| | | East Lothian |

BritEvents.com | The Brunton Theatre.

REGISTERLOG IN
SEARCH

The Brunton Theatre

VenueVenue MapReviewsLocal InfoPrevious EventsPhotosSeating Plan
Ladywell Way, Musselburgh, East Lothian, East Lothian E216AA

The Brunton Theatre is located at Ladywell Way, Musselburgh, East Lothian, East Lothian.

Below is a list of what's on at The Brunton Theatre - if you're organising an event at this venue, it's free to add an event.


Map Location




Your Reviews


Please feel free to add your own review of the brunton theatre by adding a comment below.

Previous events at The Brunton Theatre

the brunton theatre Seating Plan

The seating plan for the brunton theatre is not currently available.

Seating plan for the brunton theatre



Events at The Brunton Theatre




Events in Musselburgh


Check out our list of what's on in Musselburgh, including music, concerts, theatre, days out, attractions, sport, visual arts and much more.



Venue Information

Venue
The Brunton Theatre
Address
Ladywell Way
Musselburgh
East Lothian
E216AA
Box Office

Most Popular


FEATUREDitch the workout - join the Zumba Party

Zumba - the fitness dance craze, is taking over the nation, and classes are popping up everywhere, and there's a good chance that one is happening near you. BritEvent's Amanda Arnold, who just happens to be a Shrewsbury-based Zumba instructor, tells us more about the fitness phenomenon.

FEATUREBritain's prettiest inhabitied places

From chocolate-box villages of quaint thatched cottages, to old medieval churches steeped with history, it's no surprise that Britain has some of the prettiest places in the world. Tourists flock from all corners of the globe to see picturesque villages such as Castle Combe, St Ives, Clovelly and Portmeirion. BritEvents' Lucy Middleton has the tough job of whittling down the prettiest inhabited places in Britain.

FEATUREYou and What Army band interview

Telford-based electro-rock band You and What Army describe themselves as "having unforgivingly catchy trance synths that soar over tectonic-plate-shatteringly heavy guitar riffs, dancefloor-destroyingly awesome basslines and lowrider-cruisingly phat beats, with the narrated apocalypse rapped, sung and screamed wildly into the fray." That's one massive claim, so BritEvents' Lucy Middleton catches up with the four piece band to find out more about their epic sound.

FEATUREThe Mystery of British Crop Circles

In the late 1970s, strange circles began to appear in fields throughout the English countryside. Isolated cases had been witnessed before, but this was becoming too common to ignore. A freak of nature, or intelligent design?