Home Events

for Fri., June 11
  • Laundry & Bourbon with Lonestar

    Laundry and Bourbon with Lonestar, two companion one act plays set in backyards of a small Texas town. Three ladies come together to talk about their life's ups and downs. Lonestar follows the life of three small town boys and the events that have shaped them. Both shows give us highs & lows with humor spread around, for good measure.
    Apr. 19-May 5  
    Navasota Theatre Alliance
  • Affordable Art Fair Austin

    Affordable Art Fair Austin will launch in May 2024, showcasing original contemporary artworks ranging between $100 to $10,000. Welcoming a whole host of local, national and international exhibitors, their spectacular first edition is set to be unmissable!
    May 16-19  
    Palmer Events Center
Recommended
  • Qmmunity

    Community

    2021 Austin Black Pride Celebration

    Don’t miss out on Austin Black Pride’s awesome multiday celebration of Austin’s Black LGBTQIA communities, featuring a vogue ball, conversations, Drip Drop dance party, and way more festivities.
    Tue.-Sun., June 8-13. Prices vary.  
    Multiple locations
  • Arts

    Theatre

    Annie Jump and the Library of Heaven

    Acclaimed playwright Reina Hardy returns to the Vortex with her first National New Play Network rolling world premiere, bringing her magic and humor to this coming-of-age adventure for everyone who’s ever looked up at the stars and dreamed. "This remarkable play engages young adults and audiences of all ages, bringing science and imagination into the theatre." Directed by Marcus McQuirter and Rudy Ramirez, and starring Jeremy Rashad Brown, Oktavea LaToi, Dane Parker, Christina Blake, and Eva McQuade.
    Through July 3. Fri.-Sun., 8pm. $10 and up.  
  • Arts

    Visual Arts

    Art Happy Hour with Navena Bentz

    "Nevena Bentz chooses female fragments and distortion as a means to expose women’s inner contradictions, struggles, and unease."
    Fri., June 11, 6-8pm
  • Community

    Kids

    ¡VAMONOS! A Caminos Talk Show

    Emma S. Barrientos Mexican American Cultural Center's Caminos program has created ¡VAMONOS!, an arts and variety show by teens for teens. Tune in via Facebook Live or Instagram TV.
    Every other Friday, 6pm  
  • Arts

    Visual Arts

    Bergstrom Farmhouse: Big Skies

    Here's the first Austin exhibition of Kerry Beverly’s landscape paintings, elegantly displayed in the historic Bergstrom Farmhouse of rural Austin.
    Reception: Sat., June 12, 6-9pm
    8207 Canoga
  • Community

    Kids

    Cenicienta: A Bilingual Cinderella Story

    Austin's Glass Half Full Theatre presents its award-winning “story within a story” using puppetry, performed in Spanish and English. Featuring Madison Palomo as Belinda, who – when she confronts her stepmother and stepsisters – learns to embrace her love of poetry and stand up for herself. This captivating bilingual Cinderella story is recommended for ages five and older.
    Available online through June 30. $10.  
  • Music

    Choctaw Wildfire (album release)

