EPISODE · May 13, 2026 · 1H 11M
Ep 027 Fleabag: With Producer Eleanor Greene and Screenwriter Helen Tompson
from The London Screenwriters' Festival Podcast
Fleabag Script Analysis: What Makes Phoebe Waller-Bridge's Writing So Damn GoodIf you've ever wondered why Fleabag hits differently from everything else on TV, this episode breaks down exactly how Phoebe Waller-Bridge pulled it off — one brilliant script choice at a time. Host Helen Tompson sits down with script editor and development powerhouse Eleanor Greene (25+ years in the industry, starting as a runner on Queer as Folk) to dig into the first episode of Fleabag with the kind of forensic detail that'll change how you watch — and write — forever. They cover the fourth wall and why it works here when it fails everywhere else, how Waller-Bridge's ruthless honesty shapes every character introduction, the feminist subtext hiding in plain sight, the Obama masturbation scene (yes, really), why the show is comedy and drama and why that question even matters, and the specific script cuts that made the final version so much sharper. Whether you're a writer looking for craft lessons or just a massive Fleabag fan who wants to go deeper, this one's got you covered."Really good comedy has tragedy at its heart, 'cause otherwise the comedy's got nothing to feed off." — Eleanor Greene00:00 - Welcome & why Fleabag Ep. 101:30 - Meet Eleanor Greene: 25 years in TV drama03:30 - From Edinburgh Fringe monologue to the fourth wall06:30 - Ruthless honesty & the writer-as-performer10:30 - Opening page: stage directions and the rhythm of 514:30 - Character introductions: inverting the convention20:30 - Lean writing, white space & the "Handsome man / Asshole guy" gag26:00 - The Obama scene & female desire on the page30:00 - Comedy or drama? It's really about length36:00 - The flip test: turning drama into comedy (and back)43:00 - The Save the Cat moment that got cut & the Harry timeline note53:00 - The MacGuffin: the statue, stakes and present-day plot57:00 - Feminism, the Godmother & disagreeing about who's the bitch
What this episode covers
Fleabag Script Analysis: What Makes Phoebe Waller-Bridge's Writing So Damn GoodIf you've ever wondered why Fleabag hits differently from everything else on TV, this episode breaks down exactly how Phoebe Waller-Bridge pulled it off — one brilliant script choice at a time. Host Helen Tompson sits down with script editor and development powerhouse Eleanor Greene (25+ years in the industry, starting as a runner on Queer as Folk) to dig into the first episode of Fleabag with the kind of forensic detail that'll change how you watch — and write — forever. They cover the fourth wall and why it works here when it fails everywhere else, how Waller-Bridge's ruthless honesty shapes every character introduction, the feminist subtext hiding in plain sight, the Obama masturbation scene (yes, really), why the show is comedy and drama and why that question even matters, and the specific script cuts that made the final version so much sharper. Whether you're a writer looking for craft lessons or just a massive Fleabag fan who wants to go deeper, this one's got you covered."Really good comedy has tragedy at its heart, 'cause otherwise the comedy's got nothing to feed off." — Eleanor Greene00:00 - Welcome & why Fleabag Ep. 101:30 - Meet Eleanor Greene: 25 years in TV drama03:30 - From Edinburgh Fringe monologue to the fourth wall06:30 - Ruthless honesty & the writer-as-performer10:30 - Opening page: stage directions and the rhythm of 514:30 - Character introductions: inverting the convention20:30 - Lean writing, white space & the "Handsome man / Asshole guy" gag26:00 - The Obama scene & female desire on the page30:00 - Comedy or drama? It's really about length36:00 - The flip test: turning drama into comedy (and back)43:00 - The Save the Cat moment that got cut & the Harry timeline note53:00 - The MacGuffin: the statue, stakes and present-day plot57:00 - Feminism, the Godmother & disagreeing about who's the bitch
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Ep 027 Fleabag: With Producer Eleanor Greene and Screenwriter Helen Tompson
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