Event Details
Cost: $42 – $55
4th Line Theatre
779 Zion LineMillbrook, ON L0A 1G0 Canada + Google Map
705-932-4445
View Venue Website
“Wild Irish Geese”
Written by Megan Murphy
August 4 – 29, 2026
Directed by Kim Blackwell
Previews: August 4, 5
Opening Night: Thursday, August 6
Tuesday to Saturday at 6 pm
With an added Monday performance on August 24th
Back by popular demand after its sold-out 2025 premiere, “Wild Irish Geese” returns to the 4th Line stage with a powerful story of migration and starting over. In the 1820s, Peter Robinson led an emigration scheme that brought hundreds of Irish families to Canada as they fled famine and poverty. More than 2,000 arrived in Scotts Plains—later known as Peterborough—and began their lives anew. “Wild Irish Geese” reflects on the courage, displacement, and enduring spirit of those who journeyed far to survive. Through hardship and hope, these new Canadians forged a fragile beginning in a complex colonial landscape. Planting deep roots in the Peterborough area, these Irish emigrants now have tens of thousands of descendants both locally and across the globe.
To purchase tickets, call the box office at 705-932-4445, or toll-free at 800-814-0055, visit us online at www.4thlinetheatre.on.ca or in-person at 9 Tupper Street, Millbrook, ON L0A 1G0.
The Winslow Farm site opens at 4 PM on performance dates – bring a picnic, purchase food on-site, visit the concessions stand (selling snacks and alcoholic and non-alcoholic beverages) before the show. Festival Fridays at the Farm features food vendors and artist talks/expert chats before the show. The show starts at 6 PM and runs approximately 2.5 hours with a 15-minute intermission.
EPIC IN NATURE. Idyllic, rural, and quintessentially Canadian, each year the 4th Line Theatre Company presents Canadian plays on the Winslow Farm in Millbrook, Ontario – written by and about Canadians; small town stories or broad national sagas that touch a nerve in all of us.
4th Line Theatre’s mandate is to preserve and promote our Canadian cultural heritage through the development and presentation of regionally-based, environmentally-staged historical dramas.