• ‘Derby Live’s – Dirty Dancing

    Markeaton Park Craft Village The Craft Village, Markeaton Park,, Derby, Dersbyshire

    The popular Outdoor Theatre and Cinema Season will return to Markeaton Park this July and August. It will bring a fantastic selection of al fresco entertainment for all ages to enjoy, amid the beautiful surroundings of the park. Derby LIVE and Derby Parks will be bringing audiences two stirring Shakespeare plays, a fairytale-inspired puppet performance perfect for families, and showings of two classic films. Lose yourself in the Osar-winning coming-of-age tale Dirty Dancing (12). on Saturday 1 August. In the summer of 1963, teenager Baby (Jennifer Grey) goes on a family vacation to Kellerman’s holiday resort. Things are pretty tame until she meets dance teacher Johnny (Patrick Swayze) who teaches Baby how dance and – more importantly – how to love. Film starts at 9pm and tickets are £16. So gather your friends and family, pack up your chair and bring a picnic as you enjoy what the 2026 Outdoor Theatre and Cinema Season has to offer. Councillor Nadine Peatfield, Derby City Council Cabinet Member for City Centre, Regeneration, Strategy and Policy, said: Derby’s favourite summer tradition is back! This year, we’re especially proud to spotlight three incredible local theatre companies, and I’m so excited to see two truly classic movies back on the big screen. Grab your friends, pack a picnic, and join us at Markeaton Park for an unforgettable night in the heart of one of the city’s most beautiful landscapes. Tickets for Outdoor Theatre and Cinema Season are now available from the Sales and Information Centre at 19 Chapel St, Derby, DE1 3GU, by phone on 01332 255800 or on the Derby LIVE website.

  • Ashbourne Summer Programme – Ashbourne Classic Car Festival

    Ashbourne Market Place. Buxton Road,, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, United Kingdom

    Ashbourne is preparing for a summer packed with family-friendly entertainment, community celebrations and town centre activity as local volunteers, businesses and organisations come together to launch a major programme of events in the town’s newly regenerated Market Place. Following the completion of the town’s regeneration improvements and wider £15 million Levelling Up investment, the refurbished Market Place is set to become a vibrant focal point for community life, helping attract visitors, support independent businesses and create new reasons for people to spend time in the town centre. Three major Sunday events have now been confirmed for Summer 2026: Ashbourne Classic Car Festival – Sunday 2nd August Ashbourne Big Fashion Day Out – Sunday 6th  September The events are being coordinated by Ashbourne Town Team and Discover Ashbourne CIC in partnership with Ashbourne Town Council and the Ashbourne Festival, alongside local businesses, volunteers and community organisations, helping bring new energy, footfall and activity into the town centre throughout the summer months. The programme aims to showcase Ashbourne as a vibrant destination market town whilst encouraging residents and visitors alike to enjoy the newly improved public spaces created through the regeneration programme. The refurbished Market Place is already beginning to establish itself as an important hub for community events and activities, with the regular Makers Market now taking place in the town centre and future plans also being explored for a Food Market and After Dark Market. All three summer events are designed to have strong family appeal, creating welcoming and inclusive days out for all ages whilst supporting local cafés, pubs, retailers and hospitality businesses across the town centre. Organisers say the event is not only about celebrating dogs and the local community, but also about making full use of the newly upgraded public spaces and helping drive increased footfall into Ashbourne over the summer season. The Ashbourne Classic Car Festival will then bring a stunning display of classic and vintage vehicles into the town centre during the height of the summer season, creating a major attraction for visitors and motoring enthusiasts from across the region. Special recognition is being given to Ashbourne Car Enthusiasts, who are leading the organisation and coordination of the Classic Car Festival event. Anne Wright, Chair of Ashbourne Town Team, said: “These events are about far more than simply putting on entertainment. They are about creating pride, energy and confidence in Ashbourne and making full use of the fantastic new Market Place space that has been created through the regeneration programme. “We want Ashbourne to be known as a vibrant, welcoming and creative town which supports local businesses and gives people reasons to visit, stay longer and enjoy everything the town has to offer. “There has been a huge effort from local volunteers, businesses and organisations to help make these events happen and we are incredibly grateful for all the support being shown across the community.” Organisers are now encouraging local traders, hospitality businesses and community organisations to get involved, support the events and make the most of the increased visitor numbers expected throughout the summer. Sponsorship opportunities, stallholder enquiries and volunteer support are also being welcomed. Tickets for the Ashbourne Dog Day Out show classes will be available to purchase on the day, with advance tickets also available from Henmores in Ashbourne and Peak Village. Further details about all summer events can be found on the “What’s On” pages of the Discover Ashbourne website and through participating businesses’ social media channels over the coming weeks.

  • Summer Evening Concert with Darley Dale Band

    Barringtons Station Road, Darley Dale,, Matlock,, Derbyshire,, United Kingdom

    Spend a summer evening enjoying live music with Darley Dale Band at Barringtons in Darley Dale. Featuring a varied programme of brass band favourites, light entertainment and popular melodies, this concert offers a wonderful opportunity to experience live music in a relaxed and welcoming setting. The band's engaging performances continue to attract audiences from across Derbyshire and beyond. Sunday 9 August | 7:00pm | Barringtons, Darley Dale About Darley Dale Band Darley Dale Band is a friendly and ambitious community brass band with a long history dating back to 1880. Drawing musicians from across the Derbyshire Dales, the band performs regularly at local events, festivals and community celebrations. More Darley Dale Band Performances • Remembrance Sunday at the Whitworth Centre – Sunday 8 November at 3:00pm • Winster Christmas Lights – Sunday 6 December from 5:30pm • Christmas Concert with Holymoorside Choral Society – Saturday 12 December at 7:30pm To get intouch , click here

  • Will you be attending the Ashover Show?

