Skip to main content

Theatre Calgary’s new staging of Come From Away aims for the heart

iPhoto caption: The cast of 'Come From Away.' Photo by Harder Lee.
/By / May 29, 2026
SHARE

On day one of rehearsals for Come From Away, director-choreographer Jesse Robb posed a question: “Where were you on September 11, 2001?”

Many of the responses from the cast and creative team — consisting primarily of Albertans — took him by surprise. “[Their] school didn’t even show footage. They didn’t know the day of. They didn’t go home. They just continue[d] with their day of classes,” he said. 

A graduate of New York University, Robb had a starkly different experience of the world-altering event: “I was in New York, living below 14th Street,” he shared. “And I was stuck [in the downtown core] when they basically barricaded it. Because of the lack of digital information at that time, those of us that were in Manhattan didn’t actually know what was going on until… [after] those that were seeing it on television.” 

Twenty-five years later, the Tony Award-nominated Canadian helms Theatre Calgary’s upcoming production of the beloved (and very widely produced) musical that celebrates the Canadian hospitality at the periphery of the American tragedy. He’s joined by associate director-choreographer and longtime creative collaborator Paige Parkhill, who, in addition to extensive work with the Walt Disney Company, has supported Robb in choreographing numerous shows, including Water for Elephants on Broadway and Spamalot at the Stratford Festival.

Members of the company of Come From Away. Photo by Harder Lee.

Written and composed by Irene Sankoff and David Hein, Come From Away is a true story that transports us to Gander, Newfoundland after 38 planes have been diverted to the local airport following the 9/11 attacks. There, a patchwork company of residents must suddenly accommodate the presence of almost 7,000 stranded passengers — a number that nearly doubles their small-town population overnight. 

B.C.-born Parkhill didn’t quite know what to expect when she and Robb went into the musical’s 2016 pre-Broadway tryout in Toronto. But sitting between him and “his Newfoundland born-and-raised mother,” she found herself “overwhelmed with Canadian pride.” 

“I was so pleasantly surprised,” she confessed. “I felt an urgency with the piece in terms of the music and the physicality. The music really shook me in a way that I didn’t expect.” 

For Robb, the musical felt especially immediate. “There was this sensibility, truth, and honesty about how the interactions of humanity exist on the Rock that feels very unique to the people of Newfoundland,” he said. “I looked at my mom after I saw it, and I thought, ‘This explains so much about my youth and so much about the values that my mother put on my sister and I in terms of how we interact with humanity and how we react in times of struggle, in times of hardship.’”

Despite their stirring first encounter with the musical, the pair recognize that our world isn’t the same one Come From Away was born into. Robb identified the specific challenge of telling stories in a media landscape dominated by streaming services, noting: “Our eye is quicker. Our heart is quicker. We’re dismissed much quicker.

“How do you get out of the synapses of the forward-thinking brain and into the body and the heart?” he asked. “It’s a whole new mathematical Rubik’s Cube to try and touch people in a way now, with the information we have post-pandemic.” 

Parkhill agreed, adding that “the world as a whole has an attention deficit issue. So, in order to hold the audience’s attention, the story needs to be told in new ways.” 

This is perhaps especially true of Come From Away, which has seen three Calgary productions since 2019 and was the U.S.’s most-produced show of the 2025-26 season — including a production at the Muny in St. Louis, choreographed by Robb and Parkhill, just last year. 

Members of the company of Come From Away. Photo by Harder Lee.

What makes the duo’s directorial approach unique, however, is a body- and person-first philosophy. “[My practice] comes from a very active, physical place,” Robb explained. “It really boils down to: ‘What are the words we’re saying and how are we carrying ourselves in space?’ Which I find lends itself really well to an orchestration like Come From Away.

There are, of course, challenges that come with handling what Parkill fondly described as a “90-minute song” — that is, a one-act show boasting near-constant scoring with little room for digression. “The storytelling has to be crafted to an inch of its life so that you’re not unspooling the simplicity of the heart,” said Robb. “The backbone of why this piece works is the heart.”

It’s a heart including both the story itself and the artists who inhabit it: “Jesse is really good at taking the person and moulding them to shine and excel in whatever the piece offers,” Parkhill said. She commended Robb’s ability to “craft for the human, rather than coming in with a bunch of material that everybody has to do the same.” 

“I am not looking for the world of Rockettes,” he laughed. “I fight for the ‘other,’ which is the idea of portraying and lifting the existence as opposed to changing and creating one unified look.” 

