PEOPLE & PROPERTY OF MELBOURNE
INSIDE STORY K A RL STEFA NOV IC ON LOV E & LIFE OFF CA MER A
TAKE A BOW
MARVEL OF MAO’S LAST DANCER
SCREEN TIME GUY PEARCE’S IRISH EYES
WASTE NOT
CRAIG REUCASSEL ON A MISSION
MELBOURNE TIMES
JULY 25-31, 2018
LUISA BRIMBLE
When a relationship hits the rocks, friends gather, nursing beers or sav blancs, to therapeutically unpick the “how” and the “why”. When Karl Stefanovic and his wife split, they endured an inquisition that made the Spanish one look soft. The Today cohost spoke to journalist Luke Dennehy about finding love again – one of the most basic human pursuits – under intense scrutiny, and how something so natural has been subjected to the most unnatural sort of pressure. Get to know more about one of Australia’s most recognisable faces in this week’s feature story. ●
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The editor’s desk
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THE EDIT What we love at Domain Review
OUR COVER \ Today show co-host Karl Stefanovic. Photograph courtesy of Channel 9.
MORE TO LOVE ONLINE Go to domain.com.au/domain-review/
General inquiries \ 9249 5226 \ editorial@domain.com.au Editor \ Emily Power Deputy editor \ Jessica Dale Online editor \ Adrian Lowe Picture editor \ Kylie Thomson Senior designer \ Colleen Chin Quan Designer \ Emma Staughton Editorial assistant \ Hailey Coules Chief marketing & editorial officer \ Melina Cruickshank Real estate sales director \ Mitch Armstrong \ 0438 820 767 mitch.armstrong@domain.com.au Retail sales \ retailsales@domainreview.com.au Is your mag missing? Distribution \ 9249 5353 distribution@domainreview.com.au
REVIEW Published by Domain Group. A Fairfax Media business (ACN 141 396 741). All material is copyright. All significant errors will be corrected as quickly as possible. Distribution numbers, areas and coverage are estimates only.
MELBOURNE TIMES
Managing editor \ Alice Stolz
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golden crema. Available at Coles. ● lavazza.com.au
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FIRST PERSON
““I am JJustine Clarke ” … and I’m a Play School presenter My first time on Play School was in November
1999. I was one of the lucky few that got an audition. I’d wanted to go on the show since I was old enough to think I could do it. I thought that was about 17, but it turned out it wasn’t until I was 28. I hounded my agent for years. I grew up watching Benita Collings and Noni Hazlehurst, John Hamblin and Don Spencer; all extraordinary performers. When Play School turned 40 I met them all, and that was really special. There were always kids around me. My mother ran a creche when I was in preschool. One of my other jobs when I wasn’t acting was babysitting. I always really enjoyed the company of preschoolers. Play School is a gentle show, but in order to achieve that you’ve got to work at a really quick pace. The crew has to work very quickly – you have to know your lines and be prepared. Time is taken over the script; every word is scrutinised. The foundations of the show are still very strong and the early childhood advisors all have multiple degrees. We film it in 10-minute segments where there’s maybe a story, two or three songs, and some craft. It’s informed my other performing, actually – it teaches you to focus. Some presenters can do up to 10 episodes in a year. I’m going in for an episode later this year (with a busy schedule with other projects, including the national Silly Songs Tour Tour, at Hamer Hall on September 23). On Play School you’re performing to a camera, but on tour I’ll be singing and dancing with about 1500 people. It’s the songs from the new album The Justine Clarke Show! We’ll hopefully be getting everybody dancing and singing. Performing live is really the pay-off. I love how involved the kids want to be in the show, and I love hearing them. With Play School, people don’t realise that there’s no security about it; it’s not a regular job at all. I never expect to get another call. I always think that could be the last one. My favourite character? You can’t tell the others, but I’m just going to come out and say it – it’s Humpty. I love the shape of him, I love the way his hair moves ... he’s got the silliest grin on his face. But they’re all just so great to be around. ●
As told to
L A R I S SA H A M ●
Ph o t o
N I C WA L K E R
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COVER STORY
I
t’s at home that Karl Stefanovic truly feels safe – away from the spotlight, the prying eyes of the paparazzi, and the judgment from the viewers of the Today show that have watched him every morning for 14 years. In the past two of those years, Stefanovic has rarely been out of the headlines – a lot of it for his personal life, which has seemed to be fair game. First, it was revealed in October, 2016, that he had split from his wife of 21 years and mother to his three children, Cassandra Thorburn. Then a year later, as his divorce continued to be scrutinised in the women’s magazines, Stefanovic, 43, met shoe designer Jasmine Yarbrough, 34. The pair have had a commitment ceremony and will marry later this year – Stefanovic says a venue hasn’t yet been decided. He admits the constant scrutiny, which has led to reams of column inches, is at times bruising and that in the past it has nearly broken him. “I keep having to reassure myself not everyone thinks that, and I don’t think anyone is that interested in me,” he says. “I can’t control much of the coverage. But as long as in my house, in my home, Jasmine and I are in love, we are open with each other and I can talk about anything with her, that’s my safe environment.” Stefanovic was engaged in media commitments over lunch at one of his favourite restaurants in Melbourne, Crown’s Rockpool, not long after the
