Winnie the Pooh

This event has ended

Pavilion Theatre, Wednesday 17th January - Sunday 21st January

It's Winnie-The-Pooh’s birthday, but not everyone is celebrating! The mean and nasty Queen Bee is fed up with Pooh stealing her honey, so she has an evil plan to get rid of him forever!

Join Arclight Drama Studio and your favourite characters, Tigger, Piglet, Kanga, Roo, Eeyore, Christopher Robin and of course, Pooh, as they try to save the Hundred-Acre Wood.


Date:
Wednesday 17th January - Sunday 21st January
Time:
7.30pm (matinee Sat/Sun 2.30pm)
Price:
€15 - €19
Address:
Pavilion Theatre, Marine Road, Dún Laoghaire, Dublin, Ireland

Google Map of Pavilion Theatre, Marine Road, Dún Laoghaire, Dublin, Ireland

You might also like...

What's on

Bealtaine Festival

Various Locations

Bealtaine is Ireland’s national festival which celebrates the arts and creativity as we age. The festival is run by Age & Opportunity, the leading national development organisation working to enable the best possible quality of life for us all as we age. This year Age & Opportunity unveils an all-new festival theme, ‘Lust for Life’, which reflects a familiar experience for many older people. To celebrate the theme Bealtaine Festival has commissioned a new essay, ‘Lust of Life’, by writer, former Labour TD and Bealtaine Festival ambassador, Liz McManus, which explores the n

What's on

Dublin Dance Festival

Various Locations

This May, DDF shares dance that takes a stand, ditches convention and claims its strength. Dance that embraces the lows, celebrates the highs and welcomes our future. This year, dance demands to be heard. It’s time to DANCE OUT LOUD. The Dublin Dance Festival believes in the power of dance to move, connect and inspire change. With so much of Ireland’s culture tied up in language and the past, dance has a unique power to explore and express what it is to be human, right now.

What's on

International Dublin Gay Theatre Festival

Various Locations

The Dublin Gay Theatre Festival is an annual event, celebrating contribution of gay people to theatre, past and present. The Festival was founded in 2004 to mark the 150th anniversary of the birth of Oscar Wilde, in his native city. With an emphasis on new or recent international and Irish works with a broadly gay theme or relevance, the Festival has grown to become the largest event of its type in the world. The Festival creates new opportunities for visibility and affirmation for existing and emerging gay artists and theatrical works. The Festival’s criteria for inclusion into the prog