More Things To Do in and around York as Colour & Light illuminates winter nights. Hutch’s List No. 4, from The York Press

Dame for a laugh anew: Graham Smith returns to the pantomime stage with Shiptonthorpe Community Theatre

A PANTO dame’s return and another’s transformation into a dog top Charles Hutchinson’s  cultural picks for early February and beyond.

Pantomime of the week: Shiptonthorpe Community Theatre in Robin Hood And The Babes In The Wood, Shiptonthorpe Village Hall, Shiptonthorpe, near Market Weighton, today, 3pm and 7pm; Sunday, 2pm; February 6 and 7, 7pm

GRAHAM Smith, Rowntree Players’ pantomime dame from 2004 to 2022, pulls on the frocks once more after a three-year hiatus in the York guest house proprietor’s debut for East Riding company Shiptonthorpe Community Theatre.

He plays Nellie Nickerlastic in Richard Waud’s production of Robin Hood And The Babes In The Wood, joined in principal roles by Neil Scott’s King Richard, Toby Jewsen’s Robin Hood, Chris McKenzie’s Little John, Henry Rice’s Will Scarlett, Paul Jefferson’s Friar Tuck, Alison Rosa’s Sheriff of Nottingham and Chloe Jensen’s Maid Marion. Tickets: 07922 443639 or email richardwaud@yahoo.co.uk.

Femme Fatale Faerytales: Dark feminist re-telling of age-old classic

A homecoming, a haunting, a holy rebellion: Femme Fatale Faerytales present Mary, Mary, Fossgate Social, Fossgate, York, February 1 and 2, 8pm (doors 7pm)

MARY, Mary quite contrary, wouldn’t you like to know how her garden grows? Step into the fairytale world of Femme Fatale Faerytales as Sasha Elizabeth Parker unveils a dark, lyrical, feminist re-telling of an age-old classic. Part confession, part ritual, part bedtime story for grown-ups, Mary, Mary invites you to meet the woman behind the nursery rhyme in all her wild, untamed, contrary glory.

In her York debut, expect enchanting storytelling, poetic prophecy and a subversive twist on the tales you thought you knew on two intimate, atmospheric nights in one of York’s cult favourite haunts. Box office: wegottickets.com. Box office: wegottickets.com.

Kym Marsh’s Hedy, left, and Lisa Faulkner’s Allie in Rebecca Reid’s updated version of Single White Female, on tour at the Grand Opera House, York

World premiere tour of the week: Single White Female, Grand Opera House, York, February 3 to 7, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Wednesday and Saturday matinees

SCREEN actress, 2010 Celebrity MasterChef winner, TV presenter, chef and cookery book author Lisa Faulkner returns to the stage for the first time in 21 years in Rebecca Reid’s darkly humorous stage adaptation of psychological thriller Single White Female, now updated to the social-media age.

Faulkner’s recently divorced mum Allie is balancing being a single parent with the launch of her tech start-up. When she decides to advertise for a lodger to help make ends meet, Kym Marsh’s Hedy offers her a lifeline, but as their lives intertwine, boundaries blur and a seemingly perfect arrangement begins to unravel with chilling consequences. Box office: atgtickets.com/york.

Colour & Light: Illuminating Clifford’s Tower and York Castle Museum from February 4

Illumination launch of the week: Colour & Light, York Castle Museum and Clifford’s Tower, February 4 to 22, 6pm to 9pm

YORK BID is bringing Colour & Light back for 2026 on its biggest ever canvas. For the first time, two of York’s landmark buildings will be illuminated together when York Castle Museum and Clifford’s Tower become a combined stage for a fully choreographed projection show, transforming the Eye of York.

Presented in partnership with York Museums Trust and English Heritage, the continuous, looped, ten-minute show will bring York’s historic characters to life in a family-friendly projection open to all for free; no ticket required.

Matt Tapp’s ‘Wild’ Bill Hickok and Helen Gallagher’s ‘Calamity’ Jane in Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company’s Calamity Jane

Musical of the week: Joseph Rowntree Theatre Company in Calamity Jane, Joseph Rowntree Theatre, York, February 4 to 7, 7.30pm plus 2.30pm Saturday matinee

HELEN Gallagher’s tough talkin’, gun-totin’ heroine ‘Calamity’ Jane and Matt Tapp’s former peace-officer ‘Wild’ Bill Hickok lead director Sophie Cooke’s cast for Sammy Fain and Paul Francis Webster’s musical Calamity James.

Deadwood’s citizens are content with their ways of life: supporting their fort of soldiers and socialising at the beloved Golden Garter saloon. However, when a new face blows in from the Windy City to create a stir, friendships will be formed, long-time loyalties tested and perhaps even secret love revealed. Box office: 01904 501935 or josephrowntreetheatre.co.uk.

