Home Events

for Thu., May 29
  • Maudie's Moonlight Run by The Trail Conservancy

    Join The Trail Conservancy for Maudie's Moonlight 5K Run! The scenic route winds along Lady Bird Lake and the Butler Trail, leading to the ultimate post-run fiesta with legendary Tex-Mex, ice-cold margaritas, and live music! Complete details on the run route, registration, and volunteer info are available online.
    Thurs. June 5, 8pm-10pm  
    Auditorium Shores
  • 17th Anniversary Celebration & Annual Rosé Garden Party

    Join the celebration & enjoy an afternoon of pink sips, floral vibes & sunshine in every glass. Crisp, dry, sparkling & everything in between. Tickets include tastings of a curated selection of 15 Rosé wines from around the globe, refreshing gourmet bites & lively entertainment amidst a stunning garden setting inside & out!
    Sat. May 31, 3pm-7pm  
    House Wine
Recommended
  • Film

    Special Screenings

    ATX TV Festival

    As the small screen continues to get bigger and bigger, the ATX TV Festival keeps its finger on the pulse with its 14th fest. The weekend-long event brings premiere screenings, cast reunions, informative panels, and more so you can learn all about your favorite TV moments. Highlights include a chat with late-night host Seth Meyers, Brett Goldstein taking about writing for Shrinking, a reunion of The Leftovers cast and creators, and much more. – Blake Leschber
    May 29-June 1
    • Qmmunity

      Nightlife & Parties

      Adventure Time Drag Show

      What time is it? Time to see a tribute drag show to one of the 2010s wackiest cartoons, with hosts Cassie Opeia and Greta Grip presiding over a packed lineup of adventurers, princesses, Ice Kings, and more.
      Thu., May 29, 9pm
    • Qmmunity

      Arts & Culture

      Juno Birch: The Probed Tour

      Her hair? BIG. Her dress? CHROME. And her skin? Uh, YEAH: It’s freakin’ blue as hell. Drag star Juno Birch spins on over to Austin in her space-age saucer, carrying with her tales from the cosmos (Manchester). Having performed drag since 2018, Juno claims her inspiration sources include – but are not limited to – Sixties housewives, the Muppets, and Squidward. That offbeat inspo base blends perfectly with opener Roxy Castillo’s comedy, which features more than a few references to getting weird with it. – James Scott
      Thu., May 29
    • Qmmunity

      Nightlife & Parties

      Middle School Dance Party: Mileypalooza

      Revisit all the iconic Miley moments through this sonic journey spun by DJ Ed West. You’ll travel from Hannah Montana hits to her new release Something Beautiful, and even make a stop at her Black Mirror bop “On a Roll.”
      Thu., May 29, 9pm
    • Music

      No Idea Festival Day 1 w/ Ken Vandermark & Mabel Kwan

      Anchored by Chicago saxophonist Ken Vandermark and Austin native Mabel Kwan, Chris Cogburn’s No Idea Festival emerges from the shadows with the Vernacular Residency. Night one features a film screening of Vandermark doc Musician, a Vandermark/Kwan duo set, and a panel discussion. Night two includes a Vandermark master class, the Mabel Kwan/Juan García duo, the saxophonist’s Texas Ensemble (with various Young Mothers and former Sons of Hercules drummer Kory Cook), and a set of music by founding AACM member Fred Anderson and Dallas avant trumpet pioneer Dennis González, whose son Stefan co-leads the band with Vandermark. Heaven for musical improv junkies. – Michael Toland
      Thu., May 29, 7pm
    • Film

      Special Screenings

      Perfect Days (2024)

      Wim Wenders’ films, through wildly different settings and characters, tend to focus on similar existential questions: How do we deal with loneliness? What does love provide us? How to find joy in a senseless world? But his 2023 character study of a Japanese toilet cleaner seems to posit an answer rather than a question: Hirayama, though spending most of his days alone doing an unglamorous job, seems content finding meaning in being present for the small pleasures of living. It’s an ancient answer owed to Zen Buddhism, but Perfect Days has reinvigorated it for a generation of productivity-obsessed dissociative phone-zombies. If what you seek is a harmonious existence, there may be nothing you can do to achieve it – you might just have to choose to see it. – Lina Fisher
      Thu., May 29
    • Film