    Ashover Show Rectory Fields,, Ashover,, Derbyshire,, United Kingdom

    In the late 1980’s the late Mr Lance Waud prepared and published a booklet for Ashover Show entitled “Ashover Show – 50 years on”. Mr Waud had been a very well respected member of the agricultural community and an advisor for the “War-Ag” which had been tasked by the government during and immediately after the Second World War to advise farmers on how best to maximise farm production and reduce the risk to the British isles from any blockade of imported food. Much of this brief summary is derived from the information collected and recalled by Mr Waud and his copyright and that of his Estate is gratefully acknowledged. This years show will be on  Wednesday 12th August 2026 at Rectory Fields, Ashover, Derbyshire, S45 0BA 2020 brings us to the 89th Annual Show, but the Ashover Agricultural and Horticultural Society in its present form can trace its origins back to 1924 when a meeting was held in Kelstedge to resurrect the agricultural events that had been held locally in both Ashover and Kelstedge in the form of small village shows and ploughing matches but which had been interrupted by the First World War. Some of those were recorded back into the 1880’s. Amongst the farmers taking part in that first gathering was Mr Paul Brailsford from Alton who became the first Secretary, Mr J Bassett who was elected Chairman, and Mr J E Toyne, the local school Headmaster who was vice-chairman and Treasurer. The inaugural President was Mr W W Chesterman of Eastwood Grange, whilst amongst the committee members were representatives of other notable farming families including Mr William Bradley and Mr Alan Prince both from Kelstedge, and the Rev J B Nodder who farmed and owned the Rectory Fields where the first Show was held on 16th September 1925. Also represented were the Beardow, Chappell, Jenkinson, Lomas, Nightingale and Tomlinson families, several of which are still represented on the Committee today, albeit in some cases 3 or even 4 generations down the family line. The continuous line of support and involvement from generation to generation is one of the main strengths of Ashover Show, and ensures its ongoing success. The first show had a good attendance with admission costing 1 shilling (5p in today’s money) and the Ashover Brass Band entertained the crowd. By 1926 the cost of entry had gone up to 1s2d (6p) and this helped to increase the reserves of the Society to £52.9s.5d. Funds were further helped by the transfer of the remaining funds form the old Kelstedge Show amounting to £11.7s.6d. The Show has remained on the Rectory Fields every year apart from 1927 when it moved to nearby Eastwood Hall Farm for one year, and it became so popular that the Ashover Light Railway ran special trains from Clay Cross as the Show was fixed to coincide with the Wakes Week Holiday. In more recent times special bus services were put on to bring visitors from both Clay Cross and Chesterfield, but in the past few years this facility has been withdrawn by the local bus companies, making the provision of additional car parking more and more important with each year that passes. There have been very few years when it has not been possible to hold a Show, principally during the Second World War, but also caused by outbreaks of Foot & Mouth Disease most recently in 2001, but in 2007 a disease outbreak in Surrey just a few days before the Show caused the cancellation of the cattle and sheep classes, but the Show went ahead without them. After the end of the war in 1945 the Show appointed it’s first Show Manager, Mr George Robinson, an auctioneer closely involved with Chesterfield Cattle Market, and upon his sudden death in 1968 that role was taken over by Mr Stanley Winnington, who held the post of either Show Manager or Show Marshall for over 50 years. Sadly Stanley passed away early in 2012 but the baton of Show Marshall is now in the very capable hands of Paul Shardlow who represents yet another of the local farming families who have several generations of service to the Show. The Show has enjoyed or endured all extremes of weather from blazing sun to torrential downpours, and even survived a tragic fire in one of the cattle marquees on the night before the Show in 1997. In spite of that an overnight clear up meant that very few people visiting the Show the next day would have been aware that anything untoward had happened. The Society has moved forward by becoming a Limited Company in 1998 and has appointed a Health & Safety Officer, a Biosecurity Officer and each year has to agree an action plan with the local Authority in case of a major incident or emergency.  In spite of the necessary professionalism of this approach, the Show remains entirely dependant on a large number of volunteers who spend several days helping to set out  the layout, put up the rings, pens and so on, and man most of the jobs during the course of Show day, take everything down afterwards and litter pick and clean down the fields, ready for the ground to revert to farmland by the Saturday after the Show.  Attendances continue to increase, and now crowds of over 16,000 are expected, drawn by the deliberate policy of the Show Committee to preserve the essentially Agricultural and Horticultural nature of Ashover Show, augmented in the very recent past by the addition of the Craft Marquee, the food hall, known as Appetising Ashover, and most recently a poultry Show. As much as the world has progressed since 1924, Ashover Show remains as one of the most popular Agricultural Shows in the country, enjoys tremendous loyalty and support from its members, supporters and visitors, and intends to continue to offer outstanding value and a full day’s entertainment on the second Wednesday in August for very many years to come. For more information about

  • Mr Tumble is coming to Derby!!

    Valliant Live 2 Colyear Street,, Derby,, Derbyshire, United Kingdom

    CBeebies megastar Mr Tumble is bringing music, laughter and party moments to Vaillant Live at the CBeebies House Party Live tour this summer.  The beloved CBeebies character, created and played by BAFTA award-winning Justin Fletcher MBE, famous for his starry waistcoat, spotty bag and bow tie, joins the five-star family show alongside superstars of CBeebies Mister Maker, Duggee, Rebecca Keatley and Nigel Clarke. It’ll be a family fun-packed stage show with sensational songs, stupendous surprises and mega moments. Get ready to rave…with dancing, singing, streamers, giant jellies and bubbles galore….and of course, a CBeebies Bedtime Story. This is the perfect activity for the six-week holiday – tickets available at vaillantlive.co.uk.