When a house party gathers at Gull’s Point, the seaside home of Lady Tressilian, Neville Strange finds himself caught between his old wife Audrey and his new flame Kay.
Category: Ann McColgan-Clark
Ann has been involved in drama from the age of 8. On leaving school, she was a founder member of Portadown Youth Drama club, and then the Gateway Drama Club. She moved to Belfast in 1986 becoming an active member of the Southbank players (formerly Osborne Players) appearing in over 18 productions until she moved to London in 2006. In London she auditioned and was accepted as a member of the Acting Company for the Tower Theatre, based in Islington and Fleet Street, appearing in 4 productions. She retired from a successful career in banking to Wimborne, joining Wimborne Drama Productions with whom she appeared in 8 productions.
Sadly, Ann passed away to cancer on 26th December 2022 and is much missed by her friends in the group.
Live Theatre is Back with Agatha Christie Thriller
After a gap of 18 months, we return with classic Agatha Christie thriller Towards Zero
Single Spies
Single Spies is the collective name for this double bill of one-act plays about two of the most celebrated spies of modern times: Guy Burgess and Anthony Blunt.
The Winslow Boy
Set in 1912, the play follows the efforts of the Winslow family to clear the name of 14 year old Ronnie Winslow, expelled from naval college for allegedly stealing a five-shilling postal order.
Travels With My Aunt
Henry Pulling leads a boringly conventional life as a retired bank manager when he meets his long-estranged Aunt Augusta at his mother’s funeral.
The Ghost Train
A ghostly driver, sudden deaths and a travelling parrot make this 1920s thriller an unnervingly hilarious exploration of our capacity for belief in the supernatural.
Shadowlands
The love story of C.S. Lewis – Oxford don and author of The Chronicles of Narnia and The Screwtape Letters – and American poet Joy Davidman.
The Hollow
An unhappy game of romantic follow-the-leader explodes into murder one weekend at The Hollow, home of Sir Henry and Lucy Angkatell, arguably Christie’s finest comic grande dame