Tickets
There are a number of different ways of obtaining tickets for our productions.Online
Click here to book tickets online We now offer credit card facilities for booking tickets when using our online option. Please note that a booking fee applies to all online orders.
By email
You can book tickets by emailing boxoffice@pottersbartheatrecompany.co.uk
By post
You can download our booking form here Return address and payment details are contained within the form.
By phone
Our box office number for all shows is 07985 542204. Our box office is now open!
Upcoming Show Information
Potters Bar Theatre Company is proud to be presenting Guys and Dolls. This is based on Damon Runyon's short story 'The Udyll of Miss Sarah Brown'. The musical is based around Nathan Detroit, the organiser of the oldest established permanent floating crap game in New York, who bets fellow gambler Sky Masterson that he can't make the next girl, or 'doll', he sees fall in love with him. That happesn to be Sarah Brown a devoted member of the local Salvation Army. The show is full of memorable numbers and we meet an array of characters including Miss Adelaide, long suffering fiance of Nathan, the hotbox girls, the crap shooters and the Salvation Army. The show is set in New York and Havana around 1950 giving some Latin spice! All ends well in a double wedding. Box Office details as above - tickets priced at £15 for adults and£10 for under 18s, with senior citizen concessions at £12 for the Tuesday evening and Saturday matinee performances.The Winslow Boy is a brilliant play by one of England's most loved and respected playwrights poses a thought provoking and interesting moral dilemma that is still relevent today. How far should a person go to defend what he believes is right? And do the ends justify the means? Ronnie is sent home from Naval Academy accused of stealing. His father, Arthur, believes him to be innocent but, in battling for justice for his son, Arthur ruins his health and almost destroys the whole family financially and emotionally. By the end of the play years have gone by and Ronnie himself has virtually forgotten the whole episode. Was it worth it? Come and make your own mind up.
Box office now open