divorce became public, and he seemed shellshocked. Everyone at the time had an opinion on his divorce including, reportedly, some female viewers of Today who had sided with Thorburn and were consequently turning off. During that time, Stefanovic says he had the support of some very high-profile Melburnians. “Eddie and Carla (McGuire) have been amazing friends for me,” he says. “When you go through difficulties, and I’m not saying I’m a martyr in that regard, people turn up, and they did just that. “I just think they are wonderful. I’ve got some wonderful friends down here.” One day Stefanovic could see the Today show permanently moving to Melbourne. “There is no better or brilliant TV place,” he says. Every time he comes to Melbourne, Stefanovic usually stays in the same room at Crown and in the bubble of the restaurants, away from the paparazzi. A year after that Rockpool lunch, the headlines are still relentless, but Stefanovic says this time he is in a much happier place because of Yarbrough. But the pair are unlikely to hit a red carpet together. At the Logies on the Gold Coast earlier this month, Yarbrough was there but stayed away from the televised red carpet because it was too full on. “No one should feel sorry for us in any way shape or form, but she has had to deal with a lot,” he says. “It wouldn’t be easy coming into Karl Stefanovic’s world, but I’m enjoying being in her world.
“I can’t control much of the coverage. But as long as in my house, in my home, Jasmine and I are in love ... that’s my safe environment.”
Reading between the headlines Karl Stefanovic usually breaks the news, but is now one of Australia’s most talked-about people. The Today show co-host puts the rumours to rest.
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Karl Stefanovic and Jasmine Yarbrough arrive at the Logies on the Gold Coast earlier this month, left.
Wo r d s
LU K E D E N N E H Y
“She is a breath of fresh air, [and] she’s incredibly strong. She just makes me cry with laughter every day.” After a period as Nine’s US correspondent, Stefanovic started working as the co-host on Today when he was 30. It’s an age now that seems ridiculously young for such a high-profile television role. He has covered royal weddings, presidential inaugurations, a number of Australian elections, tsunamis, bushfires and terror attacks. The story that affected him most was the Nice terror attack in July, 2016, where 87 people - many children - died after a truck drove into a crowd. “It took me a long time to get over that one,” he says. “I remember standing there and this kid brought up a colouring-in piece of paper, and put it down at the memorial. “I started crying, and I didn’t stop.” He insists journalists, including himself, aren’t robots when it comes to coping with stories. “I think as journalists, you have to be really aware of the toll it can take and I think it’s OK to speak to someone and work through the emotions,” he says. Stefanovic has worked with numerous Today cohosts, including Tracy Grimshaw, Jessica Rowe for an ill-fated period, Lisa Wilkinson for 10 years, and now Georgie Gardner.
CHANNEL NINE
T
he public perception of that new pairing didn’t start well. The so-called “Ubergate” story broke in March, after comments from a discussion in an Uber car between himself and his brother, journalist Peter Stefanovic, were leaked to the press. Now, both Today hosts insist their relationship is in a good place. “She is awesome, there is so much b******* about us,” Stefanovic says. “We just would not work with each other if we didn’t like each other. I’m loving it, she is loving it. Everyone is on their toes. “I think the bar has been lifted by her, and we are all becoming better at what we do because of her.” Walking the red carpet together at the Logies, Gardner said all the chatter about her alleged dislike for Stefanovic is not true. “I knew what I was getting myself in for, and that is he is predictably unpredictable,” she says. “We have a lot of fun, we laugh a lot and we have each other’s backs. I think there is a really good chemistry there, and more to come.” Stefanovic has had a lot going on in his work and personal lives in the past few years. He hopes the personal side will settle down, but one thing is for sure – despite rumours of him departing Today, he’s not going anywhere. “It’s the best job in TV, and I won’t be leaving it anytime soon.” ●
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ART & CULTURE
A moving portrait Ballet master Li Cunxin shares an insight into his exceptional life.