Alexander Flanagan Wright in Wright & Grainger’s Helios at Theatre@41, Monkgate

Ancient & modern  drama of the week: Wright & Grainger in Helios, Theatre@41, Monkgate, York, February 5, 7.30pm

EASINGWOLD theatre-makers Alexander Flanagan Wright and Phil Grainger begin their new partnership with Theatre@41 by re-visiting Helios, wherein a lad lives half way up a historic hill, a teenager is on a road trip to the city in a stolen car and a boy is driving a chariot, pulling the sun across the sky.

In Wright’s story of the son of the sun god, Helios transplants the Ancient Greek tale into a modern-day myth wound around the winding roads of rural England and into the everyday living of a towering city. “It’s a story about life, the invisible monuments we build to it, and the little things that leave big marks,” he says. Box office: tickets.41monkgate.co.uk.

Robin Simpson in rehearsal for Catherine Dyson’s The Last Picture, premiering at York Theatre Royal Studio

Solo show of the week: The Last Picture, York Theatre Royal Studio, February 5 to 14, except February 8, 7.45pm, plus Wednesday and Saturday 2pm matinees

ROBIN Simpson follows up his sixth season as York Theatre Royal’s pantomime dame by playing a dog in York Theatre Royal, ETT and An Tobar and Mull Theatre’s premiere of Catherine Dyson’s The Last Picture, directed by John R Wilkinson.

Imagine yourself in a theatre in 2026. Now picture yourself as a Year 9 student on a school trip, and then as a citizen of Europe in 1939 as history takes its darkest turn. While you imagine, emotional support dog Sam (Simpson’s character)will be by your side in a play about empathy – its power and limits and what it asks of us – in a story of our shared past, present and the choices we face today. Box office: 01904 623568 or yorktheatreroyal.co.uk.

The poster for Super Furry Animals’ summer concert at York Museum Gardens

Gig announcement of the week: Live At York Museum Gardens presents Super Furry Animals, York Museum Gardens, July 11

FUTURESOUND completes the line-up for its third Live At York Museum Gardens season with Welsh art-rock icons Super Furry Animals, celebrating more than 30 years together with multicolour hits and off-piste deep cuts, lovingly handpicked from  nine albums.

Gruff Rhys, Huw Bunford, Cian Ciarán, Dafydd Ieuan and Guto Pryce are returning to the concert platform in 2026 for the first time in ten years. Joining them in York will be special guests Baxter Dury, Los Campesinos!, Divorce and Pys Melyn. Tickets for SFA, along with Liverpool’s  Orchestra Manoeuvres In The Dark on July 9 and South Yorkshire ’s Self Esteem on July 10, are on sale at futuresoundgroup.com/york-museum-gardens-events.

Super Furry Animals: Playing first concerts in ten years in 2026, including Live At York Museum Gardens headline show

Graham Smith finds new home for dame duty in Shiptonthorpe pantomime Robin Hood And The Babes In The Wood

Graham Smith: Playing Dame Nellie Nickerlastic in his first pantomime since 2022

GRAHAM Smith, once the doyen of Rowntree Players pantomime dames in York, is moving on to panto pastures new with Shiptonthorpe Community Theatre after a three-year hiatus from the frocks and quips.

Yorkshireman Graham, who lives on farmland near Wilberfoss, will revel in the moniker of Dame Nellie Nickerlastic in Richard Waud’s production of Robin Hood And The Babes In The Wood at Shiptonthorpe Village Hall in two clusters of performances from tomorrow to Sunday, then next Friday and Saturday.

“It came about by accident,” says Graham, who lives 11 minutes from Shiptonthorpe.  “I put some left-overs from a building project on Nextdoor [the neighbourhood app], and this guy got in touch and said he’d have them.”

The conversation led on to a recollection of Graham’s days in the Rowntree Players panto and a suggestion that he should contact the Shiptonthorpe group. “I thought it would be too late for this year’s show, but I rang Richard [Waud] anyway and I think he thought I might see it as beneath me, but it certainly isn’t,” he says.

“Over the years I’ve done touring pantomimes; I’ve done school-hall pantomimes; I’ve even done a convent in North Wales. They were days spent in and out of a van, doing maybe two shows a day.

“I said to Richard, ‘all I’m concerned about is making sure I do my best and that everyone does theirs – happy days’. I offered to play in the comedy duo, the baddie, whatever, but for the first scene in the auditions Richard asked me to read for the dame…then the second scene, then the opening to Act Two!

“Then Richard asked, ‘Does anyone else want to have a go?’, and someone said, ‘What? After that!’. When I got home, there was a message on my phone from Richard to say, Graham, we’d love you to do it’. He must have contacted me within ten minutes of finishing the auditions.”

