Absolutely Fabulous: Book Clubbin'


01:35 am - 02:05 am, Wednesday, June 10 on U&W (25)

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About this Broadcast

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Book Clubbin'
Season 5, Episode 2

Saffy's pregnancy sends her mum off the deep end, bringing nightmares about becoming a grandmother, her torture compounded by the taunting midwife. Luckily, Eddie's new celebrity book club started with Patsy takes her mind off her troubles, as Mariella Frostrup promises to bring her famous friends


subtitles 16x9 audio-description
Movie/Drama Sitcom

Cast & Crew

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Jennifer Saunders (Actor) .. Edina Monsoon
Joanna Lumley (Actor) .. Patsy Stone
June Whitfield (Actor) .. Mrs June 'Gran' 'Mother' Monsoon
Julia Sawalha (Actor) .. Saffron Monsoon
Jane Horrocks (Actor) .. Bubble
Kristin Scott Thomas (Actor) .. Plum Berkeley
Felix Dexter (Actor) .. John
Jeanette Krankie (Actor) .. Midwife
Mariella Frostrup (Actor) .. Herself
Dewi Humphreys (Director)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Jennifer Saunders (Actor) .. Edina Monsoon
Born: July 06, 1958 in Sleaford, Lincolnshire
Best Known For: Absolutely Fabulous.
Early-life: Born Jennifer Jane Saunders on July 6, 1958, in Sleaford, Lincolnshire. Her father was in the RAF and she briefly spent time on the same forces camp as her future comedy partner Dawn French, but the pair never met as children. Instead, they got to know each other while attending London's Central School of Speech and Drama in 1977, where they were both on a teaching training course. They later teamed up with Adrian Edmondson, Rik Mayall, Nigel Planer, Alexei Sayle and Peter Richardson to create the The Comic Strip Presents series.
Career: Appearances in The Young Ones, Girls on Top and Happy Families followed, but it was the sketch show French and Saunders that propelled her to fame. One short skit in the series became the basis for Absolutely Fabulous. The sitcom's phenomenal global success opened new doors, and helped land Jennifer roles in the movies In the Bleak Midwinter, Spice World and Fanny and Elvis. She also voiced a not-so-good fairy godmother in hit animation Shrek 2 and stars in the BBC's Blandings. As well as the film and TV work, she has long been an active participant in the charity Comic Relief, alongside her on-screen partner Dawn French, and regularly takes part in the telethon events. We've also seen her reunited with her old pal in Jam & Jerusalem, which she wrote.
Quote: 'It seems you can take a picture on your mobile and it can be on the front page of a celebrity mag the next day. It's a kind of madness.'
Trivia: Married fellow Comic Strip star Adrian Edmondson in 1985. They have three daughters - Beattie, Ella and Freya. She was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2009 and is now in remission. Her autobiography, Bonkers: My Life in Laughs, was published in 2013.
Joanna Lumley (Actor) .. Patsy Stone
Born: May 01, 1946 in Srinagar, Kashmir
Best Known For: Patsy in Absolutely Fabulous.
Early-life: Joanna Lamond Lumley was born on May 1, 1946, in Srinagar, Kashmir. As a child she lived with her family in Hong Kong, Malaysia and Singapore, where her father was a major in the Ghurkas. She came to England aged nine to attend boarding school in Kent, and later a convent school in Hastings. At 16 she auditioned for the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, but was turned down and decided to become a model instead, despite initially being told she was 'too fat and too ugly'.
Career: Lumley's first film was 1969's Some Girls Do, followed by Bond movie On Her Majesty's Secret Service. Her most notable early role was as Ken Barlow's girlfriend Elaine in Coronation Street. Lumley became famous thanks to The New Avengers in 1976. After Sapphire and Steel in the late 1970s, she turned her attention to the theatre and had a stint as a Times columnist. In 1992, Jennifer Saunders cast her as Patsy in sitcom Absolutely Fabulous. Since then, she has appeared in numerous TV dramas and films, including Maybe Baby, James and the Giant Peach, Jam & Jerusalem, Sensitive Skin, The Making of a Lady and The Wolf of Wall Street.
Quote: 'I can't see any difference in having your hair dyed, your teeth fixed, your nose done, or your face smoothed out or lifted.'
Trivia: Lumley received an OBE in 1995.
June Whitfield (Actor) .. Mrs June 'Gran' 'Mother' Monsoon
Born: November 11, 1925 in London
Best Known For: Terry and June, and Absolutely Fabulous.
Early-life: Born June Rosemary Whitfield in Streatham, London, on November 11, 1925. Her mother had hoped to become an actress, but was forbidden to do so by her father. Instead, she appeared in amateur dramatics and encouraged June to enter showbusiness by enrolling her in dance classes at the age of three. Her father was a company director. After the Second World War she moved to Huddersfield with her parents and trained to be a secretary before attending RADA, after which she landed her first professional role on the London stage.
Career: Whitfield became one of BBC Radio's most beloved stars - 22 million people regularly tuned in to her show Take It From Here during the 1950s - but is probably best known for her TV appearances, and has starred alongside Frankie Howerd, Peter Sellers and Tony Hancock. Among her many comedy programmes during the first half of her career were Steptoe and Son, Hancock's Half Hour and The Benny Hill Show. Her long professional relationship with Terry Scott resulted in such series as Happy Ever After and Terry and June. She has also appeared in several Carry On films. Since then Whitfield has won acclaim in Absolutely Fabulous, The Last of the Blonde Bombshells, Jude and Mirrorball.
Quote: 'I was never a great beauty. I think I amused more than I aroused. But at least that meant I didn't feel the pressures that many glamorous actresses do when they reach a certain age. Playing mums and grans never bothered me.'
Trivia: She was awarded an OBE in 1985, and a CBE in 1998.
