WHEN things go bump on the night in Malvern this Christmas, it might not be Santa Claus.

A classic MR James ghost story, "Oh Whistle, And I'll Come To You", will be performed at St Peter's Church, Cowleigh, as a seasonal chiller from the New Perspectives team

The play's director, Theresa Keogh said: "This is a brand new stage adaptation by visionary playwright David Rudkin.

"Rudkin’s spine- tingling adaptation uncannily marks both 80 years since the death of M.R. James, and Rudkin’s own 80th birthday year."

The play follows Professor Parkins who, on a peaceful coastal retreat, discovers an ancient whistle with a soul-stirring inscription urging him not to blow it. After ignoring this warning, the professor starts to see and hear things that go against his rational judgement. It soon becomes clear that Parkins is far from alone.

Theresa said: "There are few stories as beloved as M. R. James' ghost story, but David Rudkin's version doesn't disappoint. He has taken M. R. James’ nightmare universe and crafted a uniquely fresh and chilling world; a tour de force of writing uniting both writers at the height of their powers. A play for the most devoted M.R. James fans and newcomers alike.”

New Perspectives’ Artistic Director, Jack McNamara, added:

“Following on from our international success with Rudkin’s, The Lovesong of Alfred J Hitchcock, both here and in New York, we are delighted to be working with this incredibly distinctive writer again. Oh Whistle is a brilliantly simple ghost story, yet Rudkin manages to bring out such depth, humour and complexity in his new version."

David said: “With M.R. James, when his horror comes onstage – the demon, apparition, or whatever – we have to ask, and try to answer, what is it? What does it want? James empowers us to see in almost any object thereafter an unspeakable menace.”

Mark Jardine, who previously worked with New Perspectives in their one man show How Steeple Sinderby Wanderers Won The F.A. Cup is returning in the role of the unfortunate Professor Parkins. Jack Wilkinson is also returning to New Perspectives too in the role of Hobbis, after working on a rehearsed reading in Eyam, Derbyshire, of another David Rudkin text, Here We Stay.

The show will be performed at St Peter's Cowleigh, on Friday, December 2, from 7.30pm.

Tickets and further details on, 01684 438692.