SKIPTON: Almost 100 performers, both amateur and professional, will take to the town hall stage tomorrow.

Skipton Building Society Camerata, will be joined by Skipton Choral Society and an impressive line-up of soloists to perform Beethoven’s Symphony No 9.

The concert is supported by Skipton Town Partnership and comes in the same weekend that Skipton celebrates Sheep Day.

It starts at 7.30pm and also includes Mozart’s Symphony No 40.

For tickets, call 0333 666 3366.

Skipton Ladies Choir will give its summer concert next Saturday, July 11.

The choir, which celebrated its silver jubilee last year, has a varied repertoire, ranging from The Beatles to John Rutter.

Starting at 7.30pm, the concert will take place at Skipton Baptist Church and admission on the door is £8 for adults and £6 for concessions. The price includes refreshments.

An exhibition of work by artist Judy Sale will open at Mill Bridge Gallery tomorrow.

Travel on The Edge will show Judy’s bright, bold abstract canvasses, which have been inspired by the many countries in which she has lived and worked.

Born in a small town in the middle of the USA, she has spent all her adult life elsewhere, living in eight different countries, and her current home is in Haworth.

The exhibition will be launched at the gallery tomorrow at noon, when Judy will talk about her work, and it will run until Saturday, August 29.

Skipton Folk Unplugged will hold a Singers Night on Monday.

The club meets at the Narrow Boat pub from 8.30pm and all are welcome.

SETTLE: The next exhibition at Settle's Gallery on the Green is particularly apt.

The gallery is housed in a decommissioned phone box and the exhibition, Call Me, is a written collage of notable literary telephone dialogues.

It has been put together by Ellen Bell and Jo Hamill and remembers the days before smart phones, mobiles and even landlines, when private telephone conversations had to be conducted inside a public call box.

Call Me runs until August 15 and further details are available from Settle Tourist Information Centre or online at galleryonthegreen.org.uk.

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.

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 Monday.

Settle Music will hold one of its popular guitar sessions next Friday, July 10.

It will take place at Settle Primary School from 7pm to 9pm and the cost is £5.

BOLTON ABBEY: Members of the Priory Church will stage a 21st century equivalent of a medieval mystery play this weekend.

Supported by the Bolton Abbey Drama Group, they will portray the life of Jesus in 12 short scenes in the atmospheric surroundings of the Priory.

It will be the first Bolton Abbey pageant to be held for nine years The play will begin and end in the church, but will also take in other parts of the Priory grounds, including the river bank.

Scenes include the Baptism of Jesus, the Wedding at Cana and Christ's entrance to Jerusalem.

There will be no charge to see the play, beyond the normal admission charges for the estate.

Performance begin at 2pm on Saturday and Sunday.

BRADLEY: Bradley Film Club will show Avenger's Assembly at the village primary school on Tuesday at 6pm.

Starring Scarlett Johansson and Robert Downey Jr, the film is the climax of a long-running series of adaptations from Marvel comic book series.

It brings together some of the most celebrated characters, including Black Widow, Iron Man, Thor and Captain America as the mysterious S.H.I.E.L.D. organisation attempts to save the world from the dastardly machinations of Loki and his gang of fellow supervillains.

Admission is free.

GLUSBURN: Cybertown - an electro and classics tribute band - will perform at Glusburn Institute next Saturday, July 11.

The event will mark the 30th anniversary of the first Live Aid concert and all proceeds will go to Oxfam, which helps people across the world.

The gig starts at 8.30pm and tickets costing £5 are available from the institute on 01535 630223.

GRASSINGTON: Artist Pat Jones is holding an exhibition in Church House.

It runs until tomorrow.

INGLETON: The village will be turning the clock back this weekend.

It is staging its annual Operation Homeguard festival, which takes visitors back to the 1940s.

And the programme includes two dances at the community centre.

Major Swing will provide the music tomorrow while the performers on Saturday will be the Mike Brown Swing Band. Both events start at 7.30pm.

Other entertainment includes music from Jump, Jive and Wail at the Wheatsheaf on Saturday at 3pm, performances by George Formby impersonator Colin Bourdiec in the village square on Sunday at noon and 1.30pm and dancing by students from the Helen Howard School of Dance in the village square on Sunday at 2pm.

For full details, visit ingletonhomeguard.co.uk.

TOSSIDE: Guitar duo Level Two will perform songs from the 60s to the present day as part of this year's Fox Festival.

The gig will take place in the community hall on Saturday night and admission is £5.