For over four ridiculous decades, Mark Trevorrow has been making audiences laugh, sing and swoon through his fabulous, iconic alter ego — the ever-charismatic Bob Downe.
In this very 1980s fluro feature interview, Mark reflects on Bob’s glitter-dusted history, queer comedy in Australia and the joy of camp that refuses to fade.
From the early days of Oxford Street cabaret in Sydney to the big stage around the world, Bob Downe remains a beacon of humour, heart and unapologetic queer fabulousness. Get ready for sequins, sincerity and a few cheeky surprises — because Bob’s still got it and Mark’s still loving every minute.
With his new show touring Australia we chatted with Mark Trevorrow to revisit his early days of cabaret, the glitter-soaked nights of the 1980s and the enduring magic of Bob Downe — someone who has made us laugh ’til it hurts and even charmed the most famous queen of all, Elizabeth II.
Sharp, camp and joyfully irreverent as ever, Mark reflects on his legacy, laughter and why, after forty ridiculous years, Bob Downe still hits the stage like it’s 1984.
Mark Trevorrow aka Bob Downe: It was electric! I literally stopped the show at the Murrumbeena Methodist Sunday school concert. I was holding my sheet music and a lighted candle, with a long-haired blonde girl right in front of me. Put it this way — at age 5, my hand-eye coordination wasn’t what it is now.
The Globos was the start of everything. Me and my late bestie Wendy de Waal roped in our mates to put on a 1960s lip-sync show in June 1980 at a party in our South Yarra flat. The show was such a hit that the police arrived. With the help of my Herald Sun colleague Wendy Harmer, we started doing the Melbourne new wave cabaret circuit. Then at Wendy’s 25th birthday party (she’s turning 70 this year) I met Gina Riley, who introduced us to St Martin’s Youth Arts Centre, where we met the performers who made up the professional version of the Globos when we were booked for the opening season at Kinselas cabaret in Sydney. That very same month (August 1982) we were Countdown Chartbusters with ‘Tintarella Di Luna’. What a start! And the rest is history.
After the Globos broke up in late 1983, I started working at a family friend’s cafe in Glebe, where I met a hilarious woman named Cathy Armstrong. We immediately started riffing in different characters and then at the 1984 Glebe Food Fair we staged a skit outside the cafe, where Bob was born — he started as a shop dummy ‘Amrrrkn’ showbiz interviewer, parodying those nasty interviews Rona Barrett was doing on Entertainment This Week.
Someone from the ABC Radio Comedy Unit was in the crowd and within weeks we were writing and recording radio sketches! In January 1987, I went solo with Bob at the Harold Park comedy pub, and then appeared at the inaugural Melbourne Comedy Festival where I was nominated Best Newcomer.
Being booked to headline and host variety shows at the fabled Last Laugh Theatre Restaurant in Melbourne in 1987. Gina Riley and I then created a music trivia game show, Bob & Coralee’s Pick-a-Hit, which played six months at the Laugh in 1988-89. And then being physically pushed on stage by Richard Fidler from DAAS for my very first Edinburgh Fringe appearance — where the crowd went instantly wild. I went on to do 18 (count ’em!) Edinburgh Fringe festivals, were I met the incredible Lily Savage (the late Paul O’Grady) in 1991. My tours and TV work with Lily were the most fun I’ve ever had, on and off stage!
Bob allows me to make a living singing all my favourite pop songs. I’m probably best known for my cover of the 1965 Georgie Fame classic ‘Yeh, Yeh’. All kinds of music inspires me — as Duke Ellington famously said, there’s only two kinds of music: good and bad.
Comedy changes all the time — it has to, it’s a reflection of where we’re at as a society and culture right now! But the changes are so subtle and incremental, it’s actually hard to pin them down. All I know is, you either keep up or you don’t.

Coralee Hollow & Bob Downe (aka Gina Riley & Mark Trevorrow )
At the time, I didn’t! Looking back, it amazes me that I slipped past the gatekeepers, thanks mainly to the nine Mardi Gras broadcasts I co-hosted. Now being gay is a career move! I’ve lost my point of difference. Everyone’s gay!
Appearing in the 1995 Royal Variety Performance in London, in the presence of the Queen and Prince Philip. It was a terrifying and ultimately triumphant occasion. Hosting the Sydney Olympics Torch Night concert in the Domain with 80,000 people was pretty incredible too. And what a gift Gina and Jane gave me with Darryl Lee, my recurring character on Kath & Kim.
It just amazes me that no matter how I’m feeling or what’s going on behind the scenes, I hit that stage and Bob never lets me down. It’s miraculous. Of course, after all these years, the audience carries me along in a wave of acceptance and love — what a blessing!
Alfie and Lotte, the two schnauzers I share with my hub Stefan. They’re just constantly happy, energetic and loving. And they’ve never even heard of climate change or Trump!
I decided not to do a greatest hits, so I’ve learned 30 classic ’80s bangers in honour of my birth in 1984. And you’ll love meeting Bob’s nepo-nephew, Philip McKrevis, and my Merch Hub Stef!
Can we please go back to low-res, cathode ray tube, corduroy TV? HD came along at a very unfortunate time for some of us. Ask Kerri-Anne!
I’m hanging out for a commemorative 50¢ coin, or at least a stamp!
SUNDAY 7 DECEMBER 2025
Extra Show Added! Book Here for 6pm
For more Bob and tour dates visit: bobdowne.com