Kingston, Canada

Providence

This site-specific play is located the K&P trail, on its 150th anniversary; the play explores the lives of immigrant workers in 1875, one day before the railway’s opening

Providence Immersive Event - Main Image
Providence Immersive Event - Image 2

Providence by the Eye of the Dawn Collective, is a play set in Summer 1875, the day before the railway opens. The cast of five includes three men, a girl, and the mother of two of the men. Like most of the workers who built the K&P, the men are poor immigrants from Ireland and Scotland. And like many immigrants to Canada, they have an equivocal relationship with their past lives. Trouble from "the old country" is making their new home dangerous. At the Binnington Court entrance to the K&P Trail is an information sign explaining that the trail is named after the Kingston and Pembroke Railway (known locally as the Kick and Push). On the back is a photograph of a small work crew, including three men, and surprisingly, seated before them, a young girl. Musing on who these people were, and why the photograph was taken—was the beginning of the play Providence. While almost all of the K&P railway itself is long gone, within Kingston there is one short stretch of the original tracks at Hickson and Hagerman Avenues. It is here that Providence is staged on the 150th anniversary of K&P's opening. This show was funded in part by the City of Kingston Arts Fund.

Audience Role

The audience will sit and view the work on site. Please note it is an outdoor venue to be prepared for the weather of the moment, and stay tuned for any updates due to inclement weather.

Ages: 13 +

Content Advisories

No sexual content
Some adult themes depicted.

Interaction Advisories

No physical contact with performers

Mobility Advisories

Event is wheelchair accessible
Restrooms not accessible
Wear comfortable clothes
Wheelchair accessible

About The Kick & Push Festival

The Kick & Push is a summer theatre festival that aims to take the audience beyond being passive observers. In its tenth year of operations, the Festival continues to bring professional artists to Kingston, Ontario from all over Canada to share innovative works of great artistic and historical value.