    “Omnipresence,” bigass word: “the presence of God everywhere at the same time.” Charlie Pierce possesses such an Old Testament voice on Uh-Huh, that of the One Above or He That Dwells Down Below. No in-between here for Omniscient, the narrator. Think Orson Welles.: From the count-in on the first of eight tracks, “Say No to Drugs,” Hawkeye – er, Pierce – resounds right up front in the mix: left channel, right channel, mid channel, chest cavity. “I tried saying no to drugs, but the drugs don’t take ‘no’ for an answer/ I took a turn at falling in love with a sweet little dancer.” Like Charley Crockett, the vocal fingerprints of Choctaw Wildfire’s alter-ego hook the ear at every point, here his “-er” on “answer” and “dancer” taking a hard R, like “-errr.”: And the substance in question spills literally, but also ingests Bryan Ferry’s favorite opiate and most musicians’ ultimate life narcotic: “I paid my dues eating up road/ Lord, it’s the only life I’ll ever know.”: Feel Pierce hammering down on piano, too, the ambience of the room big, bold, and brassy, like they cut Uh-Huh live at the Preservation Hall in New Orleans, only with a booming drum sound off the Secret Machines. Looks like Gibby Haynes, sounds like Leon Russell, wrote one geezer, and on “Say No to Drugs,” the bandleader manages the command of the former without the aid of a bullhorn, yet with the anthemic magnetism of the latter’s late musical realism. Meanwhile, the rhymes pump forth as if from a hospital IV:: “I’ve been up for days and days that I still can’t remember/ And I spent a year or so, just trying to forget her/ Wouldn’t let go when she wanted to run/ Sometimes a needle is a smoking gun.”: Deep, heavy, and melancholic, “Say No to Drugs” still soars, chopping white-line fever by utilizing a troubadour’s credit card. “I put down a fifth today, but I only did a little bit of cocaine,” intones Pierce, blowing up the last word. “And I’ve been driving through the pouring rain/ It’s been so very hard to maintain/ I feel the devil burning my brain/ Pour me a shot to keep me sane.”: At the opposite end of the album, “Dingleberry Pie” bookends an equally up-in-arms rouser, about which the Chronicle wrote last October: “The return of Choctaw Wildfire stages a raid on the white man’s bathroom, pantry, and presidency, brass promenade ‘Dingleberry Pie’ advancing the locals’ first LP since 2015’s Mad Dogs & Englishmen runoff Nowhere by ticking off some 80 pie types in just over three minutes.” Its profane video summarized the 2016-2020 shit show most succinctly.: Between those two attention-getters, Uh-Huh falls in with a French Quarter drum and fife parade (“Doing Alright”); takes a dubby, Leonard Cohenesque jaunt (“Trouble”); ripples as if possessed of some vintage Tumbleweed Connection (“Survive”); and rumbles Waitsian (“Bad Road”), Pierce leading his band of merry men through a heavily Big Easy-centric stomp & holler. Core groupers Leland Potter (percussion), Will Landin (tuba, bass), Jeffrey Barnes (clarinet, saxophone), and Spencer Jarmon (guitar) enlist Michael St. Clair (trombone), Derek Phelps (trumpet), Kullen Fuchs (trumpet), and Zach Varner (clarinet, saxophone). Thus, horns snake throughout like serpents inside the Egyptian tomb Indiana Jones disturbed, while sticks on the tom, Toots Thielemans-esque mouth harp, outlining electric guitar, and a balladic thrust at an upbeat, cantering tempo (“Love Me”) clock a Cosimo Matassa/Allen Toussaint tightness.: “I was fortunate to catch quite a few Dr. John shows,” emails Pierce about the NOLA lean of Uh-Huh. “Saw him open for the Stones once at the Aragon Ballroom in Chicago. Caught him at the Chicago Theatre as well; snuck backstage after to meet him. He nodded out mid-sentence when we spoke, which definitely wasn’t out of the realm of expectation. Such an amazing performer and so much chutzpah.”: “Chutzpah,” that’s Choctaw Wildfire in a word.
    Fri., June 11, 11pm
  • Arts

    Classical Music

    Conspirare: Songs for Seasons

    Soloists Stefanie Moore, Laura Mercado-Wright, Dann Coakwell, and Simon Barrad perform songs evocative of late spring and early summer, then unite as a quartet with pianist Austin Haller in the world premiere of Kile Smith’s April Showers, commissioned by Conspirare.
    Fri., June 11, 7:30pm; Sun., June 13, 4pm. Donations accepted.  
  • Qmmunity

    Community

    Fuego ATX Pride 2021 Edition

    Austin’s fave monthly QTBIPOC dance party-meets-artist-market returns just in time for Pride Month. Featuring 15+ queer local vendors, drag performances, and music by Mosaico Experiencia, SuperMcnasty, La Morena, and Chorizo Funk.
    Fri., June 11, 7pm. Free entry.  
  • Community

    Out of Town

    Lake Travis Film Festival

    More than 100 films are included in the five categories, plus workshops and special events.
    Thu.-Sun., June 10-13  
    Bee Cave/Lakeway
  • Arts

    Visual Arts

    Northern-Southern: Baton

    This is a group show by relay, begun in July of 2020 as a method of socially distancing a community in the height of the pandemic: Artists took turns alone in the space, each adding to the exhibition. Now, as it nears its close, the exhibition resembles a community in which work converses and overlaps. With Adreon Henry, Vy Ngo, Dawn Okoro, Leon Alesi, Matt Steinke, Sev Coursen, Stella Alesi, and more.
    Closing reception: Sat., July 24, 3-9pm
  • Qmmunity

    Nightlife & Parties

    Poo Poo Platter: Paula Abdul Drag Tribute

    Our Ladies of the OutHaus grace the stage of their Red River haunt in honor of their crazy cool love for the Eighties pop songstress. Starring Bulimianne Rhapsody;: Louisianna Purchase; Arcie Cola with Prance Albert;: Kitty Buick; Summer Clearance; CupCake; and Sylvia Hatchet, plus special guests, Tasha Simmone Star, DeeGee Rey, and Chique Fil-Atio.
    Fri., June 11, 10pm. $10.  
  • Arts

