A note regarding COVID-19
Upcoming Events in Clute
Clute
Planetarium Show
May 7, 14, 21, 24, 28
Center for the Arts and Sciences, 400 College Blvd.
Featuring high-tech equipment including a 30-foot dome equipped with a Spitz Star Ball projector, this show re-creates the night sky as it appears to the naked eye, giving viewers a close-up look at comets, exploding stars, and black holes.
Planetarium Show
June 4, 8, 11, 15, 18, 22, 25, 28-29
Center for the Arts and Sciences, 400 College Blvd.
Featuring high-tech equipment including a 30-foot dome equipped with a Spitz Star Ball projector, this planetarium show recreates the night sky as it appears to the naked eye and gives viewers a close-up look at comets, exploding stars, and black holes. Showdates vary throughout each month.
Planetarium Show
July 2, 6, 9, 13, 16, 20, 23, 26-27, 30
Center for the Arts and Sciences, 400 College Blvd.
Featuring high-tech equipment including a 30-foot dome equipped with a Spitz Star Ball projector, this planetarium show recreates the night sky as it appears to the naked eye and gives viewers a close-up look at comets, exploding stars, and black holes. Showdates vary throughout each month.
“Chitty Chitty Bang Bang”
July 12-14, 19-21
Center for the Arts and Sciences, 400 College Blvd.
This stage production takes you on a fantastic musical adventure with an out-of-this-world car that flies through the air and sails the seas. The show was adapted for the stage by Jeremy Sams and is based on the children’s motion picture starring Dick Van Dyke.
Great Texas Mosquito Festival
July 25-27
Clute Municipal Park, 100 Parkview Drive
At this fun-filled family event, celebrating its 43rd year, festivalgoers can expect vendor booths with a variety of foods, arts and crafts, and other merchandise; a carnival; live entertainment each evening; and Willie-Man-Chew, the 26-foot-tall mosquito mascot that greets visitors.
Planetarium Show
Aug. 3, 6, 10, 13, 17, 20, 23-24, 27, 31
Center for the Arts and Sciences, 400 College Blvd.
Featuring high-tech equipment including a 30-foot dome equipped with a Spitz Star Ball projector, this planetarium show recreates the night sky as it appears to the naked eye and gives viewers a close-up look at comets, exploding stars, and black holes. Showdates vary throughout each month.