SOME tickets still remain for a searing drama at Wokingham Theatre this month.
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolfe, by American playwright Edward Albee, will raise funds on its first night charity performance for Promise Inclusion.
The Wokingham charity supports people with a learning disability and/or autism, their families and carers.
The play is a tense three-act 1960s masterpiece filled with dark humour and ferocious psychological games.
A famous classic, it is an expertly crafted piece of theatre that should have audiences on the edge of their seats.
College professor George and his wife Martha, drunk after a party, invite a young colleague and his wife to stop by at their home for a nightcap.
There, the unhappy older couple treat their guests to a cruel display of disunity.
Drinks flow, inhibitions melt, and a long-held secret is revealed during what can only be described as a rollercoaster of an evening.
The charity performance is on Wednesday, April 29, at 7.45pm.
Tickets cost £16, with all sales going directly to Promise Inclusion.
For tickets, people should call: 0300 777 8539.
For information, visit: promiseinclusion.org and wokinghamtheatre.org.uk










































