Before there was Kim, before there was Paris, before there was Chiara or Charli, there was Fran. Before a generation of celebrities turned being yourself into a brand, Fran Drescher built a career on and perfected the art of being unapologetically herself—fabulous, funny, and born to be famous.
But much like happenstance is crucial to the success of influencers, Drescher’s journey to stardom, she explains, has been a product of being in the right place at the right time. The theme song to The Nanny—the ’90s sitcom that turned the actress into a household name—may have said it best: “She had style. She had flair. She was there.”
Fittingly, that’s exactly how she became the co-creator, executive producer, and star of her own prime-time show: She was there, on a flight to London, with Jeff Sagansky, who was then the president of CBS Entertainment. From her Malibu home, the 63-year-old, clad in a white bathrobe and little else, recounts a tale she’s told so often, it’s practically Hollywood legend. “I ran into the bathroom to put some makeup on,” she says. “And I’m saying, ‘Carpe diem, carpe diem’ as I’m powdering my face, ’cause I knew this was an opportunity of a lifetime. I started talking to him when I came out, basically telling him, ‘Have I got a show for you, for me.’ He finally said, nine and a half hours later, ‘When you get back to L.A., call my office. They’ll put you up with comedy development, and you can pitch your idea.’ ”
That patented blend of confidence and chutzpah is how many of Drescher’s famed anecdotes, from what she calls the “gay ’90s,” came to be. Consider the time Gwyneth Paltrow introduced Drescher to her then-husband, Chris Martin.
“I was in a restaurant. I was on a first date with a guy. … Next thing you know, Gwyneth is walking over to our table. … She says, ‘[My husband] is in love with you. And would it be okay if I bring him over?’… Next thing you know, I’m inviting myself to the Hard Rock Hotel in Las Vegas to see [Coldplay] perform. I said, ‘Can you arrange the tickets for me to come backstage?’ And they said, ‘Sure. The band would be so thrilled. We watch [This Is] Spinal Tap when we’re on tour.’ ”
Then there was that night in 1999 when she, Jennifer Lopez, Chris Rock, Ben Stiller, Cameron Diaz, and Edward Norton took a stretch limo from a Miami “disco” to Lenny Kravitz’s house. “Lenny said, ‘Gee, you know, we should all go back to my house, but how are we gonna get outta here? And who’s got a car?’ And I said, ‘I got a car! We can all fit in it.’ That whole crowd piled into my car with my girlfriends. This is a night we’re still talking about. And we got to Lenny Kravitz’s house. He makes us take off our shoes, because he has these red floors. And a room that has all kinds of cubes in it that everybody climbed into. And some of us started making out with some of us—me included, of course.”
And don’t forget the iconic evening she rubbed elbows with Princess Diana at the 1995 CFDA Awards.
You’re dealt a hand of cards, and you have to play it, as courageously and elegantly as you possibly can.
“Princess Diana hosted a cocktail party for the presenters and the winners,” Drescher describes. She leans in close to her phone’s camera, her smile widening as she settles in to share a fond memory. “It was wall-to-wall people, and she stood in the center of it, with a roped-off area. … [I told my manager] ‘I’m not getting this close and not meeting her.’ So I said, ‘Pardon me, excuse me, pardon me,’ and everybody just got out of my way. … When I did my presentation, I made up a whole story [about our meeting]. We happened to both be in Mr. Blackwell’s best- and worst-dressed list [that year]. I said [onstage], ‘I met the princess, and I said to her, “Princess, we’re both on Mr. Blackwell’s list.” And she said, “Yes, but I’m on the best-dressed, and you’re on the worst-dressed.” And I said, “But you got Princess Margaret on your list, and I got Demi and Madonna on mine. You’re on the wrong list, Princess.” ’ And [Diana] was in the front row, bellied over, laughing.”
She shares these stories, finessed and fine-tuned. Like an influencer who knows her angles and hashtags, Drescher knows her greatest hits, when she’s nailing her punch line, or when the listener’s attention is waning. She rewrites her own sentences to be grabbier sound bites. (“I try and live my life by the Buddhist philosophy. I’m a Bu Jew!”) And like any naturally gifted storyteller, Drescher already has the moral of her stories queued up. “You’re dealt a hand of cards, and you have to play it, as courageously and elegantly as you possibly can,” Drescher explains of her ethos. “So I’m always trying to see: Why is this presented to me, and how can I turn this experience into a learning experience or something positive? … I still woulda been on the plane. I still woulda been at the CFDA Awards. I still woulda been at that club in Florida.