A medium, a mistress and around a dozen Murder victims appear in the new season from Bingley Little Theatre.
Among the eight productions are classic plays such as Blithe Spirit, And Then There Were None, Dial M for Murder and The Rise and Fall of Little Voice.
The season begins with a new comedy by leading playwright Ronald Harwood - Quartet - set in a home for retired opera singers (September 16-21).
The home's annual concert to celebrate Verdi's birthday is upset when a resident's ex-wife arrives.
Agatha Christie's whodunnit And Then There Were None follows the misfortunes of ten people invited to a remote island by a mysterious host (October 28-November 2).
Nunsense is a musical comedy following five nuns organising a school production of Grease (December 9-14).
Don't Dress for Dinner is a farce that follows a man as he packs off his wife so he can spend the weekend at a country cottage with his Parisian mistress (January 13-18).
And Blithe Spirit is Noel Coward's comedy about a man haunted by the ghost of his ex-wife, who keeps arranging "accidents" so he will join her (February 24-March 1).
And a Nightingale Sang is a wartime drama about a working class Newcastle family and its relationships (April 7-12).
Dial M for Murder is the famous thriller about a man who marries for money, then plots to murder his wife when she falls in love with someone else (May 19-24).
The Rise And Fall Of Little Voice is Jim Cartwright's play about a shy girl with a beautiful voice who hides in her bedroom singing along to her late father's records (June 23-28).
Tickets will be on sale from late August at Travel Options in Bingley, or by phoning 01274 752000.
p The Holme Singers have been invited to travel across the moors to perform as part of a September Serenade.
Yeadon and District Male Voice Choir is presenting a concert at Yeadon Methodist Church on September 7.
Book tickets for the 7.15pm show by phoning 0113 257-8078. Cost is £4 for adults, £2 50 for under 16s.
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