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Bellamy Brewster

Lines

June 29, 2026

A theatrical audition has always carried the faint aura of ritual: a small room, a handful of strangers vested with authority, and an actor asked to compress talent, vulnerability, and desperation into a few fleeting minutes. "Lines," a taut new psychological chamber play by Bellamy Brewster and Ewan Lloyd, recognizes that the audition is already a form of theater—and then pushes that premise into increasingly disquieting territory. Brewster, who also directs, transforms the familiar rituals of casting into a claustrophobic examination of power, ambition, and the hidden price of artistic validation. Set entirely within the confines of an audition room, the play begins with recognizable industry conventions before gradually mutating into something far more sinister. As the process unfolds, the rules become increasingly rigid, the room itself seems to contract, and what initially appears to be a professional evaluation evolves into an unsettling psychological contest. The central question lingers over every exchange: What, exactly, is the cost of being chosen? [more]