JIM CALDWELL
W LI C U N XI N PE R F O R M I N G I N 198 8
Personal items from Li Cunxin’s collection capture stage life.
hen internationally renowned ballet dancer, Li Cunxin, who is wellknown for his best-selling memoir, Mao’s Last Dancer Dancer, first saw the exhibition that tells the story of his extraordinary life, he was moved to tears. Mao’s Last Dancer the Exhibition: A Portrait of Li Cunxin, at the Immigration Museum, uses photographs, costumes, video footage and other personal items from Li’s archives to paint an incredibly personal picture of his well-documented journey from poverty-stricken rural China to some of the most prestigious ballet theatres in the world. But it was footage of one interview, which Li had never seen before, that caught him by surprise. “I walked into the room and heard my parents’ voices,” explains Li, whose mother and father are now both deceased. “It was incredibly emotional for me because it was the first time I had ever heard them say they were proud of me.” While he knew the interview had taken place, he had never seen them on screen. “Being Chinese in my parents’ era, they didn’t praise their children, so when I heard their words I was in shock and totally overcome with emotion,” says Li, 57, who moved from Melbourne to Brisbane six years ago, where he is the artistic director of the Queensland Ballet. The interview, he says, is a highlight for him personally, but he singles out other exhibits too. Remarkably, they’re not the awards or costumes that tell the story of his illustrious international ballet career; rather, they are deeply personal items, like a low-tothe-ground, bamboo stool his father used to sit on and tell stories, and a utensil the family used to steam yams. They are items that transport Li back to the small, dirt-floor hut he shared with his
parents and six brothers in rural Shandong, in Mao Zedong’s communist China. Li was just 11 in 1972 when he left home, having been selected by Chinese officials to study at the Beijing Academy of Dance, 1000 kilometres away, despite never having danced before. He was put through a gruelling training regime and was overcome with homesickness, but the arrival of a new teacher and the chance to support his family financially convinced him to continue. At the age of 18, Li was awarded a cultural scholarship to the US, to study at the Houston Ballet. In 1981, just days before he was due to return to China, he attempted to defect. Dramatically, Chinese officials held him captive in the Houston consulate for 21 hours. Li won his freedom, but was prevented from visiting his family in China, a ban which caused the dancer years of unimaginable grief and guilt. It was six years before he would see them again. Fifteen years since the release of his autobiography, he is still surprised that people are so fascinated by his life story. “I never really felt like my life was that special, and it still feels surreal to me that people are so interested in my life.” Museums Victoria chief executive Lynley Marshall says Li’s story is not just one of hope and dreams realised ‘‘but a wonderful immigrant story that the Immigration Museum is excited to tell in a personal way’’. ●
MAO’S LAST DANCER THE EXHIBITION \ Until October 7 at the Immigration Museum, 400 Flinders Street, Melbourne. ● museumsvictoria.com.au
Wo r d s
R AC H E L W E L L S
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LUKE DENNEHY \ SCREEN TIME
Watch right now … affairs and the day’s politics,
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POINTLESS \ Channel 10, Monday
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SUNRISE \ Channel 7, Monday to
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this format. Tragic, really.
July 23, will it do better than Family
Will long-time co-host David Koch
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AUSTRALIAN NINJA WARRIOR
rumour is that he will not. Time to
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tune in and watch the end of an era?
