A woman wearing a visor and holding a golf club in front of Flinders Street Station.
Photograph: Eugene Hyland
Photograph: Eugene Hyland

The best things to do in Melbourne this weekend

We've got you covered for the coolest things to do in Melbourne this Friday to Sunday

Liv Condous
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Melbourne comes alive on the weekend, so be sure to leave some room in your schedule to get out and experience the best of it! To help you make the most of your Friday, Saturday and Sunday, we've gathered all the hottest events, shows, gigs, exhibitions, openings and pop-up activations in one easy spot – you're welcome!

It's another long weekend, so make the most of it! If you're stumped, here are some suggestions of how to enjoy the extra day off. Experience some truly weird and wonderful events (as well as a stacked music line-up) with the return of Rising. Check out our guide to the best of the fest if you need help choosing from the massive program. St Kilda Film Festival is back for a landmark 41st year of showing Australian short films. Or for some theatrics, Beetlejuice the Musical (yes, a stage show based on the cult classic movie) and acclaimed musical Hadestown are both playing in Melbourne now. If you're up for a regional getaway, Woodend Winter Arts Festival will make for a wholesome, music-filled weekend. 

When in doubt, you can always rely on our catch-all lists of Melbourne's best barsrestaurantsmuseumsparks and galleries, or consult our bucket list of 100 things to do in Melbourne before you die.  

Looking for more ways to fill up your calendar? Plan a trip around our beautiful state with our handy travel guides.

