Balley Cymru’s The Light Princess tells the story of a princess afflicted by constant weightlessness when it is performed at the New Vic, Newcastle-under-Lyme on Monday.
Adapted from Mark Haddon’s book by Simon Stephens, the National Theatre’s production of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time bounds into Birmingham Hippodrome from Monday until Saturday.
Accident-prone thesps battle against the odds to reach their final curtain call in Mischief Theatre’s The Play That Goes Wrong at the Theatre Royal, Nottingham from Monday until Saturday.
Audiences will try to discover whodunit when Bill Kenwright’s production of Ruth Rendell’s A Judgement in Stone, featuring Andrew Lancel, Sophie Ward, Mark Wynter, Deborah Grant, Shirley Ann Field, Antony Costa and Ben Nealon, visits Wolverhampton Grand from Monday until Saturday.
A Watermill Theatre, Newbury double bill of Shakespeare plays tours to the Everyman Theatre, Cheltenham, with Twelfth Night playing on Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, and Romeo and Juliet on Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday.
Regan De Wynter Williams Productions stages Sasha Regan’s all-male version of Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Mikado or the Town of Titipu at Malvern Theatres from Tuesday until Saturday.
Written and performed by Jack Burrows, Born Thirsty was first produced as part of the Mansfield Palace Theatre Write Track competition in 2011 and has been redeveloped for a new performance at Create Theatre, Mansfield on Thursday and Friday.
As part of Lichfield Festival, Morbid Curiosities allows the ghouls of the 19th century to crawl from their crypts in Don’t Go Into the Cellar, an “original theatrical anthology of a selection of Poe’s finest feats of fear-filled fiction”, as Erasmus Darwin House, Beacon Street, Lichfield on Friday.
OperaUpClose performs Puccini’s La Bohème, winner of an Olivier Award for best new opera production in 2011, at Derby Theatre on Friday.
Heartbreak Productions is on the road with two of its outdoor shows, Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew at Ragley Hall, Alcester, Warwickshire on Friday and David Kerby-Kendall’s adaptation of Frances Hodges Burnett’s The Secret Garden at the Shugborough Estate, Milford, Staffordshire on Sunday.
A new adaptation of Flann O’Brien’s surreal novel about the nature of time, death, and existence, Miracle Theatre’s The Third Policeman aims to arrest audiences outdoors at mac Birmingham on Saturday.
Newcastle-under-Lyme’s New Vic revives its production of Laura Eason’s adaptation of Jules Verne’s Around The World In 80 Days which continues until Saturday before it goes on a national tour.
Stafford Festival Shakespeare continues with The Tempest in the grounds of Stafford Castle until Saturday 8 July.
Split Second Productions’ double bill of Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing and A Midsummer Night’s Dream continues at Berkeley Castle, Gloucestershire until Tuesday 11 July.
Groups of up to four people are able to experience the stories of three generations of Northampton football fans in The Twelfth Player, a site-specific performance at Northampton Town’s Sixfields stadium, which continues until Wednesday 12 July.
Cameron Mackintosh’s new production of Boublil and Schönberg’s musical Miss Saigon continues at Leicester’s Curve until Saturday 22 July.
At the Royal Shakespeare Company in Stratford, in the Royal Shakespeare Theatre Titus Andronicus continues until Saturday 2 September, Antony and Cleopatra until Thursday 7 September and Julius Caesar until Saturday 9 September; in the Swan Theatre, Oscar Wilde’s lyrical one-act play Salomé, marking 50 years since the decriminalisation of homosexuality in England and Wales, continues until Wednesday 6 September and Phil Porter’s new play Vice Versa (or the Decline and Fall of General Braggadocio at the hands of his canny servant Dexter and Terence the monkey) continues until Saturday 9 September.