Home Events

for Tue., May 7
  • Qmmunity

    Nightlife & Parties

    The Drag Queen Game Show

    Come on down, potential contestants, for the draggiest game show in all of Austin. Hosted by the terrific twosome of Celia Light and Mars, this interactive event pulls its audience into myriad mini-games based around a different theme every Tuesday. Enjoy games like trivia, speed dating, and Boobie Bingo. Whether you stumble in after a movie or go for the love of the game, this party will bring all the fabulous prizes your heart desires – like a drag queen ribbing you. Wait, is that not what everybody wants? – James Scott
    Tuesdays, 8-10pm
  • Arts

    Comedy

    The Floor Is Lava

    Yowch! That’s what you’d be saying, you know, if you touched your tootsies to a lava-flooded floor. Thankfully, Austin is not located next to an active volcano … or is it? This scripted comedy sketch show is a fresh flow of bright burning comic talent sure to scorch expectations with “fun, loose, and experimental” material. Don’t believe me? Read this totally real quote from the comedy show’s Instagram bio: My ‘comedies’ are complete *poop emoji* compared to the greatest sketch group to ever sketch! –William Shakespeare. I can’t believe ol’ Willy really said that! But no one has ever lied on Instagram before, so best believe this show’s hot stuff. – James Scott
    Tuesdays
  • Music

  • Music

  • Music

  • Music

    This Side of Grey, melotheory, Rental Space

    Tue., May 7, 9pm. $5 cover (21+).
  • Music

    Trevor Helt

    Tue., May 7, 7pm
  • Community

    Events

    Tuesday Trivia at St. Elmo Brewing

    Test your wits with Trivia 512.
    Tuesdays, 7pm. Free.
  • Qmmunity

    Nightlife & Parties

    TuezGayz

    It's good music; it's queer vibes; you know what it is, babe: It's Tuezgayz!
    Tuesdays, 10pm. $5 after 10:30.
  • Music

    Votive, Senza, Naedr, McBryde

    Tue., May 7, 8:30pm. $12 cover (21+).
  • Arts

    Visual Arts

    WPA: Elizabeth Olds

    Minneapolis-born and -raised, Elizabeth Olds lived to a sturdy 94 but didn’t get the attention she deserved in her lifetime. The Harry Ransom Center’s new exhibit, which opened Feb. 3 and runs through July 14, aims to rectify that with a first-of-its-kind look back at more than 100 of her prints, paintings, drawings, and illustrations from the 1920s to the 1960s. Of particular note: her depictions of social and political change from her time as a Works Progress Administration printmaker. Want to go deeper? Drop in for one of the daily docent tours. – Kimberley Jones
    Feb. 3-July 14
  • Music

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