Icon Fame Journal.

Juicy entertainment chatter with tabloid flavor.

news

Why Helena Shaw From Indiana Jones And The Dial Of Destiny Looks So Familiar

By Christopher Ramos

In 2016, Phoebe Waller-Bridge created and wrote "Fleabag," which is based on her one-woman stage play of the same name. In "Fleabag," Waller-Bridge starred as the unnamed main character, a woman grieving her late best friend Boo (Jenny Rainsford), not being able to connect with her family, including her sister Claire (Sian Clifford), and struggling with self-loathing. Season 2 then sees Fleabag finding love when she falls for a priest (Andrew Scott). Notably, Fleabag breaks the fourth wall, giving commentary directly to the audience.

While Season 1 had its fans and critical acclaim, it was Season 2, which aired in 2019, of the series that skyrocketed Waller-Bridge to fame. The season was an absolute hit with critics, gaining a perfect Tomatometer score on Rotten Tomatoes and leading to multiple Primetime Emmy wins for Waller-Bridge.

Waller-Bridge told Collider in 2019 that it took some time for her to come around to a good enough idea to pursue a second season of "Fleabag." After Season 1, she was working on "Killing Eve" (she worked as showrunner for the first season) and, during that time, she kept a notebook of ideas for another season of "Fleabag." Waller-Bridge continued, "I opened the notebook, and almost 70% of the ideas were about religion. I was like, 'This is strange.' ... And all of that energy collected together into this one character of The Priest, and Fleabag meeting a priest." Further, she knew that the priest would lead to seeing Fleabag open up in a different way than the audience had seen in the first season.

The writer-actress continued, "She couldn't hide from the audience ... because the audience now knows what her secret is. So, she had to open up in a different way, and that was challenging."