7.30pm
JACK IRISH \ ABC, Sunday 8.30pm
DAVI D KO C H
NIC WALKER
It is getting into the meaty part of AMERICAN HORROR STORY: CULT
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TRAM ROUTE 35 \ CIT Y CIRCLE
Hometown tourist
G R A F F IT I I N H O S I E R L A N E
ROBERT BLACKBURN/VISIT VICTORIA
T
he audio guide on the route 35 City Circle tram describes the CBD as “cosmopolitan”, “whimsical” and even “funky”. Even this rainy day can’t stop the funk it seems, while there is a flood of suit wearers, tourists and robust urban dwellers to cover the city carrying their accessory of choice: a takeaway coffee. I hop off the heritage tram at Flinders Street Station, in the thick of Melbourne’s quintessential Flinders’ Quarter. Weaving through the crowded lanes, smelling of espresso and toasted sandwiches, I stop near another of the cities’ best known attributes, an arcade, for a spot of tea and cake at Hopetoun Tea Rooms. After that, in classic Melbourne style, the hidden spots were all stumbled upon by pure chance, and they also made for the perfect shelter to the rain.
Wo r d s
A concealed panini shop, Saluministi, provides a slow-roasted pork panini – the perfect warming contrast to my now sodden shoes. Not put off, I wander through Queen Victoria Market. It would be easy to do laps of the deli for cheese samples, but to earn my keep, a $3.50 cheese and spinach borek from The Borek Shop does the trick. After another stroll, find Lucy Folk, tucked around the corner from Parliament – a stand-alone accessory store, with quirky pieces from designer hair ties, to clutches, eyewear and more. Lastly, it would be a crime to not suggest a coffee stop in the city, and I particularly liked Bonnie Coffee. Their newspaper board makes for perfect reading material whilst you wait for your takeaway, and ready yourself to join the herds of people in the city carrying one too. ●
B E C D I C KI N S O N
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NEWS & VIEWS
Eco warrior returns Craig Reucassel is peering into Australia’s bins, and it’s not pretty. Wo r d s
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raig Reucassel credits his solo television presenting success to “an element of luck” but he is, of course, being just as down-to-earth as he appears on screen. When you’ve been part of an iconic satirical troupe such as The Chaser Chaser, it is actually harder to break out as an individual television presenter with a serious message. That’s why Reucassel’s role on War on Waste has showcased his clever mix of an engaging, laid-back presenting style with some
hard-hitting messages about environmental waste. It’s also displayed a key ingredient to his success: approachability. “It’s been a very surprising effect of the show,” Reucassel admits. “I really do have a lot of people interact with me about how they’ve changed and what they’re doing, showing me pictures of their bin – that kind of thing. “But it’s really good, because we were trying to make sure we didn’t just tell a shock story about waste, that we said, ‘Hey look, there are things we can do ourselves’. I really like the way people took that on.” Now returning for a second series on the ABC, fresh from a Logies win for most outstanding factual or documentary program, the series is set to explore issues including technological products being discarded as e-waste, and the use of plasticversus-paper straws. With the 41-year-old at the helm, it will continue to lift the lid on Australia’s pressing waste issues. “There’s a great team of people who work on this and I’ve learnt from them too,” Reucassel says. “A lot of stuff isn’t scripted, a lot of it is about the actual,
“I really do have a lot of people interact with me about how they’ve changed and what they are doing, showing me pictures of their bin – that kind of thing.” natural response to something, and that was really enjoyable actually, to not necessarily have a script for some parts of the show. “I think it is definitely the case not all of us were wanting to be too judgmental about it, because the reality is a large proportion of people, myself included, didn’t know they were doing the wrong thing or what they could do.” Reucassel is rightfully proud of the effect the series has had already in the community. “I wouldn’t have done this series if it wasn’t something I was interested in and passionate about, I think we should be reducing our footprint on the world massively … but there was luck involved in being asked to do it and I’ve learnt an enormous amount and loved it,” he says.
With the removal of free plastic bags by major retailers including Woolworths and Coles, it is clear big business has been galvanised into action. “I was really surprised when Woolies and then Coles made that announcement. I think the project [War War on Waste Waste] did a lot of great stuff on that as well and there’s obviously a lot of pressure coming from other parts of the community,” Reucassel says. Now he would like to see more change at a legislative level. “I think, still, there’s a lot of stuff that needs to happen at policy level that’s not necessarily happening. I really hope we can have the maturity to do that … hopefully, we’ll see.” ● WAR ON WASTE: THE BATTLE CONTNUES \ Tuesdays, 8.30pm on ABC TV.
