SKIPTON: There is still chance to catch Skipton Players’ latest show, Michael Frayn’s four-character play Benefactors, at the town’s Little Theatre until Saturday.

The play centres round an idealistic architect hired to replace a London slum with two skyscrapers.

Performances start at 7.30pm and tickets are available from 07527 141176.

l To mark the end of her stint as artist in residence at Skipton’s Craven Museum and Gallery, Helen Peyton is putting together a social museum and art gallery.

The exhibition aims to involve the public, with them being asked to donate, interpret and create the objects. The exhibition will run until Monday, May 26.

l Artwork created by people with memory loss or dementia is on display at the Coffee House, off Coach Street.

It is part of Pioneer Project’s Own Now initiative and the exhibition runs until May 30. Admission is free and all are welcome l Christ Church, Skipton, will hold another of its Bank Holiday organ recitals on Monday. Guest organist will be Leonard Sanderman, of Chichester Cathedral, and starts at 11am, with tea and coffee from 10.30am.

l Kirsty Bromley will entertain at Skipton Folk Unplugged on Monday. She describes herself as a singer, dancer, teacher and performer of folk music within the English tradition. The folk club meets at the Narrowboat pub from 8.30pm and all are welcome.

SETTLE: Bayou Seco will take their Victoria Hall audience on a musical odyssey through the American southwest tonight. Playing fiddle, accordion, banjo and guitar, the duo – Jeanie McLerie and Ken Keppeler – will perform long forgotten songs and dances with “wit, warmth and style”.

The New Rope String Band will headline at the hall’s monthly folk night on Sunday, combining musicianship with comedy, elements of circus, clowning, vaudeville, slapstick and silliness. It is introduced by Mike Harding.

Victoria Hall is also getting ready to welcome award-winning singer songwriter Hazel O’Connor next Friday, May 9. For tickets, visit settlevictoriahall.org.uk or call 01729 825718.

l The Folly at Settle is hosting an exhibition by six of the UK’s leading contemporary artists and craftmakers who embrace the principles of the “slow” movement.

Their work is craft based, grounded in traditional skills and processes, which are often labour intensive, but “slow” does not simply mean how long the work has taken. Until June 29.

l Settle Amateur Operatic Society will hold its annual get-together at the Old Courthouse on Wednesday at 7.30pm. Everyone is welcome to attend.

l Settle Music will hold one of its popular guitar sessions next Friday, May 9, at Settle Primary School, from 7pm. The cost is £5. All styles and abilities welcome.

GIGGLESWICK: Theatre-studies students at Giggleswick School will perform their AS examination pieces in the Richard Whiteley Theatre. They will stage Franz Kafka’s Metamorphosis – where a man who becomes a beetle struggles against oppression – followed by The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time. There will be two performances – tonight and tomorrow at 6.45pm.

And the theatre will host a Community Cinema screening of The LEGO movie on Sunday.

With a U-certification, it is the first full-length LEGO adventure and follows Emmet, an ordinary LEGO figure mistakenly identified as the mythical Master Builder.

The film incorporates some of LEGO’s most popular figures as well as introducing several new characters.

The screening starts at 3.30pm.

For tickets or more information, contact Giggleswic.org.uk/rwt or call 01729 893180.

GLUSBURN: Glusburn Institute will host another film night tomorrow.

The featured film will be A Late Quartet, which is about a world-renowned string quartet whose future hangs in the balance after its beloved cellist receives a life- changing diagnosis. Inspired by and structured around Beethoven’s Opus 131 String Quartet in C sharp minor, A Late Quartet pays homage to chamber music and the cultural world of New York.

Doors open at 6.30pm for the screening at 7pm and tickets costing £5 for adults and £3.50 for concessions are available from Glusburn Institute and Cross Hills Post Office.

HEBDEN: A band specialising in hits from the 1960s will perform at the village institute on Saturday at 7pm.

The Heritage Boys – Andy Burton, Peter Johnson and Ian Whitaker – formed in November 2012 as a bit of fun for a charity fundraising event.

Tickets costing £10, which include a pie and peas supper, are available from 01756 752025 and all profits will be split between Help for Heroes and the village institute.

INGLETON: The Theatre Group will hold its annual meeting at The Top Club next Thursday, May 8, at 8pm. For details, call Jayne Lis on 015242 41701.

TOSSIDE: The prize-winning Craven Accordion Orchestra will perform its springtime concert at the community hall on Sunday at 2pm. Admission is £4.