Bingley Little Theatre's eight-play programme for 2002-03 has just been published.

BLT start the new season in mid-September with Ronald Harwood's play Quartet. First staged in 1998, the play centres on a respectable retirement home for opera singers and the impulses that drive their relationships.

That's followed in late October with an Agatha Christie whodunnit called And Then There Were None, co-directed by actress Gilly Rogers.

Dan Goggin's musical comedy Nunsense is the December offering. The action is set in a New York girls' school run by five nuns that is about to stage a performance of Grease.

Five plays follow in 2003 - Marc Camoletti's farce Don't Dress for Dinner; Noel Coward's Blithe Spirit; C P Taylor's wartime drama And a Nightingale Sang and Frederick Knott's splendid Dial M for Murder.

The year ends with Jim Cartwright's The Rise and Fall of Little Voice, a play with music, about how a small time impresario tries to exploit the imitative talents of the shy and retiring LV. Michael Caine rightly won an Oscar for his interpretation of Ray Shears in the acclaimed movie version.