Find out about the feast of entertainment on offer at Oxford’s new Old Fire Station.

YOU will have heard how Oxford’s Old Fire Station is reopening tomorrow to great fanfare.

Now no longer just a theatre, club and bar, it also houses a café, performance spaces, dance studios, artists’ workshops, a gallery and a shop selling original work by local artists. The building will also house Crisis Skylight Oxford to provide education, training and employment services for the homeless. But what YOU want to know is what’s on. So here’s our guided tour of what’s on over the upcoming months.

l THEATRE: First up is UnderConstruction who will perform at the opening of the OFS, bringing to life a watch room, a dormitory, a fireman’s mess and more during the guided tours.

Playing Fields and Five Inch Heels, a tale of teen team work, friendship love and women’s football opens on November 11 and 12. Thirteen year-old Tanya Phillips is painfully in love with footballing heart-throb Jason McAndrew. When she discovers a local women’s football team share the same pitch, she decides to join the team to see more of him.

This will be the premiere of the play and will mark the opening of The New Old Fire Station Theatre. The action is set on a football pitch with a goal for a backdrop and features a 25 strong cast.

Saturday’s show on November 12 will feature a guest performance of the World Cup signature tune, Nessun Dorma, sung by Mike Woodward of Opera Anywhere. Call the box Office on 01865 881480 or 07803 954362.

Breaking the Code is an award-winning play about British mathematician Alan Turing, who was a key player in the breaking of the German Enigma code at Bletchley Park during World War II. The play links Turing’s cryptographic activities with his attempts to grapple with his homosexuality. From November 13. Call 01865 305305 or see ticketsoxford.com The Oxford Actors Network presents four new plays over two weekends. Expect Homage to Rattigan, Hamsters Revenge, Roman Fever and Relish in January. Go to oxford-actors.net for more details.

lART: The gallery’s opening exhibition will be Urban Art, inspired by the city and city life which explores contemporary culture and political issues through painting, drawing and printmaking, featuring the work of Harry Simmonds, Ian Hodgson and Pam Glew.

A permanent artwork has been installed in the reception area of OFS called Change. To commemorate the launch of the new building, local artists Emma Reynard and Rachel Barbaresi were appointed to create an impressive permanent installation piece, working in collaboration with homeless people in Oxford, taking inspiration by photographing, drawing and collecting materials in the surroundings of the University of Oxford’s Botanic Garden.

lMUSIC: The legendary Catweazle Club showcases some of Oxfords’ finest musicians, songwriters and performance artists on Christmas Light Night, December 2. See catweazleclub.org Dennis Rollins’ Velocity Trio comes to town on December 3. Expect new jazz sounds with heady driving energy.

Call 01865 305305 for details.

l DANCE: Dynamic, original dance theatre which explores identity, stigma and life come to fruition in Dance Mania’s double bill Fragments: Labels & Life and If you look away from me on Saturday, November 19.

lSHOWS: A craft fair run by Oxfordshire Craft Guild will run from December 6-24.

* Main picture, The Catweazle Club will bring together some of Oxford’s finest musicians; from top, jewellery by Leonie Bennet of Oxford Craft Guild; work by Harry Simmonds in the Urban Art exhibition; Salsa Fuego Party Night