What's on in Dumfries and Galloway

Browse local events, performances and purchase tickets.

Search for events by:

  • using the search bar
  • filtering by type of event, location or month

Òran

Combining spoken word, lyrical storytelling and a pulsating electronic live score, this is the thrilling story of Òran and his journey to rescue his best friend from the Underworld.

Should he arrive there, Hades might grant him the chance to lead his friend home…but at what cost?

Paul Zerdin - Jaw Drop

Get ready for a night of laughter and jaw-dropping entertainment with the Paul Zerdin - Jaw Drop UK Comedy Tour!

Roald Dahl's Matilda The Musical JR

The Guild of Players are delighted to welcome M&N Productions to the Theatre Royal Dumfries for this fundraising show. Profits from this production will directly support the Theatre Royal's 'Keep Theatre Live' campaign to raise £30,000.

Round the Horne

From 1965 to 1968 there wasn’t a bigger radio programme in Britain than the ground-breaking Round the Horne. For half-an-hour every Sunday afternoon, audiences of up to 15 million people would gather around the wireless to listen to Kenneth Horne and his merry crew get up to all sorts of mischief.

The Lovely Bones

Presented by Selgovae Theatre Company

Selgovae Theatre Company are delighted to present our production of The Lovely Bones. The principal cast is made up of Higher Drama students who set themselves the challenge of tackling this powerful and moving story.

Many of these young performers have been with us since the very beginning of our junior company, Wee Mousie Drama School, and it is a joy to see them step into such ambitious roles.

The Secrets of Barrenbrook

Step into a groundbreaking immersive experience where the line between reality and story blurs. In Barrenbrook, deception lingers in the air, alliances are fleeting, and truth is never what it seems.

Under Milk Wood

"Under Milk Wood is arguably Dylan Thomas's most famous and best-loved work. First performed in New York in 1953, this "Play for Voices" was described by the poet himself as "prose with blood pressure".