Shakespeare Meets Succession in The Breath of Kings

The Breath of Kings

The Breath of Kings Rating

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Theatre Works in St Kilda is currently home to an ambitious production, The Breath of Kings. It is a two-part history cycle of the plays Henry VI and Richard III. Directed by Robert Johnson, the production brings Shakespeare’s history plays to life with extraordinary immediacy, energy, and invention.

Over an entire day of theatre, audiences are invited to witness the bloody history of England’s royal houses, from the Wars of the Roses to the rise of Richard III. The experience is immersive from the start. Staged in the round, the audience sits within arm’s reach of the performers, blurring the line between spectator and participant. The interaction is constant and sometimes joyful. At one point, I was dancing on stage and sharing treats passed around by the cast. It was alive, communal, and very much in the spirit of Elizabethan performance.

The first play, Henry VI, is a thrilling, blood-soaked account of ambition and collapse. The charismatic Duke of York, played by Tobias Manderson Galvin, ignites the crowd into chants of “York, York, York!” His performance is full of swagger and charm. Ellen Marning as Queen Margaret is a force of nature, embodying raw power and ferocity, while Sean Yuen Halley brings a touching vulnerability to King Henry VI, revealing the man beneath the crown. The production moves with such intensity and rhythm that its two and a half hours fly by.

 

 

After a short dinner break, the audience returns for Richard III, an equally kinetic and captivating experience. Alexander Tomisich’s Richard is impish, calculating, and darkly magnetic, a scheming antihero who could easily walk into an episode of Succession. His sideways charm and growing menace are compelling to watch. The ensemble around him works in seamless harmony, each actor shifting roles and tones with remarkable ease.

The production feels like a cross between Succession and a session of Parliament. It was sharp, fast-moving, and dripping with modern corporate ambition. Characters jostle for dominance and betray each other with a familiar blend of charisma, cruelty and political posturing. It is Shakespeare’s power politics reimagined through the lens of contemporary boardrooms and wealthy family dynasties.

The visual world of The Breath of Kings is simple. There is no elaborate set, only a raw, concrete-like space that places all focus on the performances. The costumes, designed by Zachary Dixon (Richard III) and Tait Adams, are a clever mix of Gothic and 1980s-inspired corporate fashion, blending the medieval with the modern to explore timeless forms of power and corruption. The effect is both stylish and symbolic, a mix of crown meet boardrooms.

This is a production that rewards commitment. Spending a day at Theatre Works for both plays is an epic journey through history, politics, and human ambition. It is fast-moving, immersive, and full of action. You may never again have the chance to see Henry VI and Richard III performed back-to-back in such an inventive way, and it is absolutely worth the time.

If you can, see both. The Breath of Kings is a triumph of energy, imagination, and ensemble storytelling.

To book tickets to The Breath of Kings, please visit https://www.theatreworks.org.au/2025/breath-of-kings.

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I Promise This Isn’t About You (Even If It Feels Like It Is)

I Promise This Isn't About You (Even If It Feels Like It Is)

I Promise This Isn’t About You (Even If It Feels Like It Is) Rating

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I Promise This Isn’t About You (Even If It Feels Like It Is) is an adventure even before the drama starts. Ticket holders meet in the Trades Hall courtyard and find themselves led down a side alley into a space that is a functional carpark by day, an open air theatre by night, naturally decorated by concrete beams and colourful street art.

Here you will be treated to a theatre in the round experience, set entirely in a share-house bathroom during an end-of-lease house party. Five young people explore the nuances of adulthood, from crushes, relationships, sexuality crises and mental illness to learning how to fix a toilet and desperately trying to keep your agapanthus alive.

I Promise This Isn’t About You has set itself high standards, being the first Fringe show this year to sell out (don’t worry, they have since added extra capacity!) and it doesn’t fall short. The set alone is a treat for theatregoers, with functional plumbing and drawers stuffed full of secret props. It’s also worth noting the incredible tech work of Georgie Wolfe and Ryan Hamilton who have managed to stage fully developed light and soundscapes in a carpark.

 

 

It would be remiss to review this play without noting the incredible work of the five actors. Mads Lou, Jo Jabalde, Eliza Carlin, Rueby Chippek, and Ally Long work perfectly together as an ensemble, creating deep complicated relationships and refusing to let the energy on stage drop for even a moment.

