Theatre Thursday: Passengers

This past weekend, we paid our first visit to the Perelman Performing Arts Center in New York City, down by the World Trade Center, to see Passengers by the 7 Fingers. It was an incredible experience.

Description: My hand, holding the program for Passengers, in front of the main section of seating in front of the stage

Written, directed, and choreographed by Shana Carroll, Passengers is an intriguing mix of dance, gymnastics, silkwork, trapeze, juggling, polework, acrobatics, singing, vocalization, and spoken word – truly the “multidisciplinary” show it is advertised to be. The performers (at our performance: Sereno Aguilar Izzo, Eduardo De Azevedo Grillo, Kaisha Dessalines-Wright, Marie-Christine Fournier, Marco Ingaramo, Anna Kitchtchenko, Maude Parent, Michael Patterson, and Will Underwood) were all absolutely fantastic; it would be almost impossible to single any one of them out for praise over the others. They are truly an ensemble, and it appears from looking at the Perelman PAC website that the show might change subtly depending on which members of the company are in a particular performance (for instance, the website includes a photo of a cast member doing high-wire balancing, which was not in the performance we saw).

The loose concept of the show is that the unnamed characters (and each cast member plays multiple roles if I interpreted things correctly) are all passengers on a train. Throughout the performance, they bond, fall in love, separate and reunite (romantically and platonically); they experience the highs and lows of all kinds of relationships. Their emotions run from the comic to the heart-breaking, and most of it is expressed via movement and body language only. There are a couple of compelling monologues and songs and one very funny dialogue about the nature of time travel which serve as breathers from the more physical aspects of the show (even the most talented dancers, gymnasts and acrobats need a break!), but the most poignant moments come through the physical movements. The silkwork and trapeze work were particularly stunning and emotional; the juggling was hysterically funny; the contortionist aspect was mind-boggling, and the polework was mouth-droppingly exhilarating.

The 7 Fingers are billed as “Montréal’s acclaimed contemporary physical theater group” and they absolutely lived up to that acclaim.

Passengers runs at the Perelman Performing Arts Center at 251 Fulton Street in Lower Manhattan through June 29th, 2025, only. I highly recommend seeing it before it closes if you’re in the NYC area. The 7 Fingers website indicates the show will also play in Boston for the month of September.

Description: the lobby marquee for Passengers (a photo of Grand Central Station’s main departures board) behind piles of luggage, a clock, and an empty bench.

 

I’ve always loved live theater, and in the past couple of years I’ve been making a stronger effort to see more of it. Theater Thursday is a new occasional series where I talk about live theater, both shows I’ve seen recently and shows I’ve loved in the past.