Thankfully, after "bonding
over a stiff drink", the chemistry clicked as they filmed the pilot. Can you
believe that was a (terrifying) quarter of a century ago? At the dawn of Ab Fab,
Princess Diana was still alive — "still married to Prince Charles", Lumley
drawls. In the years following, the sitcom was not only the tale of a craven
PR's eternal search to be fabulous, famous and thin, with her "fash mag slag"
best friend in tow, but a storm gauge for the nation's silliest obsessions.
Isolation tanks, amateur
Buddhism, the Spice Girls, Spanx, vaginoplasty and the ascent of the
billionaires have all been ruthlessly sent up. It saw at least two fashion
trends come back (it might be three times for grunge) and became a huge hit
around the world. At one point, Roseanne Barr wanted to make an American
version, and French cinema has produced its own movie, Absolument Fabuleux
(2001). None of it really worked, though: the magic ingredient has always been
"Jen and Jo".
Is theirs an unlikely
partnership? Hardly. Despite a few years between them, they are both
silly-but-sensible daughters of military fathers who, while trenchantly middle
class in lots of ways, are vocal anti-snobs. Both have enjoyed long, low-key
marriages, Lumley to classical musician Stephen Barlow and Saunders to actor and
comedian Adrian Edmondson. "It's nice. Life, family," Saunders says, following
it up with this advice for tending a marriage post 50: "Sometimes, just shut
up."
Thanks to The New Avengers
and French and Saunders, they were both famous before they met, yet
neither of their lives has been perfect. Saunders was diagnosed with breast
cancer in 2009, while Lumley had various dramas with her son, Jamie, now 48. She
concealed the identity of his father when he was growing up but eventually it
was revealed to be the photographer Michael Claydon, but not before an obnoxious
obsession in the tabloids had taken its toll on the family.
It's not as if either of these
women is prone to self-pity, though. Their public appearances include scoring
the fastest lap for a woman on Top Gear (Saunders) or haranguing the government
about Gurkhas' rights (no prizes for guessing that one). They do really get on.
"People seem to want us — and I do, too — to see far more of each other," Lumley
says. "We could spend a year not seeing each other. It's awful." Rare reunions
involve "a couple of martinis" followed by "changing the world for good".