      Special Screenings

      Popcorn (1991)

      As pop culture historian Joe Bob Briggs sagely proclaimed, the drive-in will never die – and neither will the late-night horror host. So it’s time to welcome High Priestess of Horror, Roxy Midnite, back from the crypt as the Roxy Horror Picture Show comes to its new home at the Violent Crown. Grab your popcorn as she unreels Mark Herrier’s 1991 tribute to the work of exploitation pioneer William G. Castle. You know, the guy that put buzzers under seats and flew ghosts around the theatre? Now, imagine if those stunts were a real killer… – Richard Whittaker
      Thu., May 29
    • Arts

      Theatre

      Since We’ve No Place to Go

      Bandwagon Arts first set this story on stage back in February, where attendees helped fund this play’s full production through ticket sales. All produced and ready to perform, cast members Chanse Solis, Talya Hammerman, Madison Powell, Bryan Headrick, Amelia Hobson, and Caleb Clemons take on Benajah T. Baskin and Talya Hammerman’s tale of grief, change, and moving on with shows starting this Thursday, May 29. Catch this “unseasonably chilly tragedy” before it blows away with the last bit of nice Austin weather. – James Scott
      May 29 - June 1
    • Film

      Special Screenings

      Top Gun: Maverick (2022)

      Where better to enjoy Tom Cruise running than on the chill waters of Lake Austin? Obvi you’d be roaming the lakeside sips and seating Mozart carries year-round anyway, but with on-the-water viewing options like paddleboard rentals ($20) or two-person floater chairs ($30), this’ll make for splish-splashing time at the movies. Plus, Mozart’s offers concessions so your hunger for popcorn will be satisfied as well as your hunger for indistinct patriotism. – James Scott
      Thu., May 29
    All Events
    • Music

    • Community

      Events

      The Traitors Watch Party

      Ever the contrarian, I prefer The Traitors UK’s cast of normies versus the U.S.’s bench of backstabbing reality TV all-stars pulled from Survivor, Big Brother, and the Real Housewives franchise, but whichever flavor you choose of this reality competition show (there are about 20 international versions in rotation), you’re bound to get addicted. The biggest barrier to entry – who the heck has a Peacock subscription? Vacancy Brewing does! Enjoy new episodes with other faithful on Thursdays at 8pm. The nearness of beer could occasion a drinking game – maybe every time somebody wears a truly ridonk hat? That’ll get you plastered … and possibly drunk-buying a plane ticket to the scenic Scottish Highlands, the real star of the show. – Kimberley Jones
      Thursdays at 8pm
    • Music

    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      Aisha Imdad: “The Allegorical Gardens”

      Gardens loom large in legend. Think the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, the Shalimar Gardens, the Garden of Eden: each bursting with symbolic beauty, dripping with promises of life and growth. Artist Aisha Imdad explores the lush intricacies of this verdant imagery. Her watercolor works delve into literary and mythological gardens, inspired by Indian, Mughal, and Persian frescos. Each invites closer introspection, a desire to immerse in the vibrant world of her works. Each intricate blossom speck, or gilded turn of a bird wing, vibrates with idealized life. Imdad’s art portrays the possibilities of paradise. – Cat McCarrey
      Through July 3
    • Music

      Allisen & the Wy's Guys

      Thu., May 29, 6:30pm. No cover (21+).
    • Music

      American Football, Teethe [outside]

      It was 26 years ago when a band from Urbana, Illinois, recorded an album in four days – and then split shortly after the recording. But the self-titled album gained a cult following, and later became one of the era’s most influential emo records. The band didn’t release another LP until 2016. Now they’re here. Woo!
      Wed.-Thu., May 28-29, 8pm. Sold-out.
    • Film

      Special Screenings

      American Graffiti (1973)