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Daisy
Discovered her love for football at MLC, now drafted to Collingwood VFLW
EDUCATION & INNOVATION
Me & My Coach
KRISTINA FILIPOV & MAT T SHEENS SPECIAL PROMOTION
D
irector of sport at St Monica’s College, Epping, Matt Sheens and year 11 student Kristina Filipov perhaps not surprisingly share a passion for sports. Any and all sports. The two have been involved in a number of teams since a young age. At St Monica’s, they are working together to grow the quality and popularity of rugby league.
I’ve been at St Monica’s since year 8 and I’m heavily involved in school sports – AFL, netball, I’m involved in the basketball and in a lot of the events, even athletics. My dad represented Australia in judo so I’ve done judo as well. I’ve played rep footy outside school for about seven years so I’ve had that passion since a young age. I study, I work and I play sport. I do about four hours of sport a week and I spend time with my family of course and then schooling will fit in between – I have sessions after footy and judo. I guess I schedule it, that’s how I manage. I actually got into rugby league at school because I wanted to get into sport more. Rugby league was a sport I thought wasn’t as appreciated as it could be. My coach Mr Sheens first got me into playing tag NRL. It was the way he promoted it and the resources available for rugby league at the school are now much greater than we’ve had before. We train at least once a week at the moment and we’re going to see the Melbourne Storm train. I started working with Mr Sheens this year and I’ve learnt so much from him – a lot. Rugby skills and confidence in the skills, there’s a lot of strength training as well. With Mr Sheens I focus on a lot of building leadership and how to further develop this sporting avenue. We speak about how it’s not as big as it could be. It’s so hard to choose between the leagues for me now. I love NRL but I also love my footy (AFL) and I’ve been playing for seven years. The girls I play footy with, I’ve encouraged them to get involved in rugby league because they’re very similar in a way. I feel like a lot of girls can excel in NRL, they just need the confidence. When I finish school I want to do law or criminology or sports science. I really want to do something with sport because I’ve been doing it for
GREG BRIGGS
KRISTINA SAYS ...
K R I S T I N A F I LI P OV & M AT T S H E E N S
so long. My dad is in the police force so I’ve always been exposed to that and had an interest in what he does. So it’s one or the other.
MAT T SAYS ... From a very young age I’ve played in just about every sport – rugby league, tennis, rugby union and I’ve coached athletics. I come from a very sporting family. My father was a professional NRL player for a long time and an NRL coach for more than 30 years and so he had a major influence on my career. He is still coaching in the UK. I never played NRL professionally, I went into a different field – allied health. I worked as a rehabilitation manager for the Canberra Raiders and I decided to get into physiotherapy. I played NRL at a local level and worked in the elite sport. Working at St Monica’s was a case of working in the sports industry again. I was in a regulatory/ compliance role for a few years with VicHealth. I’ve loved the opportunity to work with young people. I’ve got two young daughters who are heavily into their sport, so the opportunity to work with women in sport and opportunities to find them to find teams to play in is a passion of mine –
particularly in NRL. The opportunity to work in a development-type role and educate and coach young people in the health and emotional benefits of competing in sports is fantastic. As well as overseeing all sporting teams at St Monica’s, I coordinate the men’s and women’s NRL and tag NRL teams here at St Monica’s because that’s my area of expertise. Kristina is one of the talented students I work with. She is a really talented AFL player as well and she’s one of our key NRL ambassadors at the college. She was identified by NRL Victoria as a target, someone they would like to play contact NRLW in their new under-18s competition. It’s a pathway for the new Melbourne Storm women’s team which they’re trying to establish in the next couple of years. We’ve been working on her skill and strength development and field- and match-awareness. I think the No.1 thing that I’ve picked up about working with Kristina and other students is the need to be cognisant of their competing priorities. A lot of the talented students also compete at a reasonably high level outside of school so there are conflicting demands on their time. ● MELISSA HEAGNEY
ST MONICA’S COLLEGE, EPPING \ 400 Dalton Road, Epping. ● 03 9409 8800 ● www.stmonicas-epping.com
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EDUCATION & INNOVATION
A positive start to secondary school
GREG BRIGGS
SPECIAL PROMOTION
M
