The eclipse comes Friday evening, around sunset for North American viewers, so from your location the moon will be rather low (about 7 degrees high in the east) at mid-eclipse (6:44 pm local time). Technically this is a
penumbral eclipse, meaning that the moon never enters the darker part of the earth's shadow and so it is noticeably dimmed rather than looking like part of it is missing. Still, it should be worth looking at if conditions permit. (the eclipse ends at 8:55 pm your time but the shadow will be invisible before that). Read all about it
here.
The comet will be more of a challenge thanks to the Moon. It's a morning object now, a magnitude 8 fuzzball that will require binoculars and a pretty good idea of just where to look.
This article has descriptions of what to look for and charts showing where to look. This comet is passing so close this weekend (7.7 million miles) that it's moving quite fast. It's in southern Hercules this weekend, so it won't rise until after midnight and won't be very high before about 3 am.