      One of the biggest myths in Hollywood is that George Lucas became a big deal with Star Wars. Well, only if you don’t count the massive critical and commercial success of his five-time Oscar-nominated ode to the teenage California car culture in which he grew up, all set to a diegetic soundtrack of the best of early Sixties American pop. Its seemingly aimless anti-structure, set across one night in Modesto, was a precursor to Slacker, and it matches Dazed and Confused for a packed cast of future stars, including Richard Dreyfuss, Harrison Ford, Suzanne Somers, Joe Spano, and Ron Howard in his first major “grownup” role after growing up onscreen in The Andy Griffith Show. But beyond the revving engines and that soundtrack, relayed to the world by legendary DJ Wolfman Jack, it’s Lucas’ most touching eulogy for the dying American dream. – Richard Whittaker
      May 28 - June 1
    • Music

    • Community

      Events

      “Roots Unveiled: Exploring the Chinese Experience”

      Among the many anti-civil rights bills creeping their way through the Texas Legislature is Senate Bill 17, which would bar Chinese and many other Asian citizens from buying land here. Denounced by detractors as racist and reminiscent of 19th-century laws targeting Asian immigrants, its 2023 origins, along with growing anti-Asian sentiment after the pandemic, inspired Houston artist Jane Xu to found the multi-city Asian American Art & Culture Initiative and initiate this multidisciplinary exhibit. Curated by renowned international independent curator Sylvia XuHua Zhan, it brings in-depth research and archives along with work from a wide range of artists to offer a look at the rich history of Chinese Americans in Texas. Opening reception is Sunday, May 18, noon. – Kat McNevins
      Through August 31; opening reception, May 18
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      “The Everyman”

      I’ve been having a lot of “girl who’s going to be okay” moments as I reconnect with my earnest, optimistic side, so I’m excited for “The Everyman,” a group show curated by visual artist and musician Lisa Alley that celebrates the beauty in the small things – from commonplace occurrences to the working-class heroes that give this exhibit its name. Alley – who plays in local acts the Well, Mugger, and TV’s Daniel – shows her paintings alongside a slew of familiar names, including Parquet Courts’ A. Savage, Never’s Emily No Good, and photographer Pooneh Ghana. Everyone has the ability to create something exceptional, this Bolm Arts project assures us. – Carys Anderson
      Through June 7
    • Music

    • Music

      Barfield the Tyrant

      Thu., May 29, 10:30pm. $10 cover (21+).
    • Food

      Food Events

      Barks for Beers 2025

      Arf, arf: This is my impression of your dog when you tell them about this furry fundraising effort from Divine Canines. Tell their placid doggy faces about how 30 CTX craft breweries are participating, like Celis Brewery and Independence Brewing. Pet their ears and inform your pooch how buying a $30 Pawsport as well as a 2025 pint glass entitles you to a pour at each brewery. At this point, the canine mind might think: Okay, but what do I get out of all this? “Don’t worry,” you say. “Every brewery has promised to be dog-friendly, so we can go together.” Your dog’s response, probably: Woof! – James Scott
      May 1 - 31
      Multiple locations
    • Music

      Blake Robert

      Thu., May 29, 5:30pm
    • Music

      Bonnie Whitmore

      Thu., May 29, 8:30pm. $10 cover (21+).
    • Music

      BRiAN, Cutting Up Men

      Thu., May 29, 7:15pm. $12 cover (21+).
    • Music

    • Music

    • Music

      CANCELED: Samara Joy

      Samara Joy leaves all five of her Grammys at her parents’ house. Although the silky-voiced 25-year-old has quickly catapulted into the spotlight as a Gen Z jazz leader ranking with the likes of Laufey, the gospel-raised Bronx native prioritizes music over awards and TikTok trends. Her latest album, Portrait, paints the vocalist’s jump into production and message-fueled songwriting as she pens lyrics to instrumentals like “Reincarnation of a Lovebird” by Charles Mingus and fuses her first original, “Peace of Mind,” with Sun Ra’s “Dreams Come True.” – Amber Williams
      Thu., May 29, 7:30pm  
    • Arts

      Comedy

      Cap City Comedy Club

      That's right: Cap City Comedy Club, the longtime cornerstone of Austin's comedy scene for nearly four decades is at a new venue in the Domain. And here's Valerie Lopez with a closer look at what's in store for the scene via the venue. Click for details!
    • Music

      Casper Rawls

      Thu., May 29, 6:30pm. No cover (21+).

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