    Comedy

    Solomon Georgio

    This engaging comedian has been a featured comedian on Conan, Drunk History, The Meltdown with Jonah & Kumail, Viceland’s Flophouse, and more.
    Fri.-Sat., June 11-12, 7 & 9pm. $20.  
  • Arts

    Dance

    Soul to Sole International Tap Dance Festival

    Tapestry Dance Company, North America’s only full-time, professional repertory tap dance company, presents its 20th annual festival of rhythm, bringing alumni artists from around the world together for an online reunion – with Dianne Walker, Acia Gray, Sarah Petronio, Nicholas Young, Michelle Dorrance, Ayodele Casel, Anthony Morigerato, Jason Janas, and many more. This robust virtual festival includes 25 on-demand films of archive footage (featuring artist solos and Tapestry’s NEA American Masterpiece production of The Souls of Our Feet), 20 live panel discussions, 27 mixed-level master classes and the premiere showing of the new documentary, American Tap.
    Through June 13. Thu.-Sun., 9am-8:45pm. $131 (includes two weeks extended viewing).  
  • Community

    Out of Town

    Texas Blueberry Festival

    Join the fun as everyone gathers around downtown to try the blueberries and enjoy the music.
    Fri.-Sun., June 11-13  
    Nacogdoches
  • Arts

    Visual Arts

    West Chelsea Contemporary: Icons & Vandals

    It's the swanky venue's "most monumental" show yet, featuring works by Jean-Michel Basquiat, Ai WeiWei, Roy Lichtenstein, and a slew of other creative provocateurs who have subverted the contemporary art world throughout the 20th and 21st centuries. Bonus: The closing reception features an artist talk with "The First lady of Graffiti," Lady Pink.
    Closing reception: Sun., July 11, 3-5pm
All Events
  • Music

  • Arts

    Theatre

    A Portrait of My Mother

    An artist remembers their mother, spinning a modern Mexican Cinderella tale as we follow the trials and tribulations of one woman's journey into motherhood – from her humble beginnings in the town of Laredo, Texas, to her journey to Chicago, and everything between. Written and performed by Carlo Lorenzo Garcia, directed by David R. Jarrott. Note: Now available for viewing on Vimeo.
    Through July 31. $5.  
  • Music

  • Music

  • Music

  • Music

    Andre Thierry

    Fri., June 11, 8pm
  • Music

  • Music

  • Film

    Special Screenings

    ATX Television Festival

    Programming includes daily VOD releases, virtual party rooms and chats, special events, and panels. Celebrate the 20th anniversary of Degrassi: TNG and The Amazing Race, look back at Oz, check out panels on TV industry topics, play trivia, and lots more.
    June 11-20. Badge, $150; day pass, $25; single ticket, $12.  
    Online
  • Film

    Special Screenings

    Austin Asian American Film Festival

    The best new Asian and Asian American films, from narrative to documentaries, features, and shorts, this year presented as a hybrid event with virtual access and drive-in screenings. For the final weekend, get a 50% off pass for all the remaining virtual screenings.
    June 4-20  
    Online and at various locations
  • Community

    Kids

    Austin Humane Society's Summer Kids Series

    For a paw-some summer, register your li'l animal lover for AHS's virtual, hands-on educational sessions, including live shelter tours, dog walks, storytime with shelter pets, crafts, and dance sessions. It's all free, and supplies are provided via pickup or you can get a supply list online. Graduation is Aug. 6-7 and comes with a certificate and swag bag.
    June 1-Aug.7. Free.  
    Virtual
  • Arts

    Visual Arts

    Big Medium: Austin Studio Tour

    No, it's not happening right now, citizen, but it's preparing to return this November. Big Medium's humongous socioartistic success of an annual event – the free, self-guided art adventure through dozens upon dozens of local studios and galleries, enhanced by live demos and performances – will now combine the West Austin Studio Tour and East Austin Studio Tour to provide opportunities for artists all over Austin to connect and for the public to experience art safely both in person and virtually. Note: The tour boundaries have been extended to include all 10 districts of Austin for in-person participants, plus a 15-mile radius from the Capitol for virtual participants. And if you're an artist who wants to be part of this action: Applications are being accepted through July 19.
    Apply through July 19  
  • Arts

    Visual Arts

    Big Medium: EPCOT: Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow

    The body of work presented by the artist Jerónimo Reyes-Retana in this exhibition is conceived as the first iteration of an ongoing field research process throughout the community of Playa Bagdad (Tamaulipas, Mexico), located a few miles below the U.S.-Mexico border, on the shores of the Mexican Gulf – a community heavily affected by, as this show addresses, the nearby SpaceX launching facility.
  • Music

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