Graham first played the dame for Rowntree Players in 2004, appearing as Dottie Trott in Jack And The Beanstalk at the Joseph Rowntree Theatre, after two years in the panto’s comedy duo, and retained the role until 2022.  

On resuming pantomime’s most celebrated part, he says: “I think the dame is a specialist role. I’m fortunate enough to be fairly quick-witted, so if anything unexpected comes up, rather than ‘corpsing’ [the theatrical term for an actor breaking out of character into uncontrollable, unscripted laughter on stage], I’ll usually have a quick response.

“That’s why I played dame for Rowntree Players for so many years and why Shiptonthorpe were keen for me to do it this time.”

Graham, who has worked in the York hospitality trade for almost 30 years as proprietor of the Georgian House & Mews in Bootham, had first donned the dame’s dresses away from a theatre stage. “Bizarrely, it was at a friend of mine’s hair salon called Balta in York,” he recalls. “They did a pantomime for charity as one of his workforce was theatrical and would put on a show for four of five nights for customers and friends at the salon, which he wrote and directed.

“I believe we did three of them, and I took to the dame like a duck to water. I’m very comfortable in my own skin being camp on a stage  – and the bizarre thing is that, as the dame, I find I can flirt equally with the men and the women in the audience.

“I was only thinking about this the other day: how the dame can have women giggling just as easily as making the blokes feel embarrassed!”

Joining Graham in Waud’s cast will be Neil Scott, Shiptonthorpe’s former “beloved and renowned dame”, now taking on a regal new role as King Richard; Toby Jewsen as Robin Hood; Chris McKenzie, Little John; Henry Rice, Will Scarlett; Paul Jefferson, Friar Tuck; Alison Rosa, Sheriff of Nottingham, and Chloe Jensen, Maid Marion.

Further roles in the Alan P Frayn-scripted show will go to Robbie Howe as Snivel and Phil Featherstone as Grovel; Sienna Cayton, Ella; Pelham Dennis, Sam; Carolyne Jensen, Poet; Sarah Burnell, Minstrel, and Shirley Rice, Lady Guy.

“For a village-hall show, the set looks fantastic, the digital lighting system, sound and mixing desk are all of a high standard and all the cast will have radio microphones,” says Graham.

“In rehearsal, Richard has been quite a laidback director about making little changes. For the way I speak, as a Yorkshireman, some of the lines don’t work, sometimes the words jar, so Richard has been happy for me to make adjustments.”

 Discover the results from tonight when Graham is dame for a laugh once more.

Shiptonthorpe Community Theatre in Robin Hood And The Babes In The Wood, Shiptonthorpe Village Hall, Shiptonthorpe, near Market Weighton, tomorrow, 7pm; Saturday, 3pm and 7pm; Sunday, 2pm; February 6 and 7, 7pm. Tickets are available from Richard Waud on 07922 443639 or by emailing richardwaud@yahoo.co.uk.

Graham Smith to take on new panto damehood as Nellie Nickerlastic in Shiptonthorpe Community Theatre’s Robin Hood And The Babes In The Wood

Graham Smith in shocking pink as saucy Dame Dora Di Sorderlie in Dick Whittington in December 2021 in his Rowntree Players days

GRAHAM Smith, once the doyen of Rowntree Players pantomime dames, is moving on to panto pastures new with Shiptonthorpe Community Theatre.

Graham, who lives near Wilberfoss, will revel in the moniker of Dame Nellie Nickerlastic in Richard Waud’s production of Robin Hood And The Babes In The Wood at Shiptonthorpe Village Hall.

Neil Scott, Shiptonthorpe’s former “beloved and renowned dame”, will take on a regal new role as King Richard while Henry Rice will step into the boots of Will Scarlett, one of Robin Hood’s Merry Men.

Joining them will be Toby Jewsen as Robin Hood; Chris McKenzie,Little John; Paul Jefferson, Friar Tuck; Alison Rosa, Sheriff of Nottingham, and Chloe Jensen, Maid Marion.

Further roles will go to Robbie Howe as Snivel and Phil Featherstone as Grovel; Sienna Cayton, Ella; Pelham Dennis, Sam; Carolyne Jensen, Poet; Sarah Burnell, Minstrel, and Shirley Rice, Lady Guy.

Show times will be Friday, January 30 2026, 7pm; Saturday, January 31, 3pm and 7pm; Sunday, February 1, 2pm; Friday, February 6, 7pm, and Saturday, February 7, 7pm.

“Get ready for laughter, adventure and festive fun as the curtain rises on another unforgettable pantomime season,” says the director.

Tickets are available from Richard Waud on 07922 443639 or by emailing richardwaud@yahoo.co.uk.