A chilling award winning play is coming to the Rosehill Theatre on October 18, for one night only.

'The Haunting of Blaine Manor' will have the audience quaking in their seats as they are taken back to the 50s and the era of black and white ghost stories.

The production has filled theatres up and down the country and has been referred to as the new Woman in Black or Agatha Christie meets The Haunting, winning The Salford Star Best Play of 2017 Award.

Writer/director Joe O'Byrne, from Bolton, known across the north west for a series of critically acclaimed films and plays, Tales from Paradise Heights, said: "It is a period piece set in 1953 paying homage to the black and white ghost stories of the fifties and sixties including the characters therein - the likes of Vincent Price, Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee, Peter Lorre etc and to M R James, England's greatest greatest ghost story writer."

The play follows renowned American parapsychologist Doctor Roy Earle, famous for discrediting hauntings and exposing fake mediums, as he is invited to attend a seance in Blaine Manor, said to be the most haunted building in England.

However, Earle's arrival awakes something horrific within the manor's walls. As a raging storm closes them off from the outside world, Earle and his companions find that what is waiting within the manor is not nearly as horrific as what has entered with them.

The Haunting of Blaine Manor comes to the Rosehill Theatre on October 18. Tickets, at £15, are available from the box office on 01946 692422 or rosehilltheatre.co.uk