From quotable one liners, immaculate comic timing and amusing costume to emotional breakdowns, romantic connections and desperation, this show cycles through every emotion in a thoughtful, developed way that shows off the writing talents of author Sarah Matthews and is a must watch for anyone who’s ever attended a messy house party (or anyone who’s ever wanted to).

To book tickets to I Promise This Isn’t About You (Even If It Feels Like It Is), please visit https://www.melbournefringe.com.au/whats-on/events/i-promise-this-isn-t-about-you-even-if-it-feels-like-it-is.

Photographer: Jaimi Houston

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The Revlon Girl – A Story From The Aberfan Disaster

Revlon Girl

Revlon Girl Rating

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It’s NOT about make-up….

Playing at Clayton in Melbourne 10-19 October 2025 with Encore Theatre. Written by Neil Anthony Docking. Directed by David Krause.

The play is set over the course of one evening, in a room above a pub, eight months after the 1966 Aberfan Disaster in Wales.

Much more than just a difficult story to tell. 116 children were killed (mostly aged 7 – 10) when a landslide engulfed their school. Teachers were taken with them and including some others the death toll total pulled out of this mining catastrophe at 144.

Heavy rain hit the region and a coal waste tip spilled down the hill in slurry to the town directly below. Exactly in its pathway was the Pantglas Junior School where 109 children fell victim of a chronic example in poor decision making and grossly ignored warnings. The National Coal Board were found to have been extremely negligent in its handling of the coal tips, built on unstable ground and known to be on top of springs.

‘The Revlon Girl’ is about a group of local women tragically having lost their child or children in the devastating occurrence and also having grown up together themselves. They organise a ‘Revlon’ make-up representative to come out to see them at one of their get-togethers for some uplifting ‘beauty tips’. She arrives in a fancy car and brings her product samples of new colours and shiny lipsticks along with friendly education of how to look and feel better, but can these things actually make a difference? These women are going through what no mother should ever have to endure.

The play opens with pictures from the actual event, video and sombering sound effects, so anyone watching can clearly visualize and feel in the pit of their stomach that awful day. However, gratefully, it isn’t long before little funny moments too are presented in the script and such continues all the way through the play, bringing welcome lightheartedness reprieve from serious darkness.

 

 

Perfectly cast, the personalities of the women are all very different; it appears that Sian is organised and more positive, Rona is loud and overpowering, Jean holds onto the power of prayer, Marilyn is delicate and showing intense grief. ‘The Revlon girl’ is just there trying to make a difference in whatever way she can; after donating to the disaster memorial fund, she volunteered with the company to visit the women – beauty cases in tow, but Charlotte’s own story of loss will come to be told amongst the bereavement later.

Though we immediately know that Marilyn is still suffering immensely as she uneasily steps into the room, it quickly becomes apparent that all these mothers, having been dealt the same tragic experience, are dealing with the event’s aftermath as best they can, whilst trying to be supportive to each other. They do not agree on everything, they have different perspectives on what is now important and what should be done, but they all tell a story of their child/ren, the hopes they had for them, their very special and unforgettable memories that will never leave their hearts or minds.

Watching this play as a mother myself was challenging at times; the acting of all women is very real and each character has both tenderness and fierceness that every mother can empathize with – hopefully we never experience to this velocity. You send your children to school and they don’t come home. Nothing would hit you faster and harder.

It is no wonder that Marilyn still waits for her two girls to come home (the way that line was delivered will stay with me). No surprise that Rona does not want to queue for anything anymore after waiting in line for an eternity to view her son’s body. It is confusing to Jean as to why God has given her another baby on the way (a ‘surprise’ conceived just before the disaster), but took the one she wanted. Sian wants another baby, she wants her husband to look at her again, to share again, to love again.

These women all miss their beloveds more than they’ll ever verbally be able to express. The play shows how much and how differently they cope, but they do cope, they do help one another. It’s NOT just lipstick!

The play is set in a simple one room scene; couch, chairs, pictures and a leaky skylight causing some concern (rainwater understandably heightens anxiety here), though I barely noticed what was around the well-designed stage set and in the accurate costuming of 60s clothing in detail, because the actual grit story being told by these excellent actresses is one I couldn’t take my attention away from. You may want to sometimes, but I doubt you can. It’s an important message on top of the actual happening, and an honour to have produced in the memory of all those lost and the parents and loved ones left behind.

