If YOU MISSED it last time you have another chance to see Hexagon Theatre Company’s production of Pyrenees, by David Greig, Scotland’s foremost playwright. The play was so well-received Hexagon have decided to give it one more airing, this time at the Cotswold Playhouse.

High in the Pyrenees, a middle-aged man is found unconscious in the snow. In one hand he clasps a briefcase full of euros; in the other, the scallop shell traditionally carried by pilgrims to Santiago de Compostela.

He has no papers, no passport, and no memory of who he is or how he got there. And he speaks English.

A woman from the British Consulate in Marseilles is sent out to see if she can establish his identity.

On the terrace of a hotel, under the intrusive gaze of the proprietor, she and the man talk.

Gradually they begin to work out a story for him and as they do so they find themselves connecting on a deeper level.

The appearance of another hotel guest threatens to undermine their conclusions.

Comment by audience member in December: “Great performance last night at Beacon Hall Painswick by Hexagon Theatre. "Had me riveted the whole time. Thought-provoking and funny. An excellent night out.”

Friday 5th February at 7.30pm at The Cotswold Playhouse.

Tickets available from www.cotswoldplayhouse.co.uk or on the door.