Audiences may be wondering about the political undercurrents of a musical that focuses on Canada-U.S. relations. It’s precisely due to the precarity of our current moment, though, that Robb feels “the piece, in lots of ways, is even more resonant to me now than it was at the 20-year anniversary [of 9/11].” 

And he thinks Canadians today would still rise to the occasion: “I don’t even think — I know we’d do the same thing. I know that even in a political divide, in the animosity, in the anger — if the same event happened tomorrow, we’d do the same thing.”


Come From Away runs until June 27 at Theatre Calgary. More information is available here.


Theatre Calgary is an Intermission partner. Learn more about Intermission’s partnership model here.

Eve Beauchamp
WRITTEN BY

Eve Beauchamp

Eve Beauchamp (they/them) is an award-winning Calgary-based theatre artist, playwright, and graduate of the BFA in Acting at the University of Ottawa. They are the co-artistic director of Levity Theatre Company and primarily create work that explores queerness, capitalism, and neurodivergence through humour, poetry, and storytelling. Currently, you can find them pursuing their Master of Fine Arts in Drama at the University of Calgary.

LEARN MORE

Comments

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Members of the cast of 'Appropriate. iPhoto caption: Members of the cast of 'Appropriate.' Photo by Colin Munch.

Q&A: How a new Calgary performance venue aims to energize the city’s indie theatre scene

"Smaller venues that create independent theatre rather than the institutional spaces — I think that’s something that really enriches the city," says co-artistic director Jakob Schäefer.

By Eve Beauchamp
Ma-Anne Dionisio, Nikko Angelo Hinayo, Kennedy Kanagawa, and Kelsey Verzotti in 'The Tale of the Gifted Prince.' iPhoto caption: Ma-Anne Dionisio, Nikko Angelo Hinayo, Kennedy Kanagawa, and Kelsey Verzotti in 'The Tale of the Gifted Prince.' Photo by Harder Lee.

REVIEW: Theatre Calgary’s The Tale of the Gifted Prince is a dazzling new musical

The world premiere production stuns, delivering audiences a larger-than-life musical flush with Broadway splash. 

By Eve Beauchamp
iPhoto caption: 'Dream Machine' photo by Blake Brooker.

REVIEWS: High Performance Rodeo 2026

For Calgary theatre-goers, January holds the antidote to frigid post-holiday slumps: One Yellow Rabbit’s High Performance Rodeo, the city's biggest performing arts festival. This year marks the 40th iteration of the interdisciplinary event and offers Calgarians a feast of over 30 shows across 12 venues from January 13 to 31.

By Eve Beauchamp
Elinor Holt and Ellen Close in 'How Patty and Joanne Won High Gold at the Grand Christmas Cup Winter Dance Competition.' iPhoto caption: Elinor Holt and Ellen Close in 'How Patty and Joanne Won High Gold at the Grand Christmas Cup Winter Dance Competition.' Photo by Benjamin Laird.

How the Calgary-based stars of Lunchbox Theatre’s new holiday comedy are learning to tap dance from scratch

“We’re living in a world right now where failure is not an option,” says actor Elinor Holt. “And a lot of times people would rather not try anything at all, rather than try something and risk failing at it.”

By Eve Beauchamp
iPhoto caption: Shekhar Paleja, Emily Dallas, and Tyrell Crews in 'Dial M For Murder'. Set design by Anton deGroot. Photo by Trudie Lee.

REVIEW: Theatre Calgary’s Dial M For Murder queers the classic with style and suspense

The cloaked romance that sparks the homicidal scheme at the core of play is no longer between Margot (Emily Dallas) and a Mark, but rather a Maxine (Olivia Hutt). Yes, exactly — the original heterosexual coupling becomes refreshingly queer. 

By Eve Beauchamp
Maya Baker, Jameela McNeil, Kelsey Verzotti, Sarah Horsman, and Jessica Jones in 'Legally Blonde.' iPhoto caption: L to R: Maya Baker, Jameela McNeil, Kelsey Verzotti, Sarah Horsman, and Jessica Jones in 'Legally Blonde.' Photo by Trudie Lee.

For Calgary’s Kelsey Verzotti, playing Elle Woods means grappling with high notes, audience expectations, and impostor syndrome

In 2022, Verzotti became the first Asian-Canadian to play the titular redhead in Anne of Green Gables at the Charlottetown Festival. Now, she’s set to shatter more expectations as she tackles the lead role in Theatre Calgary’s Legally Blonde.

By Eve Beauchamp