Ryedale Festival Community Opera is looking for singers, dancers, performers and musicians of all ages and abilities to audition next week for this summer's production.
IN A TALE depicting the struggle of being caught between heaven and earth, artistic director Tamsin Shasha portrays a demi-god's fall from grace in Bacchic.
DO YOU have to be a little mad to be a politician? And, beneath the flippancy of that opening gambit, have some politicians actually been, well, a touch insane while in office?
IN his new play Fast Labour, Eastern Europe meets East Anglia as Steve Waters focuses on the growing culture of human exploitation by gangmasters, delving below the surface to reveal the world of the asylum seeker.
INTRODUCING...American actor Jon Farris, making his British stage debut as the psychiatrist to George W Bush in Donald Freed's political tragi-farce Patient No 1.
Ever wanted to see legendary historical figures as they lived back then? If so, prepare yourselves for the highly-animated theatre production of The Terrible Tudors.
HULL Truck has a long history of staging sporting endeavours, from rugby league to football, skiing to darts, crown bowls to keep-fit, judo to wrestling, horse-racing to more rugby league.
York Theatre Royal will present Patient No. 1, a stark comic satire set in a not-too-distant future by American political writer Donald Freed, the theatre's playwright in residence, from May 1 to 17.
ALAN Ayckbourn will conclude his tenure as artistic director of the Stephen Joseph Theatre, Scarborough, with The Things That Go Bump season, three Ayckbourn plays about the ghosts that lurk in the dark corners of all our minds.
THE Lambeth Walk musical by Yorkshireman Noel Gay pops up every handful of years in York: York Amateur Operatic and Dramatic Society in 1997, York Light Opera Society in 2003, and now New Earswick Musical Society.
AFTER the first night, artistic director and choreographer Javier De Frutos let it be known he would prefer Phoenix Dance Theatre's first full-length dance drama to be considered as a musical.
IN a fog of Victorian pipe smoke, Jerome (John Sackville) and his accident-prone friend Harris (Jonathan Race) and City slacker George (Drew Mulligan) are slumped in their armchairs. What they need is rest and a complete change: a trip up the Thames.