LC’s head of junior secondary school, Cathie Ireland, has always had a keen interest in seeing young students successfully transition from primary school to year 7. “Many years ago I actually did the transition with a group of girls I taught in year 6 – I moved into a secondary school with them in year 7,” Ireland says. “I suppose I lived the journey with them. It gave me some great insights into how they were coping and behaving in a primary setting and how that seemed to change over six weeks of school holidays. “I saw girls who were confident and asking me lots of questions, to losing a lot of belief and confidence in themselves and it sparked a big interest in me in how we can blur the lines between primary and secondary school to make it the softest landing possible in year 7.” Ireland joined MLC in January and oversees all students in years 7 and 8. Along with her team, she has been working to provide that soft landing through building strong relationships with primary schools, parents and potential students. The college works with families to get a clear picture of each student, their interests and their academic strengths and challenges to provide a positive next step in education. “One of the important things to remember is that secondary school isn’t a brand new start,” Ireland says. “Our girls are coming in with seven years of school behind them already. So the more we know about them coming into secondary school, the more it helps us to help them.” Ireland says the large team of junior secondary staff, including year-level coordinators and home group teachers, works closely with students to develop strong working relationships with them. She is also well supported by deputy head of junior secondary Penny Church and year 7 coordinator Jess Brooder. “We have specific programs teaching year 7s about organisations skills, about using a diary, how to manage their homework, whom to go to when they need extra support,” Ireland says. “We also have some great programs like the Big Sister program for each home group, where year 11 students will partner up with year 7s to show them the ropes. “So every morning you’ll see them before school
M L C ’ S J E S S B R O O D E R , CAT H I E I R E L A N D & PE N N Y C H U R C H
ADVICE FOR STARTING YEAR 7 … Cathie Ireland recommends parents and students take advantage of MLC’s school tours and open days. Make yourself and your daughter as familiar with our school as possible. ■ If you’ve got questions there’s plenty of people that can answer them so make sure you ask them. ■ Prepare your daughter for the fact that there may be some hiccups but also prepare her by saying, “You’ve had seven years of schooling so far, you’re continuing on a journey here. Take all the great skills that you’ve learnt from primary school into secondary school – don’t throw them away.” ■
starts helping them out with things – just being a guiding hand, it’s lovely to see,” she says. Students are also encouraged to join in the extensive array of co-curricular options in order to meet others with shared interests. “There are other specific things we do through
our wellbeing program ... for example, we talk to year 7s about friendships,” Ireland says. “Friendship groups naturally reform in year 7. We have students coming in from 70 primary schools, so there are new personalities and different dynamics. It’s a time of exploring identity.” Apart from the layers of wellbeing and support built through the junior secondary school, another more literal type of building is also happening: a new Year 7-8 Learning Centre which will open in mid-2019. “At the moment our years 7 and 8 are in separate buildings so I’m looking forward to having the team together in the one JSS home,” Ireland says. “It will be a building that creates some exciting, flexible spaces for better learning outcomes for our girls.” Though she has only been with MLC since the start of the year, Ireland says she is loving the opportunity to work with year 7s and 8s again. “My most recent role had been head of a primary school and I’m really loving being back in the junior secondary area. I see the complexity of the lives of our adolescent girls and helping them adjust to the next stage of their schooling. “I love the breadth of choice and offering that’s available at MLC, and the diversity within our college gives everyone an opportunity to find their place.” ● MELISSA HEAGNEY
MLC \ 207 Barkers Road, Kew. ● 03 9274 6333 ● www.mlc.vic.edu.au
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FEATURE HOUSE
DOWNLOAD THE DOMAIN APP SEE MORE IMAGES, FLOOR PLANS & PROPERTY DETAILS
FITZROY NORTH \ 31 TAYLOR STREET 4
1
1
Immaculately presented and in a great location, this is a family home with fabulous credentials and surprising space. Heritage details have been cherished in a renovation that added contemporary amenity and great style, and the outdoors have been as carefully upgraded as the interior. The facade is decorated with ornate woodwork trim on the front verandah and the neat garden has a hedge and brick-paved paths. The four bedrooms – three with built-in wardrobes – and a fitted study, open from the central, triple-arched hallway. Bedrooms are carpeted; in the rest of the home, golden hardwood floors are laid throughout. The family bathroom follows and has a separate shower and spa bath. Opposite that is the well-designed kitchen and then the living and dining area runs the full width of the house. The smart grey, black and white kitchen has granite benchtops, matching splashbacks, stainless-steel appliances and a walk-in pantry. The living and dining area is light and open with sunshine pouring in through windows that pick up on a design feature of the era with squares of coloured glass at each corner. It’s a charming touch with the red and blue adding flickers of colour to the pale colour scheme. Deep skirting boards here also continue the period detailing of the original rooms. A deep, covered deck opens off this area and steps down to the brick-paved garden with the garage, accessible from the right-of-way, and the laundry. The house has ducted heating and cooling.
