How Phoebe Waller-Bridge is 'spicing up' James Bond

Faye Thomas Phoebe Waller-BridgeFaye Thomas

Phoebe Waller-Bridge says she has added some "little spices" to the new James Bond film No Time to Die.

The award-winning writer, actress and creator of Fleabag says she was brought on board "to help out" with the script for the 25th official 007 instalment.

"They were just looking for tweaks across a few of the characters and a few of the storylines," she adds.

No Time to Die will be the first Bond film to come out in the era of the #MeToo and Time's Up movements.

But, while questions have been raised in recent years about the misogynistic and domineering way James Bond has traditionally treated women, Waller-Bridge insists she was not told to change the culture of the films.

"They were already doing that themselves," she says. "They're having that conversation with themselves the whole time. It (her involvement) was much more practical. Just, 'You're a writer, we need some help with these scenes. And you come up with some dialogue for these characters'."

Waller-Bridge is only the second woman to have a writing credit on a Bond film during the franchise's 57-year history. The first was Johanna Harwood on Dr No and From Russia with Love in the early 1960s.

Daniel Craig, who's played Bond since 2006, has said it was his idea to enlist Waller-Bridge.

She says it was actually the film's American producer Barbara Broccoli who first got in touch.

Getty Images Lea Seydoux, Ana de Armas, Daniel Craig, Naomie Harris and Lashana Lynch attend the Bond 25 film launch at Ian Fleming's home in JamaicaGetty Images
Left-right: Lea Seydoux, Ana de Armas, Daniel Craig, Naomie Harris and Lashana Lynch launch No Time to Die

"We met for coffee and then a few months later we met again. And then I met the director Cary Joji Fukunaga and then I met Daniel after that. But I know Daniel and Barbara had been talking about it for while," explains Waller-Bridge.

She then spent time discussing the script with Craig in New York before joining the cast and crew at Pinewood where she spent "a lot of time" on set.

She said "it doesn't get cooler" than writing lines for James Bond.

The film's lead actress is Lashana Lynch, who plays a British agent. She says she was overjoyed when she discovered Waller-Bridge was going to be involved.

Lynch told the Hollywood Reporter magazine: "I very literally squealed when I first heard her name. I thought, 'Oh my gosh, British girl just like me. She's going to know how to actually take care of women onscreen'."

Ana de Armas, who will also be seen in No Time to Die, says Bond fans will notice the shift in dynamics in the new film. "It's pretty obvious that there is an evolution in the fact that Lashana is one of the main characters in the film and wears the pants - literally," she told the magazine.

But for fans hoping Waller-Bridge might make a brief appearance, she herself stresses she's not in the film.

Phoebe Waller-Bridge as Fleabag
Phoebe Waller-Bridge hopes her book of Fleabag scripts will give fans a new insight into the show's making

She does however pop up in a behind-the-scenes recording for Children in Need with her Fleabag co-star, Olivia Colman.

Colman has provided vocals on a cover of Portishead's Glory Box, with Waller-Bridge backing her up on the ukulele.

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She says the woman she affectionately calls "Colly" sent her a message asking her to help out and she agreed immediately.

And she reveals the pair frequently enjoy "good old" karaoke sessions.

"I've been karaoke-ing with Colly for a long time. So I know the pipes that woman has. And so I was excited that the world was going to get to hear them."

Getty Images Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Olivia ColmanGetty Images
Phoebe Waller-Bridge has become good friends with her co-star Olivia "Colly" Coleman

Her friendship with Colman has spanned the two series of the hit BBC comedy Fleabag, and the scripts from the show are now being published in the book Fleabag: The Scriptures, which features unseen stage directions.

Waller-Bridge thinks they will give readers "a more personal connection with the characters" as well as "really displaying what the actors brought to it".

"Once you see what's on the page," she adds, Colman's performance as Fleabag's evil godmother "is even more impressive when you see what she was given in the first place".

The book also features new writing from Waller-Bridge in which she discloses more about her creative process.

"I rewrite quite a lot on the day," she divulges, which means "I'm so last minute".

Waller-Bridge says she was prompted to write Fleabag "almost entirely" because she was being cast in very "basic" roles after drama school.

Andrew Scott in Fleabag
Andrew Scott's priest became the object of Fleabag's affection

And the pressure to look a certain way had her "teetering on the edge of a depression".

"It really got under my skin," she says. "[There was] this ideal version of a woman everyone had to aspire to from a very young age and the ideal was that she was very sexual and perfect.

"I felt so angry about it because I didn't feel I had to justify myself. And I had to prove that first and foremost I had a brain and I was clever. But at the same time I also felt I had to prove that I was pretty and desirable."

In the second series of Fleabag, Waller-Bridge gave her character a love interest in a charismatic priest, played by Andrew Scott.

In the final episode, the pair have a brief conversation in an alley before sharing a kiss - it's a scene Waller-Bridge says she hadn't worked out properly.

"We'd read it out and I felt like it was not working. I remember saying, 'I'm really sorry Andrew I don't like that and he said it's OK'. He was such a good sport."

But it was the end of the day, time was running out and the director was calling for them to shoot the scene.

"Andrew jumped up and was like, 'Yeah let's do it'," recalls Waller-Bridge. "It did give it a kind of crazy electricity because we didn't really know what was going to happen.

"We did that three or four times on the trot and eventually got the scene we needed."

She also reveals it was Scott who insisted his character say "I love you too" to Fleabag at the end - "and thank God he did," she concludes.

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