Dear Fatty

Dear Fatty

by Dawn French

3.57 out of 5 (14 ratings)

Format:
Paperback 
Pages:
384 
Publisher:
Cornerstone 
Publication Date:
02 July 2009 
Category:
Individual Actors & Performers 
ISBN:
9780099519478 

Description

Dawn French is one of the greatest comedy actresses of our time, with a career that has spanned nearly three decades. Loved for her irreverant humour, Dawn has achieved massive mainstream success while continuing to push boundaries and challenge stereotypes. Here she describes the journey that would eventually establish her as a perhaps unlikely, but nevertheless genuine, national treasure. Dawn began her career as part of the groundbreaking alternative comedy group, the Comic Strip, marking a radical departure from the more traditional comedy acts of the time. Later came the all-female Girls On Top, which teamed Dawn with Jennifer Saunders, Ruby Wax and Tracy Ullman and firmly established women in British comedy. As part of the wildly successful and much loved duo French and Saunders, Dawn helped create a repetoire of brilliantly observed characters, parodying popular culture and impersonating everything from Madonna and Harry Potter to The Exorcist. Dawn's more recent role in the Vicar of Dibley showcased not only her talent but also her ability to take a controversial and topical issue and make it mainstream - and very funny. From her early years as an RAF child and her flat-sharing antics with Jennifer Saunders, to her outspoken views on sizism and her marriage to Lenny Henry, Dear Fatty will chronicle the extraordinary, hilarious rise of a complex, dynamic and unstoppable woman.

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Showing 1-4 out of 15 reviews. Previous | Next

  • I was surprised how much I enjoyed this book. I'm a fan of French & Saunders and the Vicar of Dibley, but it wouldn't have occurred to me to read it if I hadn't been given it for a Christmas present. The memoir takes the form of a series of letters written to the important people in Dawn French's life. Some are amusing, some touching and some heartbreaking and all of them are great to read. This is definitely one I'll be reading again later.

    5.00 out of 5

    unevendays

  • Wonderfully refreshing and funny - can't help but love her.

    4.50 out of 5

    LynetteM

  • Dawn French (I really hope it is her and not a ghostwriter) writes in a delightfully frank, and of course, funny way. She is emotionally revealing while not going into tawdry detail. And she had me bawling my eyes out several times - I like that in a book. There is the odd comedic section that didn't grab me hugely, but certainly serves to illustrate the kind of humour that French and Saunders do/did. I loved the way she used letters to people that are important to her to detail her life. I felt it worked really well.

    4.50 out of 5

    devilish2

  • Dawn French (one half of the British comedy duo, French and Saunders) may be one of the funniest women alive today. The other funniest woman alive today is Jennifer Saunders, the other half of French and Saunders. For those not familiar with either, they have had a successful run at BBC with their variety show, <i>French and Saunders</i>; Dawn French may be best known for her role in <i>The Vicar of Dibley</i>; Jennifer Saunders is probably best know for her role as Edina in <i>Absolutely Fabulous</i>; both have also starred in shows too numerous to list here. And every single show that I have seen them in has been top notch.<i>Dear Fatty</i> is Dawn French's memoir. Like anything that French does, her memoir is frequently laugh-out-loud funny. What surprised me most about her memoir is how unflinchingly honest she is throughout. She relates her life, both its ups and downs, as best she remembers it. Written in the form of letters to her friends and loved ones, <i>Dear Fatty</i> touches on the funny and the sad in French's life. For instance, one letter is to her father, who committed suicide when she was 19, and in one paragraph that goes on for almost two pages, she asks him questions. Why he did what he did; why didn't he ask for help; etc. By the end of this particular letter, I'm not ashamed to say that I had tears in my eyes. Her frustration of 30 years of unanswered questions is so evident, and she does nothing to hide that. Of course, not wanting to keep her readers in too serious a mood, she immediately segues into far more lighthearted material, but that honesty is there and it can be raw and emotional, and I respect her all the more for it.I never doubted her ability to write; watch any of her sketches or shows, and it's obvious she has a talent, and she excels at proving that over and over again in her book. One of my favorite lines from the book is:<blockquote>"It's a process of having faith in the self you don't quite know you are yet... Believing that you will find the strength, the means somehow, and trusting in that..."</blockquote>Words that speak volumes to me in my life right now.I don't that many people would rush out to buy this book. First off, I'm not even sure it's available in the US yet, and secondly, I don't know that anyone who isn't a fan of Dawn French would really care all that much. But for those of us who are fans, this is a gem of a book, and even if you aren't a fan of Dawn French, I still think you'd find this a funny and revealing look into the life of one of the funniest ladies out there right now.Highly recommended.

    4.50 out of 5

    tapestry100

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