FINAL WORD
Between Nicholson Street and Merri Creek, the house is in a fine position to take advantage of the area’s exciting
“A WELCOMING AND SUBSTANTIAL FAMILY HOME ON LARGE LAND
and varied dining scene as well as the bike trails and natural
OFFERING GENEROUS AND VERSATILE ACCOMMODATION WITH
beauty surrounding Merri Creek.
SCOPE TO FURTHER ENHANCE.” ANDREW DEANGELIS - AGENT
East Brunswick Kindergarten and Childcare is nearby along with Merri Creek and Fitzroy North primary schools and Fitzroy High School. Transport is a short walk away on St Georges Road or Nicholson Street. Taylor Street is wide and lined with homes from various eras with a park at the northern end. ● BEVERLEY JOHANSON editorial@domain.com.au Agent: Nelson Alexander, Andrew DeAngelis 0402 039 342 Price: $1.7 million Private sale
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NORTH MELBOURNE \ 28 LITTLE BAILLIE STREET 3
2
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With three levels plus a rooftop terrace, this is contemporary city living at its best in one of Melbourne’s most convenient and interesting inner suburbs. At ground level, the garage opens from Little Baillie Street and behind this is a bedroom opening to a light court and with an en suite and built-in wardrobe. The next level is the living area where a beautifully equipped, white kitchen has spectacular pendant lighting. This area opens to a terrace. Two bedrooms share a bathroom on the second floor and a spiral staircase leads to the roof terrace with panoramic city views. The property is close to Queensberry Street, North Melbourne train station, cafes and shops. ● BEVERLEY JOHANSON Agent: Jellis Craig, Lucas Mills 0410 037 682 Price: $1.3 million-$1.4 million Auction: 11.30am, 28 July
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CARLT L ON NORTH LT 3/1044 DRUMMOND STREET E ET P RK VIEWS PA
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3A 2B 1C
A perfect townhouse located within easy walking distance to everything that makes inner city living click.
Auction
Comprising 3BR upstairs, BIR’s, central bathroom, main bedroom with ensuite and balcony. Downstairs, light filled living room, spacious kitchen meals, both with access to central leafy courtyard extending your living areas. Features include lockup garage, ample storage, ducted heating and cooling top off f this balanced and well positioned home. ff
Inspect
nicholsonre.com.au
Sat 11th August at 11 am Wed 5.30-6pm, Sat 11-11.30am
Contact
Nick Djorgonoski 0411604622 Angelo Scambiatterra 0418339827
Brunswick 9387 0966
Reservoir 9460 2541 DOM A IN REV IEW
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CLIFTON HILL 150 Roseneath Street Clifton Hill´s biggest surprise package on one of its deepest residential blocks is this four bedroom, two bathroom residence with a seemingly endless rear garden just by parklands. Updated and extended with dimensions more like a double-fronted; this unique 406sqm (approx.) property with rear ROW (potential OSP) offers spacious living and dining, dual double-glazed bifold doors to covered deck, Blanco/Miele kitchen and heating/cooling.
Auction
Saturday 11th August at 11.30am
Inspect
Thursday 1-1.30pm Saturday 1.15-1.45pm
-----------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------
Contact
Antony Harbor 0406 585 435 Antony Woodley 0421 286 741
-----------------------------------------
Office
286 Queens Parade Fitzroy North 9488 0688
Web
www.150RoseneathStreetCliftonHill.com
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Part of the Marshall White Group
8/1A Hamilton Street Alphington 3 Bed | 2 Bath | 2 Parking .................................
Guide $760,000 - $810,000 Auction Sat 4th Aug at 11.30am Open Thu 26 Jul 6:30 to 7:00pm & Sat 28 Jul 11:00 to 11:30am .................................
Bill Kyriakopoulos 0419 008 008 Evan Wailes 0437 081 986
20
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