Development Absolutely Fabulous evolved from a
French and Saunders sketch called "
Modern Mother and Daughter" (from
series 3 episode 6), which starred Saunders as the mother, named Adrianna, and French as the daughter, named Saffron (as in the series). The sketch revolved around a middle-aged single mother who acted like a teenager and was reliant upon the emotional and financial support of her teenage daughter, who behaved like a middle-aged woman. It has no connection, other than the character's name, to the earlier film,
Eddie Monsoon: A Life?, a comedy play written by Saunders' husband
Adrian Edmondson in 1984 for the TV series,
The Comic Strip Presents.... The name "Edina Monsoon" is derived from Edmondson's name and "Eddy Monsoon" is a nickname of his. ,
Julia Sawalha,
Jennifer Saunders,
June Whitfield and
Joanna Lumley Saunders revealed in 2012 that she was inspired by pop band
Bananarama, with whom she and
Dawn French had become friends after their
Comic Relief collaboration in 1989. Although
Ab Fab was produced by Saunders and French's company, Saunders & French Productions, Dawn French appeared on the show only once, in a cameo in the first-series episode "Magazine", before making a brief cameo in the 2016 film. French was originally intended to play Edina's daughter, Saffron, but a younger actress (Sawalha) was ultimately cast. In 2011, plans for a 20th-anniversary revival were welcomed in
The Guardian, which applauded the show as "prophetic". The first new special of
Absolutely Fabulous: 20th Anniversary was broadcast on 25 December with the second episode being shown on 1 January 2012. The third and final special, aired on 23 July 2012, coincided with the
2012 Summer Olympics in London, with
Stella McCartney appearing in a
cameo role. A sketch for
Sport Relief was also broadcast in 2012. A film version of the series,
Absolutely Fabulous: The Movie, was released to theatres in the summer of 2016. Three new specials were announced to celebrate the show's 20th anniversary, with the first special, "Identity", airing on 25 December 2011.
Jon Plowman, executive producer and original producer of the series, said: "Viewers have been fantastically loyal in their devotion to our show, so we're really thrilled to say that it's coming back for three new shows to celebrate our 20th anniversary. All of the originals who are back together again are still truly absolutely fabulous and the new adventures of Edina, Patsy, Saffy, Bubble and Mother, plus a few surprising guests, will be a real treat for viewers." Saunders announced in November 2011 that she had begun work on a film version of the series. In the United States, the episodes were jointly co-produced by Logo and BBC America in the US. and aired in January 2012 for broadcast by both BBC America and Logo Channel. Both channels co-produced the 20th Anniversary episodes, although Logo removed some scenes for its airings. BBC America broadcast it in full. Both channels aired the episode in a 40-minute block to allow for commercial interruptions. On 3 January 2012, following the success of the 20th anniversary specials, it was rumoured that Saunders was set to write another Christmas special for 2012. The BBC was rumoured to be urging her to write a sixth series for 2013. Saunders denied the reports of additional episodes via her Twitter account. Episodes of
Absolutely Fabulous were shot in front of a live studio audience.
Theme song The theme song for
Absolutely Fabulous is "
This Wheel's on Fire", written by
Bob Dylan and
Rick Danko and performed by
Julie Driscoll and Saunders'
Comic Strip fellow and later husband,
Adrian Edmondson. The song was also sung by
Marianne Faithfull and
P. P. Arnold for the two-part special, "The Last Shout", in 1996.
Hermine Demoriane sang the theme song with a French accent over the closing credits of the series 4 episode "Paris" in 2001. At the end of the series 1 episode "Birthday", Edina and Patsy sang the song together on a karaoke machine. It was later performed by
Debbie Harry and Edmondson in the 2002 Christmas special "Gay" (where Harry also guest-starred), as well as in series 5. For series 4, a line sung by
David Bowie, "Ziggy played guitar", from his song "
Ziggy Stardust", played at the end of each episode. Due to copyright issues, the theme song is missing from many US Region 1 DVDs, replaced by an instrumental version. Also excised from the US DVD release is the musical number from
Chicago performed by Horrocks, Gaffney, and Ryan during a dream sequence in the series 5 episode "Birthin'". In addition to the official theme song, in 1994,
Pet Shop Boys recorded a
song for
Comic Relief using excerpts of dialogue from the series put to dance music. The single was attributed to "Absolutely Fabulous produced by Pet Shop Boys". It peaked at number six on the
UK Singles Chart in July 1994. The music video featured clips from the show and specially recorded footage of the Pet Shop Boys with Patsy and Edina. On 10 June 2016,
Kylie Minogue released a cover version of "This Wheel's on Fire" for the soundtrack to
Absolutely Fabulous: The Movie, before the film's release in July 2016.
Conclusion On 29 November 2016, Jennifer Saunders confirmed that she was "done" with
Absolutely Fabulous and that it would not return to television for another series or specials, nor would a sequel to the film be made. Saunders said she wished to focus on new projects and spend more time with her family. Even so, in 2018, Saunders, when asked about the prospect of reviving the programme yet again, did not entirely dismiss it, saying "I am thinking at the moment of writing a little something. It has to be age-appropriate otherwise we’d have to be in wheelchairs basically. I think Julia is old enough to be my mother now." Saunders said the prospect of writing new stories with those characters was "always on [her] mind, always". In November 2020, Joanna Lumley was asked about the possibility of another revival and said that that would be up to Saunders. Lumley said it was unlikely, as Saunders did not want to work on new stories featuring the characters at that time. Lumley said that June Whitfield's death in December 2018 also meant it was less likely to happen, but said if Saunders wished to write new
Ab Fab stories, she would be up for returning to play Patsy; she said "wait and see". ==International broadcast==