Julia Sawalha (Actor) .. Saffron Monsoon
Born: September 09, 1968 in London
Best Known For: Playing Saffy in Absolutely Fabulous.
Early-life: Born in 1969 in London, the daughter of Roberta and Nadim Sawalha. She was named after her grandmother, a Jordanian businesswoman. She is of Jordanian, British, and French Huguenot ancestry. She was born into an acting family: her father Nadim is a well-known stage and screen actor and sister Nadia a presenter and actress. Julia became interested in acting at a young age, and landed her first break when she was chosen to star on the children's TV series Press Gang.
Career: She moved into comedy with a starring role in Absolutely Fabulous in 1992, and followed up this near-iconic role with parts in Martin Chuzzlewit, Kenneth Branagh's movie In the Bleak Midwinter and Lydia Bennet in the 1995 adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. In 2000, she had the major vocal role in Nick Park's animated caper Chicken Run, and she landed another significant part when she became the female lead in Jonathan Creek. Since then, she has favoured classic roles, winning rave reviews in Cranford and Lark Rise to Candleford.
Quote: On her sister: 'We have such respect for each other. If I ring her up in tears, she will give me the toughest advice, then she'll have me laughing in seconds.'
Trivia: She voiced a main character in the video game Fable II.
Jane Horrocks (Actor) .. Bubble
Born: January 18, 1964 in Rossendale Valley, Lancashire
Best Known For: Her stunning turn in Little Voice.
Early-life: Born Barbara Jane Horrocks on January 18, 1964, in Rossendale Valley, Lancashire, the youngest child of a salesman and a hospital worker. She has two older brothers. At 10 she started singing and impersonating famous stars. On leaving school in Rawtenstall, near Burnley, she went to a technical college in Oldham. After being turned down by various drama schools, she eventually made it to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts (Rada), where her classmates included Imogen Stubbs and Ralph Fiennes. She made ends meet one Easter by dressing up as Snoopy in Harrods, but ended up getting glandular fever.
Career: After graduating, Horrocks spent a year with the Royal Shakespeare Company, but left to make the film Life is Sweet with acclaimed director Mike Leigh. Her TV debut came in 1987's Road, by Jim Cartwright. He heard her impersonating Edith Piaf, Judy Garland and Shirley Bassey and was so impressed he wrote The Rise and Fall of Little Voice for her, which was turned into the 1998 movie Little Voice. Other projects include The Witches, Absolutely Fabulous, Hunting Venus and Chicken Run. She also had a one-off sketch show, Never Mind the Horrocks, in 1996, sang on Robbie Williams' Swing When You're Winning album and has released her own album. Other work includes Gracie!, The Road to Coronation Street, Trollied, True Love and Sunshine on Leith.
Quote: 'If you're still acting when you're old, there's something wrong with you.'
Trivia: She's recorded a collection of songs inspired by her youth, including punk classics.
Kristin Scott Thomas (Actor) .. Plum Berkeley
Born: May 24, 1960 in Redruth, Cornwall
Best Known For: Four Weddings and a Funeral, and The English Patient.
Early-life: Born in Redruth, Cornwall, on May 24, 1960, Kristin is the elder sister of actress Serena Scott Thomas. On leaving school, Kristin moved to London and worked in a department store. At the age of 19 she went to Paris to work as an au pair. She went on to study acting at the Ecole nationale superieure des arts et techniques du theatre in Paris. After graduating at the age of 25, she was cast opposite Prince in Under the Cherry Moon (1986).
Career: Her big break came when she was cast in A Handful of Dust (1988), a role that won her an Evening Standard British Film Award for most promising newcomer. She went on to star in Bitter Moon (1992), Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994), Mission: Impossible (1996), The English Patient (1996), The Horse Whisperer (1998), Random Hearts (1999), Gosford Park (2001), The Golden Compass (2007) and The Other Boleyn Girl (2008). Thomas has also acted in a number of French films, including Ne le dis à personne (2006), Il y a longtemps que je t'aime (2008), Partir (2009) and Elle s'appelait Sarah (2010).
Quote: 'I've always really wanted to be onstage but movies kind of carry you along. You get swept away by them. And there's this feeling sometimes of being a bit of a pawn and of other people channelling their ambition through you.'
Trivia: She was awarded an OBE in 2003. She won a 2008 Laurence Olivier Theatre Award for her performance in Seagull.
Felix Dexter (Actor) .. John
Jeanette Krankie (Actor) .. Midwife
Mariella Frostrup (Actor) .. Herself
Born: November 12, 1962 in Oslo, Norway
Best Known For: Being a blonde, but not a bimbo.
Early-life: Born in Oslo on November 12, 1962, Mariella's family moved to Dublin when she was six after her Norwegian father became foreign editor for the Irish Times. Her parents later split up, and she lived with her Scottish artist mother, eventually leaving home at 16, the year after her father died. She arrived in London and lived in a Shepherds Bush squat, where she tried to get her TV career off the ground.
Career: Frostrup had numerous jobs, including PR officer for Bananarama and Spandau Ballet, before landing the post of presenter on Video View in 1987. Since then, Frostrup has hosted several movie review programmes, including At The Movies and The Little Picture Show. She has fronted her own series, Frostrup on Friday, appeared on Going For A Song and presented an episode of Panorama. She has also been a jury panel member for The Olivier Theatre Awards and the Booker Prize.
Quote: 'I was told that, when you hit 40, men stop looking at you. It's true - until you slip on a mini-skirt.'
Trivia: Frostrup writes an agony aunt-type column called Dear Mariella for The Observer Magazine.
Dewi Humphreys (Director)

Before / After

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