SKIPTON: Skipton Folk Unplugged returns to the Narrow Boat pub on Monday.
Niamh Boadle will draw on her Irish parentage to create an intriguing mix of traditional and modern music.
The gig will start at 8.30pm and all are welcome.
SETTLE: The Farnham Maltings will present a show that is part thriller, part cookery lesson, at Victoria Hall on Wednesday.
The Iranian Feast will feature traditional Persian food prepared by Abbas, his wife and daughter with help from their friends and neighbours.
The show is the story of a family working out how life will be in the future.
Doors open at 7.15pm and tickets are available from settlevictoriahall.org.uk or call 01729 825718.
The Ribblesdale Area Moving Picture Show (TRAMPS) will show the award-winning A Separation on Wednesday, April 27.
In Farsi/Italian with English subtitles, it is set in modern Iran and tells of a couple trying to disentangle their marriage.
The screening will take place at 7.45pm and admission is £5.
* The Folly is staging two hugely contrasting exhibitions.
1916: Chronicles of Courage is the third in the museum’s series of World War One exhibitions, in association with the Heritage Lottery-funded Craven and the First World War project.
It tells the stories of local men and women who served their country in many different ways and includes graphic reconstructions of life on the battlefield through installations of a section of trench and a regimental first-aid post fitted out with medical and surgical equipment of the period.
The second exhibition, Back in Settle, has been inspired by a Facebook group set up around three years ago by local man Mick Harrison to share stories and old photographs from the Settle area. There are now almost 1,600 people involved from all over the world.
The war exhibition runs until October 30 and Back in Settle until June 5.
* There is still a chance to catch the largest-ever exhibition of wood engravings, botanical paintings and watercolours by renowned craftsman Derek Setford, which is being staged at Gavagan Art in Settle Town Hall.
It features works inspired by landscapes from across the North West as well as some of the most intricate engravings exhibited in the region in recent years.
The exhibition runs until Saturday.
BRADLEY: Bradley Film Club will screen Star Wars: The Force Awakens (12a) at the primary school next Thursday, April 21, at 6pm.
Admission is free and everyone in the community is welcome. There will be refreshments to buy.
CLAPHAM: Alan Bennett will introduce the TRAMPS showing of The Lady in the Van at St James' Church on Saturday from 7.30pm. There will also be an opportunity to ask questions.
Tickets are priced at £10 and are available from Sue Mann on 015242 51792 or at Clapham Village Store. Proceeds from the event will go to TRAMPS, Clapham Village Hall and St James' Church.
EMBSAY: The Film Club will show Oh Brother Where Art Thou? in Embsay-with-Eastby Village Hall on Wednesday at 8pm.
The film stars George Clooney, John Turturro, Tim Blake Nelson and Holly Hunter and takes the audience on a hilarious romp through the bluegrass Mississippi in the company of three clueless escaped convicts who are searching for a non-existent treasure.
Admission is £5, which includes tea/coffee and biscuits.
GIGGLESWICK: Community Cinema will screen the family film, Alvin And The Chipmunks: The Road Chip, at the Richard Whiteley Theatre on Sunday.
It is the chipmunks' fourth fun-packed adventure, which includes an hilarious incident aboard a plane where they find themselves hotly pursued by a furious Air Marshal.
The screening starts at 3.30pm and tickets are available from giggleswick.org.uk/rwt or call 01729 893180.
GRASSINGTON: An opera evening will be held in the Octagon next Sunday, April 24.
Part of the Opera Platform season, it will feature Tchaikovsky's Eugene Onegin, which is full of immortal melodies and heart-rending drama.
The show starts at 6.30pm.
* Matt Anderson will entertain at the Foresters on Saturday at 9pm.
LINTON: St Michael’s and All Angels' Church will hold two concerts.
It will welcome The Hermitage Ensemble, a Russian Orthodox choir from St Petersburg, tonight at 7.30pm.
It will perform Russian sacred hymns and folk songs. Tickets cost £10 and are available from The Wine Shop, Grassington or call 01756 752468.
And, on Sunday, Libricini, a chamber choir of female voices from Norwich, will perform at 4pm.
Its Look and The Kiss concert will include music by Holst, Gjeilo, Rutter, Schumann and Villa-Lobos.
Admission is free, but donations will be taken for local youth club Project Reverb.
STEETON: A concert will be held at St Stephen's Church tomorrow to launch its £150,000 roof appeal.
It will start at 7pm and will feature Karen Clegg.
Tickets are £10, including drinks and nibbles, from the church.
SUTTON-IN-CRAVEN: The village's Green Hut Theatre Company is staging the American musical The Pajama Game.
It is the story of love amongst the textile workers at a little factory in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Babe - played by Emma-Jayne Byers - is the feisty boss of the Grievance Committee at the Sleep Tite pajama factory where workers are demanding a seven-and-a-half cent pay rise.
She is attracted to Sid (Andrew Steele), the new supervisor, whose task is to keep the machines working despite the girls’ increasing dissatisfaction with big-talking boss Mr Hasler (John Cahill).
But the course of true love doesn’t run smoothly as the workforce is heading for a strike.
The show opened at Sutton Village Hall last night, with repeat performances tonight, tomorrow and Saturday at 7.15pm. To book tickets, visit suttongreenhuttheatre.co.uk or call 01535 632289.
* Accordion maestro Thom Hardaker will perform at St Thomas's Church on Wednesday.
Sutton man Thom, who studied in St Petersburg under a world-renowned accordion tutor, will be in action from 7.30pm.
His programme will include music by Astor Piazzolla, Phil Cunningham, Bach and Rossini.
Tickets are available from the Kings Arms pub in Sutton, or by calling 01535 636854 or 07736 228951.