Killing Eve (2018–2022).
Waller-Bridge has also created, written, and starred in the comedy series
Crashing (2016). She has also acted in the comedy series
The Café (2011–2013), in the second season of
Broadchurch (2015), and in the films
Albert Nobbs (2011),
The Iron Lady (2011),
Goodbye Christopher Robin (2017), and
Solo: A Star Wars Story (2018). She contributed to the screenplay of the
James Bond film
No Time to Die (2021) and starred in the adventure film
Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny (2023).
Early life
Phoebe Mary Waller-Bridge was born in
Hammersmith , London, on 14 July 1985,
[3]
[4] the daughter of Michael Cyprian Waller-Bridge, founder of the electronic trading platform
Tradepoint ,
[5] and Theresa Mary, daughter of Sir John Edward Longueville Clerke, 12th
Baronet , employed by the
Worshipful Company of Ironmongers .
[6]
[7]
[8] The Bridge, later Waller-Bridge, family were soldiers and clergymen, who came to rank among the
landed gentry of
Cuckfield in Sussex.
[9]
[10] Her grandfather, Cyprian Waller-Bridge (1918-1960), "a Wodehousian sort of character... 'the eccentric son of an eccentric vicar'",
[11] was an actor and BBC announcer.
[12]
[13]
[14] On her father's side, she is a descendant of the Revd Sir Egerton
Leigh, 2nd Baronet , and a distant relative of politician and author
Egerton Leigh ,
Conservative
MP for
Mid Cheshire from 1873 to his death in 1876.
[15]
[16]
Waller-Bridge grew up in
Ealing in London
[17]
[18] and has two siblings: an older sister,
Isobel Waller-Bridge , a composer, with whom she has collaborated; and a younger brother, Jasper.
[19] Her parents are divorced.
[20] She was educated at
St Augustine's Priory , a Catholic independent school for girls,
[21] followed by the independent
sixth form college
DLD College London in the
Marylebone area of London.
[22] She graduated from the
Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London.
[23]
Career
Waller-Bridge (centre) at the
Edinburgh Festival Fringe in 2013
Waller-Bridge's performing credits begin in theatre in 2007. At that time, she co-founded the DryWrite Theatre Company with
Vicky Jones .
[7] They are co-artistic directors of the company.
[24]
[25] The two women met and became friends while working on theatre productions.
[26] Among her acting theatre credits are the 2009 productions Roaring Trade at
Soho Theatre
[27] and
Rope at the Almeida Theatre. She performed in a production of
Noël Coward 's
Hay Fever in 2011 and Mydidae in 2012. Waller-Bridge then wrote and starred in Fleabag , which she first performed as part of the London Storytelling Festival on 25 November 2012. The first full version of Fleabag premiered at the
Edinburgh Fringe Festival in 2013. She later wrote the short plays production Good. Clean. Fun.
[28] Waller-Bridge returned to the stage for further productions of Fleabag between 2013 and 2019.
Waller-Bridge began her screen career in 2009, playing roles in short films and in individual episodes of television sitcoms and dramas. Her early television appearances include the 2011 film The Night Watch , as well as
Bad Education and
Coming Up in 2013 and
Blandings in 2014. She had supporting roles in
The Café from 2011 to 2013 and in the second season of the crime drama series
Broadchurch in 2015. Her first feature length theatrical film roles were in 2011 for
Albert Nobbs and
The Iron Lady . Her role in Albert Nobbs had her cast alongside
Emerald Fennell , to whom she would later hand off showrunner duties for Killing Eve .
Waller-Bridge has voice acted for several BBC Radio plays, such as 2013's
Vincent Price and the Horror of the English Blood Beast , in which she played actress
Hillary Dwyer , and a 2014 adaptation of an
Agatha Christie story. She has provided narration in short films, including a 2015 television documentary on dating apps and a 2016 Christmas themed animated short film. She has also voiced ads for companies such as The Cotswold Company,
Warburtons ,
Gordon's Gin ,
Trainline ,
Travel Republic ,
Kuoni Travel , and
Tropicana .
In 2016, she wrote and starred in her first television project, the
Channel 4 comedy
Crashing about a group of twenty-somethings living in an abandoned hospital under the
property guardianship scheme.
[29] It began streaming on
Netflix after airing in the UK, with
W Magazine calling it Waller-Bridge's "twisted take on Friends ."
