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Interview: Lynne Franks

The spiritual, creative, outrageous queen of PR

September 15, 2011 09:56
\"At the time, I felt they stole my life\", says Lynne Franks about Absolutely Fabulous

By

Simon Round,

Simon Round

5 min read

Lynne Franks is wearing a badge which proclaims her to be an "outrageous older woman". She is chatting to me, while simultaneously briefing her PA and making herbal tea (she is currently detoxing from caffeine). She exudes energy and enthusiasm, and at 63 is bubbling with ideas. When the time comes, she will probably be buried with a BlackBerry in her hand, she jokes.

At some point in the dim and distant past, Lynne Franks was a fairly typical Jewish girl. She grew up in Southgate, went (reluctantly) to synagogue every Saturday and left school at 16 to train as a typist after an unremarkable school career.

Two decades later, she was a one-woman industry - the founder of the country's leading PR agency, a practising Buddhist and the woman on whom the character of Edina in the BBC sitcom Absolutely Fabulous is based.

You do not need to spend long in Franks's company to work out why her career progression was so spectacular. And also why her friend Jennifer Saunders found her compelling enough to write a sitcom around her. To my slight disappointment, she does not seem much like the ditsy Edina. Rather than a Bolly-swigging socialite, Franks lives for work.