The best things to do in Melbourne this weekend

  • Things to do
  • Fairs and festivals
Looking for something to do this King's Birthday long weekend? Head up to the charming village of Woodend, located just an hour's drive from the CBD, for its annual Winter Arts Festival (WWAF) from June 6 to 9.  The diverse program features some of Australia’s leading classical musicians and greatest literary minds. Join in on discussions about a variety of big topics, as well as a talk from the great niece of legendary author Jane Austen.  For music fans, there's a wealth of sound to consume. The program features international artists exclusive to the festival, including violinist Anne Harvey-Nagl direct from Vienna, and Moroccan vocalist Lamiae Naki with her ensemble Seffarine, with a performance featuring flamenco dance.  Also on the line-up is a late-night show with jazz guitarist Chris Johnstone and two incredible performances from 8 Cellos, plus lots more.  Across the four-day feast of music, words and ideas there will also be book signings, workshops and exhibition openings to explore. The program features both free and ticketed events, and you can find out more via the WWAF website. Love exploring during the colder months? Check out our guide to the best winter getaways from Melbourne. 
  • Things to do
  • Fairs and festivals
  • Melbourne
As a chill settles over the city each winter, Rising returns with a nocturnal vengeance. This year, the much-loved arts festival will take place across twelve nights from June 4-15, with a red-hot program featuring 65 events, 327 artists and nine world premieres. Musical highlights include an exclusive Australian performance by British indie-pop girlie Suki Waterhouse; a one-off show by Beth Gibbons of Portishead fame, who will bring her haunting solo album Lives Outgrown to Hamer Hall; and Brooklyn rap legends Black Star (aka Yasiin Bey and Talib Kweli) live on stage in Melbourne for the first time ever. Joining them on the line-up will also be Japanese Breakfast, Marlon Williams, Forest Swords and Mount Kimbie. On the first Saturday of the festival (June 7), Fed Square will be taken over by Blockbuster – a vibrant celebration of South Asian culture featuring contemporary Pakistani music, an eye-catching Punjabi truck art installation and plenty of delicious street food.  Flinders Street Station will double as a mini golf course when Swingers – The Art of Mini Golf takes over. This immersive (and fully playable) exhibition will include works by some of the world’s most dynamic and boundary-pushing female-identifying artists. The Capitol Theatre will also be transformed thanks to a massive kinetic light installation by Shohei Fujimoto. If it's a break from the hustle and bustle of life you're after, Korean artist Woopsyang's viral “do nothing” challenge comes to QV Square,...
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  • Musicals
  • Melbourne
  • 3 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended
If there's one fantasy series to rule them all, it's hard to go past The Lord of the Rings. And now, Middle-earth is about to collide with our cultural capital, with the news that The Lord of the Rings – A Musical Tale, has landed in Melbourne. Based on J.R.R. Tolkien’s beloved epic trilogy, the stage production is showing at the Comedy Theatre until June 22. This musical invites audiences to join the Hobbits on a quest, bringing Middle-earth to life with a cast of multi-skilled actor-musicians in a theatrical event that celebrates community, courage and camaraderie – featuring an original folk-inspired score.  *** Time Out Sydney reviewed The Lord of the Rings - A Musical Tale when it played at the State Theatre in January. Read on for that three-star review:   For elder Millennials like me, The Lord of the Rings franchise conjures memories of a simpler time: a time when movies were treated more like a coveted form of storytelling rather than just another option in an endless barrage of ‘content’ to ‘stream’. A time when I would go to the local cinema to watch each new instalment in the adventures of my favourite beardy boys club with my dad, who even loaded my sister and I into the car for a day trip to Sydney to check out an epic exhibition about how those epic movies were made across the ditch in New Zealand. (So many used prosthetics! So cool!) I believe that there’s elements of LOTR lore that are so inescapable that you need not have watched the movies or read the...
  • Musicals
  • Melbourne
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended
Snakes have curled their way around mythology for millennia. Present in countless creation stories from Egyptian, Greek and Indian to Norse and First Nations cultures (including the Rainbow Serpent), the loaded symbolism of this coiled creature clasping its tail between its fangs – the ouroboros – evokes eternity.  Sometimes the serpent holds the world together. Other times, it’s a constricting chaos agent. Either way, the fireside nature of myths, oft-shared in storytelling sessions spun under the stars, is inherently unending, melding anew with each retelling. Tackled by everyone from Roman poets Virgil and Ovid to Canadian indie rockers Arcade Fire and Katee Robert’s queered novel, Midnight Ruin, the myth of Eurydice and her Orpheus finds new life in the hands of folk singer-songwriter Anaïs Mitchell. Her eight Tony Award-winning smash-hit musical Hadestown began life as a sung-through community project before she turned it into a concept album, and then a Broadway smash with help from director Rachel Chavkin. In most Greek tales, Eurydice and her Orpheus are happily married, torn apart by a cruel twist of fate: a viper’s bite (sometimes while pursued by toxic dudebro Aristaeus), not even a malicious god in disguise. As she fades into the Underworld, ruled over by Hades and his niece/abducted wife Persephone (!!!), a desolate Orpheus, son of a musical muse, plays his lyre like her life depends on it. Descending into the abyss and crossing the River Styx, he makes a...
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  • Musicals
  • Melbourne
  • 4 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended
Way back when Tim Burton was a much weirder filmmaker, my wee brother and I were unreasonably thrilled by the chaos engine of awfully bad behaviour that was Michael Keaton’s unhinged and unwashed demon, Betelgeuse.  The grotty stripe-suited monster ate up the 1988 film of not quite the same name – the studio figured folks would stay away unless the title was simplified to Beetlejuice. Named after the red supergiant star blazing ferociously in the constellation of Orion, some 600 light years from our solar system, Betelgeuse is an outcast from the hilariously bureaucratic afterlife, aka the Netherworld. Which leaves him preying on the naïve recently deceased, like sweet young couple Adam and Barbara Maitland (Alec Baldwin and Geena Davis), in an attempt to crowbar open the sort of ridiculous loophole the Greek gods are fond of. Say his – apparently too complex – name three times and he’ll be unleashed on the mortal coil once more.  But Betelgeuse’s sleazy attentions are soon distracted by Winona Ryder’s goth child Lydia, when she reluctantly moves into Adam and Barbara’s now-empty house with her dad, Charles (disgraced actor Jeffrey Jones), and his new squeeze, OTT sculptor Delia (fabulously demented goddess Catherine O’Hara). A smash hit, Beetlejuice is a wild and unruly thing writhing with unhinged ideas, from its stop-animated black and white sand worms to characters shrunk into a model of sleepy town Winter River, and on to the hilariously-depicted dead of the surreal...