[30]
GQ Magazine described the show's six episodes as: "perfect little whirlwinds of comedy building to one big maelstrom where everyone falls to pieces—some are better off for it, and some are not. No matter where the chips fall, you'll have a good time."
[31]
Waller-Bridge at a performance of her one-woman show at the
Wyndham's Theatre in 2019
After an initial release on BBC Three,
Fleabag was broadcast on
BBC Two from August 2016. It was picked up by the on-demand
Amazon Video service and premiered in the United States in September 2016.
[32]
[33]
[34] For her performance in the series she won the
British Academy Television Award for Best Female Comedy Performance and was nominated for a
Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Actress in a Comedy Series . Fleabag ' s second and final series aired in 2019. For the second series, Waller-Bridge received
Primetime Emmy Awards for
Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series ,
Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series , and
Outstanding Comedy Series .
[35]
[36] She also topped the
Radio Times's TV 100 power list that year.
[37]
She voiced and performed
droid
L3-37 in the
Star Wars film
Solo: A Star Wars Story (2018).
[38]
[39] Waller-Bridge wrote and produced the thriller television series
Killing Eve , based on novels by
Luke Jennings .
[40] She was also the
showrunner for
series 1 .
[41] The
BBC America series stars
Sandra Oh and
Jodie Comer and premiered in April 2018 to critical acclaim.
[42] For her work on the series, she received nominations for the
Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series and
Outstanding Drama Series , the latter as a producer.
In March 2019,
HBO ordered the series
Run , with Waller-Bridge as executive producer.
[43] In the series, she also portrayed the recurring character Laurel.
[44] It was cancelled after one series.
[45] In 2019, Waller-Bridge co-wrote the screenplay for
No Time to Die (2021), the 25th
James Bond film , along with
Neal Purvis ,
Robert Wade and
Cary Joji Fukunaga . It was stated she was brought on to introduce "more humour and the offbeat style of writing she is best known for."
[46]
[47] In 2020, Waller-Bridge voiced Sayan Kötör in series 2 of the television show
His Dark Materials . She also directed the music video for "Saviour Complex" by
Phoebe Bridgers . Waller-Bridge then appeared in the music video for "Treat People with Kindness" by
Harry Styles , which premiered on 1 January 2021.
Waller-Bridge and Donald Glover in 2018
She was set to co-star with
Donald Glover in a
television adaptation of the 2005 film
Mr. and Mrs. Smith , but in September 2021, it was revealed that Waller-Bridge had exited the series over creative differences.
[48] Waller-Bridge is developing a
Tomb Raider TV series for
Amazon Prime .
[49] She appears in
Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny , as Helena Shaw, which was released in June 2023.
[50]
[51]
[52]
[53]
Personal life
Waller-Bridge lives in the
Shoreditch area of
London . She married Irish presenter and documentary filmmaker
Conor Woodman in 2014.
[18] By 2017, they had separated and filed for divorce.
[54] Since early 2018, she has been in a relationship with playwright
Martin McDonagh .
[7]
Waller-Bridge describes herself as an
atheist , although she says she "hopped around a bit from religion to religion" while growing up.
[55] She avoids social media, stating in a 2019 interview that she "would feel pressure to be funny the whole time" and that she did not feel confident enough to deal with the negative comments that come with social media use.
[56]
Filmography
Film
Key
†
Denotes works that have not yet been released
Television
Year
Title
Role
Notes
2009
Doctors
Katie Burbridge
Episode: "Chef's Secret"
2010
How Not to Live Your Life
Felicity
Episode: "Don's Posh Weekend"
2011
The Night Watch
Lauren
Television film
2011–2013
The Café
Chloe Astill
13 episodes
2013
Coming Up
Karen
Episode: "Henry"
London Irish
Steph
Episode: "#1.2"
Bad Education
India
Episode: "Drugs"
2014
Blandings
Felicity
Episode: "Custody of the Pumpkin"
Glue
Bee Warwick
2 episodes
Drifters
None
Writer in 3 episodes
2015
Broadchurch
Abby Thompson
8 episodes
Love at First Swipe
Narrator
Documentary; also called "The Secret World of Tinder"
2016
Crashing
Lulu
6 episodes; also creator, writer and executive producer
2016–2019
Fleabag
Fleabag
12 episodes; also creator, writer and executive producer
2018–2022
Killing Eve
None
Writer in 4 episodes, executive producer in 24 episodes
2019
Saturday Night Live
Herself (host)
Episode: "Phoebe Waller-Bridge/
Taylor Swift "
2020
Run
Laurel Halliday
Actress in 3 episodes; executive producer in 7 episodes
His Dark Materials
Sayan Kötör (voice)
2 episodes
2021
Staged
Herself
Episode: "The Loo Recluse"
Great British Theatre
Fleabag
Episode: "Fleabag"
Theatre
Year
Title
Role
Venue
Ref.
