A Dinner, A Drama and A Dram

Click here to download the
flyer.
Òran Mór invites you to the second season of
a Dinner, a Drama and a Dram, every Wednesday evening for eight weeks beginning
3rd October 2007
Enjoy a two course dinner, a coffee and a complimentary malt
whisky, along with a short play from the phenomenally successful a Play, a Pie
and a Pint season.
£25 per ticket.
To book, please call the events team on 0141 357 6200,
or click the ticket icon next to relevant performance in the below programme.
Doors 7.00p.m.
Dough by David Ian Neville
5th March 2008
There's a bitter taste in the air at Albie’s bakehouse. Once the hub of the community, now like many of its older customers it’s struggling to survive. But as hungry re-developers sniff around, Albie bakes on determined not to give up.
Flowers of the River by Dave Anderson
12th March 2008
Flowers of the River is part two of Dave Anderson’s ‘Seven Ages’ cycle. A sequel to A Walk in the Park (Winter) and a prequel to Tir nan Og (Autumn). An homage to Lewis Carroll, Flowers of the River talks of Spring and the growth, pain, bewilderment and joy of Youth. Intensely musical and surreally funny, Flowers of the River is in the tradition of Tall Tales.
Out on the Wing by DC Jackson
19th March 2008
Out On The Wing by D C Jackson is set in the studio of On The Wing - Glasgow's third most listened to football phone-in show, on the night a prominent SPL footballer has come out as gay. Harassed producer Lindsey attempts to rein in the hosts Phil and Rab as well as their callers in this riotous examination of an ugly side to the beautiful game.
The Apprentice by Martin McCardie
26th March 2008
On a hot stormy night, two assassins, Carter and Johnson are forced to stay in a motel room. The storm interrupts their plans and both men are forced to re-evaluate their task. Carter, the older man, remembers how life was before he became who he is, Johnson is desperate to prove who he can become. In this most peculiar relationship, the apprentice and the tradesman offer each other a glimpse of an alternative future. But only once their target has been neutralised.
God’s Hairdresser by Sean Hardie
2nd April 2008
Eduardo believes in cutting and blow drying , Irma believes in Divine Wrath and the Day of Judgement. Seven thousand feet up among the volcanoes of Guatemala God's having a bad hair day.
An Advert for The Army by Kieran Lynn
9th April 2008
A struggling filmmaker unwillingly begins his latest project, to direct a television advertisement encouraging young people to join the Armed Forces. With sand in his loafers, a bought of stage fright and a demanding leading lady, production begins on what he hopes will be his best failure yet.
Gods Are Fallen and All Safety Gone by Selma Dimitrijevic
16th April 2008
Gods Are Fallen and All Safety Gone is a play about attempts. Attempts to entertain, to teach, to soothe, to feed, to raise and be patient, but most of all to survive another Sunday afternoon.
Drunk Woman Looks At The Thistle by Denise Mina
23rd April 2008
Karen Dunbar performs a timely update of Hugh MacDiarmid's masterpiece: a chippy, pineappled steamer has her say on what’s synthetic about scots, the impossibility of rhyming 'Caledonian Antisyzygy', and needing the lavvy really, really badly.
|