All in all, I highly recommend!

Cast:
Bella Barker as Revlon
Keziah Gillam as Rona
Kate Lawson as Marilyn
Emma Spencer as Sian
Kelly Williams as Jean

Ticket link: https://www.trybooking.com/events/landing/1432366

Venue: Clayton Theatrette, 9-15 Cooke St, Clayton. Easy parking and access for wheelchairs.
Running time: 90 mins (no interval)
Tea and Coffee is served after the show and this group are always up for a chat about how the show was decided upon, set put together and worked on – they are a lovely bunch of people and anyone can be involved doing something on their excellent productions: https://encoretheatre.com.au/get-involved/

Note: This production includes themes of child loss and grief.
If you have lost a child and require support, please reach out:
https://projexj.org/
https://www.beyondblue.org.au/

To book tickets to Revlon Girl, please visit https://encoretheatre.com.au/season-1/.

Photographer: Dave Swann

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Brothers Bare

Brothers Bare

Brothers Bare Rating

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Tucked away in Theatreworks’ blink-and-you’ll-miss-it supplemental venue, the aptly named Explosives Factory, “Brothers Bare” explodes with creativity, menace, and an unnerving relevance. This darkly comic, sharply observant production takes the fertile soil of Brothers Grimm folklore and replants it in the uneasy terrain of modern life — specifically, the digital dating world, social media perfectionism, and the real-life horror of hidden agendas. It’s as confronting as it is captivating.

Written by Jessica Fallico and Iley Jones, the play takes classic nursery rhymes and fables — often sanitized for contemporary children — and strips them back to their grim roots, before repurposing them as cautionary tales for today’s world. The result is an inventive and affecting piece of theatre that blends rhyming prose, movement, and shadow puppetry in ways that surprised and disarmed the audience.

The space itself — small, industrial, and intimate — works to the show’s advantage. There’s something unnerving about being so physically close to the action, especially in a production so focused on exposing the hidden terrors of seemingly safe, everyday situations. It amplifies the tension and vulnerability on stage and makes the audience complicit in the dark journey unfolding.

The ensemble — Grace Gemmell, Elisheva Biernoff-Giles, Charlie Veitch, and Dion Zapantis — is formidable. Each performer brings a distinct intensity to their roles, switching between characters and archetypes with remarkable fluidity and precision. Whether embodying twisted versions of familiar childhood figures or portraying modern personas lost in digital disconnection, their performances are sharp, committed, and often deeply unsettling. It’s rare to see such consistency in an ensemble cast — each actor not only held their own but elevated one another in moments of shared stage time.

 

 

Choreographer Cameron Boxall deserves special mention for crafting sequences that punctuate the narrative with physical storytelling that is both poignant and restrained. Movement here isn’t ornamental; it deepens the emotional and thematic weight of the show. One particular sequence, exploring the disintegration of identity through curated online personas, was particularly memorable — beautifully composed, visually haunting, and emotionally resonant.

The use of shadow puppetry is another triumph. Rather than gimmickry, the technique is deployed with precision and purpose, often representing the lurking fears and dark fantasies that exist beneath the surface of our everyday lives. These moments — brief, almost ephemeral — leave a lasting impact, suggesting more than they show and allowing the audience’s imagination to fill in the gaps with dread.

What elevates “Brothers Bare” beyond clever concept is its unwavering commitment to its message. Rather than lecturing us, it seduces the audience into familiarity before pulling the rug out. This is theatre that plays with expectations — and with its audience — to make us question the safety of the stories we grew up with and the realities we now inhabit.

Despite its modest setting, this is a production with big ambitions. Its themes are bold, intellectually sharp, and emotionally potent. The fusion of form and content — from the lyrical script to the expressive choreography and visual flair — is remarkably cohesive, making for a rich, multi-sensory theatrical experience.

As a highlight of this year’s Fringe Festival, “Brothers Bare” proves that some of the most powerful theatre can emerge from the smallest of spaces. With its relevant themes, inventive execution, and standout performances, it wouldn’t be surprising to see this production return — and on much larger stages. It’s a haunting, timely reminder that the scariest monsters are no longer in the woods, but often behind screens or waiting with open arms and hidden intentions.

Don’t blink — you’ll want to remember “Brothers Bare”.

To book tickets to Brothers Bare, please visit https://www.melbournefringe.com.au/whats-on/events/brothers-bare.

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