2007
Is Everyone OK?
Performer
Latitude Festival , Suffolk
[57]
[58]
Crazy Love
Billie
Paines Plough
[59]
2008
Twelfth Night
Viola
Sprite Productions
[60]
2009
Roaring Trade
Jess
Soho Theatre , London
[61]
2 May 1997
Sarah
The Bush Theatre , London
[61]
Rope
Leila Arden
Almeida Theatre , London
[61]
2010
Like a Fishbone
Intern
The Bush Theatre, London
[61]
Tribes
Ruth
Royal Court Theatre , London
[61]
2011
Hay Fever
Sorel Bliss
Noël Coward Theatre , London
[61]
[62]
2012
Mydidae
Marian
Soho Theatre, London
[63]
Trafalgar Studios , West End
2013
Fleabag
Fleabag
Underbelly ,
Edinburgh Festival Fringe Soho Theatre Studio, London
[64]
2014
The One
Jo
Soho Theatre, London
[65]
[66]
Fleabag
Fleabag
Soho Theatre Main House
Daehangno Small Theatre Festival, Seoul
[67]
[68]
[69]
2015
Salberg Studio
[70]
[71]
2016
Soho Theatre Main House
2018
Australia
[68]
2019
SoHo Playhouse
[72]
Wyndham's Theatre
[73]
Music videos
Radio
Publications
Waller-Bridge, Phoebe (1 January 2013). Fleabag . London: Nick Hern Books.
OCLC
894546593 .
Waller-Bridge, Phoebe (6 October 2016). Fleabag, 2nd Edition . London: Nick Hern Books.
Waller-Bridge, Phoebe (29 August 2019). Fleabag: The Special Edition (NHB Modern Plays) . London: Nick Hern Books.
Waller-Bridge, Phoebe (12 November 2019). Fleabag: The Scriptures (Hardcover & Paperback) . Sceptre.
Waller-Bridge, Phoebe (26 November 2019). Fleabag: The Scriptures (Hardcover & Kindle) . Ballantine Books.
Waller-Bridge, Phoebe (26 November 2019). Fleabag: The Special Edition (TCG) . Theatre Communications Group.
Awards and honours
See also
References
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ISBN
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OCLC
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^
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External links
Excellence in Film Excellence in Directing Worldwide Contribution to Entertainment British Artist of the Year Excellence in Comedy Excellence in Television Humanitarian Award Retired Awards
1950–1975 1976–2000 2001–present
1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s 2010s 2020s
1962–1979 1980–1999 2000–2019 2020–present
Julia Davis (2005)
Jesse Armstrong and
Sam Bain (2006)
Caroline Aherne ,
Craig Cash and
Phil Mealey (2007)
Graham Linehan (2008)
Jesse Armstrong and
Sam Bain (2009)
Damon Beesley and
Iain Morris (2010)
Jo Brand ,
Vicki Pepperdine and
Joanna Scanlan (2011)
Jesse Armstrong and
Sam Bain (2012)
Simon Blackwell , Rob Colley,
Roger Drew , Dan Gaster,
Sean Gray ,
Armando Iannucci ,
Ian Martin ,
Georgia Pritchett ,
David Quantick ,
Tony Roche and
Will Smith (2013)
Tom Basden ,
Mathew Baynton and
James Corden (2014)
Harry Enfield ,
Charlie Higson and
Paul Whitehouse (2015)
Rob Delaney and
Sharon Horgan (2016)
Phoebe Waller-Bridge (2017)
Charlie Cooper and
Daisy May Cooper (2018)
Stefan Golaszewski (2019)
Phoebe Waller-Bridge (2020)
Mae Martin and Joe Hampson (2021)
Nida Manzoor (2022)
Lisa McGee (2023)
International National Artists People Other