Home Events

for Fri., July 1
  • Mozart's World Coffee Festival

    This year’s Mozart's free World Coffee Festival will feature samples from the 30 countries that provide the beans for Mozart’s special blends. Guests can taste the sweetness of a Colombian coffee drink brewed with sugar water and served with a chaser of lemonade. And yes, “ Tinto con Aqua Panella” will be served free of charge to the attendees this year. Music and Fun!
    Sat. Oct 4-5  
    Mozart's Coffee Roasters
  • Oktoberfest in Fredericksburg

    Prost! To Gemütlichkeit and Cheer Since 1981
    Oktoberfest Celebrates 45 Years in the Polka Capital of Texas! For 45 unforgettable years, Fredericksburg’s Oktoberfest has brought the spirit of Bavaria to the heart of Texas. This beloved family-friendly festival is packed with three days of lively music, joyful dancing, hearty toasting, and warm Gemütlichkeit.
    Oct. 3-5  
    Downtown Fredericksburg | Marktplatz
Recommended
  • Music

    Wild Seeds, Ugly Beats

    Wild Seeds, led by singer-songwriter-cum-music journalist Michael Hall, emerged at the forefront of the New Sincerity movement in 1984 with a roots rock sound bolstered by Hall’s angst-ridden, Lou Reed-inspired songwriting. Only Hall could have come up with a delightful skewering of stupid macho cock-rock with the perfect title, “I’m Sorry, I Can’t Rock You All Night Long.” This Friday night, we see them shudder back to life temporarily at the ABGB, accompanied in battle by the Ugly Beats, Austin’s long-running kings of Sixties-style garage rock.
    Fri., July 1, 9pm
    • Music

      Bigg Robb, Peterson Brothers Band

      With ample sauce in his game to justify the extra Gs and Bs in his name – hell, give him a third of each – Bigg Robb remains a showman’s showman. The dapper, booty-lovin’ ladies’ man with a penchant for sequined suits and talk box singing came up in Ohio institution Zapp, going solo after the immaculate family band ended in a shocking murder-suicide. Since 2000, Bigg Robb has maintained a relentless discography of character-driven Southern soul that sets up his engaging live show. Brotherly Bastrop guitar & bass wrecking crew Peterson Brothers burn it down first.
      Fri., July 1, 8pm  
    • Community

      Events

      RTX 2022

      A podcasting, gaming, and animation convention bringing the best entertainment and community together for a wild weekend. See your fave Rooster Teeth personalities and visit panels, live shows, meet & greets, exhibits, and more.
      July 1-3. Badges start at $52.  
    • Arts

      Theatre

      BLKS

      "Waking up to a shocking and personal health scare, Octavia and her best friends go on a crusade to find intimacy and joy in a world that could give a fuck less about them or their feelings. This 24-hour blitz explores what it is to be a queer blk woman in 2015 New York, how we survive and save ourselves from ourselves." This new work of theatre by Aziza Barnes is presented by New Manifest Theatre and Salvage Vanguard.
      Fri.-Sun., 8pm. $15.  
    • Music

      Flux Pavilion

      British DJ/EDM producer best known for his contributions to the early 2010s peak in dubstep’s popularity. Kanye West and Jay-Z notably sampled “I Can’t Stop” on their 2011 collaborative album, Watch the Throne.
      Fri., July 1, 10pm  
    • Qmmunity

      Arts & Culture

      Geekgasm Revue: Beep Bop Boop

      Update your operating system at this risqué robo-burlesque show featuring three of the Bat City Bombshells (Michelle Moon, Hibiscus Bloom, and Roc Gaude) plus Amelie Ahmose, the Great Flying Cervix, Harley Brimstone, Bella Cella, Jojo Jezebel, Cimmeria Steel, Holliday Cash, and Dev Developpe.
      Fri., July 1, 7pm
    • Arts

      Theatre

      Heartbreak House

      Different Stages returns to live performances with this George Bernard Shaw comedy classic in which a woman joins a house party at the home of the eccentric Captain Shotover and causes a stir with her decision to marry for money rather than love. Directed by Will Douglas, featuring Kelsey Mazak, Karen Jambon, Norman Blumensaadt, Kristin Fern Johnson, Katherine Schroeder, Jamie Rogers, Steven Fay, Beau Paul, Michael Lucus, and Craig Kanne.
      Through July 2. Thu.-Sat., 7:30pm; Sun., 6pm. $15-35.  
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      ICOSA's Window Dressing: Longing

      Blair Gallacher has combined the private, internal narratives of friends, acquaintances, and strangers – gathered via social media, public flyers, meeting spaces, and other delicate moments, and rendered with gouache, watercolor, oil pastels, paper, and found materials – into one poetic and united landscape. It's on view 24/7 in the gallery's front window.
      Opening reception: Fri., July 1, 7-9 pm
    • Arts

      Theatre

      Picasso at the Lapin Agile

      "Einstein and Picasso walk into a bar … " encapsulates this intellectual (but also goofy) comedy by Steve Martin, presented here by City Theatre. Featuring Wray Crawford, Tom Swift, Anne Hulsman, Timothy Allen, Holley Garrison, Kyle Romero, Joshua Nunez, Payton Trahan, Angelina Castillo, and Sebastian Garcia. Oh, and here's what our critic thought of the show.
      Through July 17. Thu.-Sat., 8pm; sun., 3pm. $15-25.  
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      Pride Art Reception & Open Studio

      Court Lurie is offering deep discounts on all her artwork at this open-studio celebration of Pride Month. "As a queer, out, Jewish artist, I am excited to be able to make my work more accessible," says the artist.
      Open studio: July 1-3, noon-6pm. Reception: Sat., 6-10pm. Free.  
    • Arts

      Books

      Robyn Jamison: The Magic of Modern Art

      The artist and author will sign copies of her latest book, subtitled How To Love Modern and Contemporary Art. And she'll be doing this at Half Price on North Lamar, where there's a whole bunch of other relevant titles to check out, too.
      Fri., July 1, 1pm
    • Arts

      Theatre

      Running Bear

      In this new drama from Raul Garza – marking Hyde Park Theatre's return to live performance – a successful middle-aged man returns to his hometown for a well-earned victory lap and finds himself on a walking bridge with a 17 year-old girl with quite a story to tell. Directed by Rosalind Faires and featuring Mical Trejo and Macy Butler. And here's what the Chron's Bob Abelman thought of the show.
      Through July 16. Thu.-Sat., 8pm. $22-24.  
    • Film

      Special Screenings

      The Handmaiden (2016)

      Park's subversive and unforgettable queer thriller was inspired by Sarah Waters' novel Fingersmith.
      Fri., July 1, 3:30pm, 10:25pm  
    • Arts

      Theatre

      The Sound of Music

      Here is Dave Steakley's reimagining of the beloved musical classic – with its Tony-, Grammy-, and Oscar-winning score – that brings the Von Trapp family singers to life upon Zach Scott Theatre's Topfer stage, a stage now transformed into a lively biergarten.
      Through July 24. Wed.-Fri., 7:30pm; Sat.-Sun., 2:30 & 7:30pm. $35 and up.  
    All Events

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