SKIPTON: Skipton Little Theatre is staging Michael Parker’s Whose Wives Are They Anyway.

It is a story of two wives going on a shopping spree while their husbands enjoy the sporting allure of a golfing weekend.

The play is directed by Phil Smith and runs Saturday.

All performances start at 7.30pm (doors open at 7pm) and tickets can be booked on 07527 141176.

The newly-reopened Craven Museum and Gallery is staging an exhibition about the Magna Carta.

*Visitors will be able to see a replica of the Magna Carta, which was given to Skipton as part of the 800th anniversary of its creation.

The display has been put together by the Skipton Magna Carta Working Group, which has been working hard to mark the 800th anniversary in Skipton.

In addition, a contemporary art exhibition titled The Forest of Possibility will run until June 30.

It is the third in the Art Unpacked series of touring art exhibitions created by Gargrave-based Chrysalis Art.

The exhibition features seven artists: James Aldridge, Claire Brewster, Andrea Mastrovito, Charlotte McGowan-Griffin, Davy and Kristin McGuire, Clare Skill and Justine Smith.

Using paper, the artists bring to life stories from the forest, ranging from the mysteries of fairytales to its sinister shadows.

For more details, visit cravenmuseum.org *Kathryn Charnock and Peter Norman will entertain at Skipton Folk Unplugged on Monday.

They will perform traditional and contemporary songs and lively tunes with a Celtic feel.

The club meets at the Narrow Boat, on Victoria Street, from 8.30pm and all are welcome.

*Local band Undercover will perform at the Three Links Club on Saturday from 8pm.

Visitors are welcome for a 50p admission charge.

SETTLE: The Ribblesdale Area Moving Picture Show (TRAMPS) will continue its foreign film season with a screening of Like Father, Like Son.

Directed by Hirokazu Kore-eda, the Japanese film is about is a money-driven businessman, who learns that his biological son was switched with another child after birth.

He must make a life-changing decision and choose his true son or the boy he raised as his own.

The film will be shown at Victoria Hall on Wednesday at 7.45pm *Visitors to The Museum of North Craven Life have the choice of two exhibitions.

Community Skills tells the story of the potteries in Burton-in-Lonsdale, which were fired up in the mid 18th century and showcases around 60 pots from the museum’s collection – the largest in Yorkshire.

The second exhibition, Reality Hits Home, focuses on the First World War and contrasts the frontline experiences of the volunteers with life at home where people were fearful for the first time of enemy attack from the skies.

For more information, call 01729 822854 or visit ncbpt.org.uk/folly *Photographers Paul Rogers and Roger Taylor have joined forces to explore and speculate on the public’s preoccupation with photographing themselves.

They are staging a joint exhibition, entitled Click, at the Gallery on the Green - housed in a former phone box. The exhibition will run until next Saturday, June 27.

*The Lime Gallery at The Courtyard, is staging an exhibition featuring the work of Ilkley-based Laura Wallace and Edinburgh’s Alison Dickson.

Laura’s oils of the Scottish landscape and seascape, her native Yorkshire and flowers show depth and vigour, with an inviting and calming palette.

Alison has a more contemporary style, but the same thoughtful approach to colour and her landscapes are calming and reflective.

The exhibition is open daily until July 6.

BOLTON ABBEY: As part of a regional tour, Harrogate Male Voice Choir will perform at the Priory Church on Saturday at 4.30pm.

The Singing Children of Africa will give a concert in the Priory Church on Tuesday at 7pm.

They are travelling from Kenya and will be in the UK for eight weeks for an educational, cultural and musical tour. They are sponsored by the charity, Educate the Kids.

Admission is free and there will be a retiring collection.

BRADLEY: Bradley Film Club will screen a number of short family films on Monday.

They include Pixar, Laurel and Hardy and Buster Keaton.

The films will be shown in the school hall at 6pm and admission is free. Children under 16 should be accompanied.

GARGRAVE: Gargrave Community Library will hold a film night in the village hall tomorrow.

It will screen the comedy adventure, The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared.

It is about Allan Karlsson, who, after living a long and colourful life, finds himself stuck in a nursing home. On his 100th birthday, he leaps out a window and begins an unexpected journey.

Doors open at 7pm and admission is £5. Seating will be café-style and guests are invited to bring along their own refreshments.

GRASSINGTON: Local woman Lorraine Paylor will star in The Essence of Eccentricity at the Grassington Congregational Church on Saturday from 3pm.

Lorraine and her friends will present a collection of comic songs, written and performed in the late 19th century and early 20th century by music hall artiste Nellie Wallace.

Tickets cost £5 and proceeds will go to Cancer Research UK.

HEBDEN: AN organ recital will be held at St Peter’s Church on Sunday - as part of Grassington Festival.

It will be given by Tim Harper, who held organ scholarships at Clare College, Cambridge, Canterbury Cathedral and St Paul’s Cathedral and is assistant director of Music at Ripon Cathedral.

The recital will start at 2.30pm and tickets are £5 from the Festival Office on 01756 752691 or at the door.

HELLIFIELD: John Froud and Daughter will entertain at a concert in St Aidan’s Church next Saturday, June 27, at 7.30pm.

Tickets cost £7.50, which includes refreshments, and are available from the vicar on 01729 851511.

INGLETON: Blackpool Tower organist John Bowdler will play at a fundraising dance at Ingleborough Community Centre, on Saturday.

The event has been organised by Settle Amateur Operatic Society and tickets are available from the community centre or by contacting 01729 822364 or 01729 822959. They cost £8, which includes refreshments.