SKIPTON: Theatre Hullabaloo will present two performances of Bear and Butterfly on Friday, January 19, in Skipton Town Hall.

Puppetry, live music and beautiful storytelling combine in this charming tale about love, loss and friendship.

Performances of Bear and Butterfly will take place at 11am and 1.30pm.

Tickets, which cost £5 and £3.75 for under 18s, are available from the box office in Skipton Town Hall or by calling 01756 792809.

Boxwood and Brass, specialists in late 18th century and early 19th century wind music, will perform at 7.30pm on Tuesday, January 23, in Skipton Town Hall.

The ensemble features Emily Worthington and Oscar Arguelles on clarinet, Ursula Monberg and Kate Goldsmith on horn and Robert Percival and Takako Kunugi on bassoon.

The programme features Beethoven's Sextet Op. 71, Mozart's (arr. Percival) Serenade K.388 in C minor, Weber's Adagio and Rondo and Mozart's (arr. Percival) Symphony No. 39 in E flat.

To book tickets, ring 01756 799912 or visit skiptonmusic.org.uk

Skipton Film Club will screen Lady Macbeth at 5.15pm on Sunday at the Plaza Cinema, on Sackville Street.

The film, starring Florence Pugh, is a story of adultery and murder, adapted from the Russian novel Lady Macbeth of Minsk, but is now set in 19th century Northumberland.

Members and non members are welcome.

Skipton Folk Unplugged will present a performance by Hebric, back together after more than 40 years, on Monday at the Narrow Boat, on Victoria Street. The concert starts at 8.30pm.

There will be a singers night on Monday, January 15.

SETTLE: The show 2 Talking Heads by Alan Bennett, which are part his series of ground-breaking monologues, will be performed at 7.30pm on Thursday, January 18, in Settle Victoria Hall.

The first monologue is A Lady of Letters, and is story about Miss Ruddock, whose civil liberties are dear to her.

She asserts those rights by writing letters, but one of these missives pushes her to the brink, with unexpected but liberating consequences.

The second monologue, Bed Among the Lentils, is a story about Susan, an alcoholic and nervous vicar's wife who has to travel into Leeds to go to the off-licence because of her debts with the local shopkeeper.

She distracts herself from her ambitious and vainly insensitive husband and his doting parishioners by conducting an affair with a nearby grocer, Ramesh, discovering something about herself in the process.

Tickets cost £8 in advance or £10 on the door.

The John Godber film Last Laugh will be screened 8pm on Friday, January 19, in Settle Victoria Hall.

The story follows college lecturer Martin Dawson and his hope to escape from obscurity by having a screenplay made into a ?lm. Tickets cost £5 in advance or £8 on the door.

A Burns Supper, featuring entertainment by Bill Adair, will be held at 7.30pm on Saturday, January 20, in Settle Victoria Hall. All tickets cost £17.

Grammy Award-winning singer and songwriter Amy Wadge and roots singer and songwriter Luke Jackson will perform in concert at 8pm on Saturday, January 27, in Settle Victoria Hall.

Tickets for all of these events are available online at settlevictoriahall.org.uk or by ringing the box office on 01729 825718.

The new winter exhibition, The Poetry of Tom Twisleton, runs until January 25, 2018, at the Gallery on the Green.

APPLETREEWICK: Somerset based singer-songwriter Reg Meuross with support from Plumhall will perform a concert at 8.30pm on Saturday, January 13, in the Cruck Barn at The Craven Arms.

This concert is part of the Reg Meuross's Two Albums Tour, encompassing two album releases: Faraway People and Songs About A Train.

Tickets cost £10 and are available online at wegottickets.com/event/388668

BARNOLDSWICK: Piano player Ben Waters will perform in concert on Saturday, January 14, at the Barnoldswick Music and Arts Centre, on Rainhall Road.

Doors open at 7.30pm and the concert starts at 8pm.

To book tickets for these events, ring 07712 628366 or 01282 813374.

CARLETON-IN-CRAVEN: The first event of 2018 at Iron Horse Country Music Club, which meets in Carleton Social Club, will be held on Saturday, January 13, when Harrogate vocalist and guitarist Chris Raddings makes a welcome return to the club.

Doors open at 7.15pm and tickets cost £6 on the door.

GIGGLESWICK: Dunkirk, the 2017 war film written, directed, and co-produced by Christopher Nolan which depicts the Dunkirk evacuation of World War Two, will be screened at 3.30pm on Sunday, January 21, in the Richard Whiteley Theatre.

Tickets cost £5.50 in advance or £7.50 on the door.

A live performance of King Lear will be screened by Shakespeare’s Globe at 7pm on Thursday, January 25, in the Richard Whiteley Theatre.

Tickets cost £13 (concessions £11) in advance or £15 (concessions £13) on the door.

To book tickets to either of these events, visit giggleswick.ticketsolve.com or ring 01729 893180.

GLUSBURN: Cine North will screen the film Hidden Figures at 7.30pm tomorrow in the Glusburn Institute Community and Arts Centre.

As the United States races against Russia to put a man in space, the story is about NASA finding untapped talent in a group of African-American female mathematicians who serve as the brains behind one of the greatest operations in US history.

Based on the true life stories of three of these women, known as "human computers", the films tells how they rise through the ranks of NASA alongside many of history's greatest minds tasked with calculating the historic launch of astronaut John Glenn into orbit.

To book tickets, ring 01535 630223 or visit gicac.org.uk

GRASSINGTON: Grassington Community Cinema will screen two films on Saturday at the Octagon Theatre in Grassington Town Hall.

Cars 3 for children will be shown at 4.30pm and My Cousin Rachel for adults will be screened at 7.30pm.

Tickets cost £2.50 for children and £5 for adults for each show and they can be booked in advance online at grassington.uk.com or in Grassington Hub, or pay on the door. Ask about the cinema's loyalty discount scheme.

Bar, popcorn and ice cream will be available and all are welcome.