  • Things to do
  • Exhibitions
  • Brunswick
Get your wands at the ready, because Melbourne is set to play host to the Australian premiere of Harry Potter: The Exhibition. This behind-the-scenes extravaganza will leave Potterheads spellbound, and features interactive recreations of famous film scenes, props and costumes from the Broadway production of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, a multimedia experience featuring the Whomping Willow, dementors, the Marauder's Map and the chance to conjure a Patronus charm. Budding witches and wizards will be sorted into Hogwarts houses and earn points as they explore the exhibition – it could be through a potions class, predicting the future à la Professor Trelawney in Divination or defeating a boggart in Defence Against the Dark Arts. There will also be opportunities to practice spell casting and Quidditch skills, plus win golden snitch medallions to become a model student. Each experience comes with plenty of photo ops and, of course, magical interactive moments. There's even a recreation of the Great Hall for visitors to enjoy in all its splendour, complete with floating candles.  This official Harry Potter exhibition is part of a global tour, previously selling out in cities like Boston and Madrid. It will be apparating into Melbourne on April 4, with tickets on sale now. You can find out more about this enchanting experience via the website.  Looking for more family-friendly things to do? Here's our guide to the best activities for kids in Melbourne. 
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  • Things to do
  • Exhibitions
  • Carlton
May the 4th is a special date for any Star Wars fan, but this year it'll be one to remember. A brand-new Lego Star Wars exhibition is making its world premiere, and it won't be in a galaxy far, far away but right here in Melbourne.  Lego Star Wars: the Exhibition at Melbourne Museum comes from revered Lego genius Ryan 'Brickman' McNaught, who's back with his latest mind-boggling project of massive Star Wars brick creations – some standing at a whopping four metres tall.  There'll be Lego replicas of many of the iconic characters, fan favourite scenes, spacecraft and more, from both the classic films and newer releases. Plus, the exhibition will include interactive brick-based activities inclusive of all ages.  While there's still some time to wait for the exhibition opening, building has already begun, and it's expected it'll take more than 25,000 hours to finish and use a wild 8 million Lego bricks. One of the most monumental creations is a three-metre-tall red X-wing spacecraft, made of an astonishing 64,759 bricks, taking 382 hours to build.  "Fans will be blown away by the scale of the experience," Brickman says. "Building these iconic scenes and characters in Lego Star Wars form is an extremely complex task – taking the humble Lego brick and using it by the millions to translate into Star Wars builds and models at an epic scale the world has never seen before.  "My team and I are super excited to launch this mind-blowing experience right here in Melbourne. My inner...
  • Musicals
  • Melbourne
  • 3 out of 5 stars
  • Recommended
In 1984, director Trevor Nunn was doing press for Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Starlight Express when he offered the perfect maxim for a Webber fan: “Here is my money. Hit me with the experience.” Arguably none of Webber’s shows have hit harder than his 1971 rock-opera, Jesus Christ Superstar, which arrives at Melbourne’s Princess Theatre after a much-lauded run in Sydney. First revived at London’s Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre in 2016 for the show’s fiftieth anniversary, it’s been restaged in Australia by director Timothy Sheader. Sheader favours a ‘more is more’ approach, leaning into every ‘Webber-ism’ that made the show a success in the first place: rock'n'roll maximalism, near-inhuman vocal lines, emotional spectacle. No crucifix is too glittery or top note too loud. Megawatt vocals and an electric ensemble cast make it a cut above the other Webber revivals we’ve seen in the last couple years. Yet its heavy-handed approach also exposes the limits of spectacle for spectacle’s sake, even when it comes to Webber. It’s a dazzling experience, but ultimately soulless.  The curtain rises on a disassembled rock concert: amps, concert speaker boxes and microphone stands peppered around a set of towering balustrades, exposed steel beams and grating that hide the band. Set and costume Designer Tom Scutt puts us somewhere between Rent’s gritty urbanism and the steampunk simplicity of Hadestown. Meanwhile, lighting designer Lee Curran adds a splash of Mad Max to things by throwing dirty...
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  • Things to do
  • Expos and conventions
  • South Wharf
Unlock a new dimension at the 2025 edition of Oz Comic-Con, which is taking place at the Melbourne International Conference and Exhibition Centre on June 7 and 8. Some huge international stars are set to appear and meet fans, including beloved actress Catherine Tate (Doctor Who), Giancarlo Esposito (Breaking Bad, The Mandalorian), Brandon Rogers, Zach Aguilar and Renée O’Connor. There will be industry talks and panels, gaming opportunities, workshops, activations, live performances, parades and plenty of exclusive merch.  At the convention, eager cosplayers can enter one of the most prestigious contests in Australia, which highlights the jaw-dropping talent and craftsmanship. Attendees will betreated to a show floor and schedule that includes Artist Alley, Gaming Zones and more. No matter what fandom you're part of, everyone's welcome. For more information and to purchase tickets, head to the Oz Comic-Con website. Looking for more fun? Here are the best things to do in Melbourne this week. 
  • Film
  • Film festivals
  • St Kilda
Australia’s longest-running short film festival, the St Kilda Film Festival (SKFF) returns this winter for its landmark 41st year. From June 5-15, the festival is set to showcase more than 150 films across 34 sessions to cast a light on Australia’s best local short filmmakers.  From family dramas to gothic horrors and brilliant animations, you can catch the films at sessions across the City of Port Phillip, which presents the festival. There are screenings at famous venues such as the Astor Theatre, Palais Theatre and South Melbourne Market, plus (for the first time since 2019) the St Kilda Town Hall.  Highlights from the 2025 SKFF program include the heartfelt documentary See Me: A Film About Redro Redriguez; Unspoken, by acclaimed actor Damian Walshe-Howling; Rage, a snapshot of the Sharpie subculture in 1970s Melbourne; and Born to Hustle, about jeweller, artist and entrepreneur Emma Addams. All the familiar showcases will also return in 2025, including the Australian Comedy Showcase; Pride Without Prejudice hosted by Victorian Pride Centre; the Documentary Showcase; Brave New Worlds; Shifting The Gaze; Under The Radar and more.  This year, the line-up will feature the festival’s largest First Nations program to date, with a particular focus on stories of motherhood and birthing by First Nations female filmmakers. There's also been a resurgence in Super 8 and 16mm filmmaking, with 12 titles shot on film, illustrating how the next generation of filmmakers are embracing...
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