The Off-Broadway Theatre Review: Ethan Slater and Marshall Pailet’s Marcel on the Train Brings Quiet Resistance to Classic Stage Company
By Ross
An invisible door slides open. And Ethan Slater steps through it into silence.
As the young Marcel Marceau, the captivating presence of Slater (Broadway’s SpongeBob…) sits on the bare thrust stage at Classic Stage Company and begins to shape the air around him. His body seems to occupy more space than his frame should allow. A shadow butterfly flutters across the back wall of the theatre. Then another joins it. For a moment, the room feels suspended in something delicate and dreamlike. Then a scream breaks the silence.
Benches rise up from the floor of Scott Davis’s platform stage to form the interior of a train car. The butterflies vanish. Suddenly, we are in Occupied France in 1943, seated among frightened twelve-year-olds on a train bound toward Switzerland and the fragile promise of safety.
This is the world of Marcel on the Train, a new play co-written by Slater and director Marshall Pailet (Who’s Your Baghdaddy) at Classic Stage Company. Inspired by the true wartime story of the legendary mime Marcel Marceau, the play unfolds almost entirely inside that single train compartment during one perilous journey across Nazi-occupied territory.

History remembers Marcel Marceau as the genre-defining master of silent performance. Before the striped shirt and the white face paint, however, he was Marcel Mangel, the son of a Ukrainian mother and a Polish Jewish butcher who settled in France. During the Nazi occupation, the young Marceau joined the Resistance and began escorting groups of Jewish children toward the Swiss border. Posing as Boy Scout leaders on camping trips, Marceau, his brother Alain, and their cousin Georges Loinger guided hundreds of children through train stations and across mountain passes toward safety. Unfortunately, Marceau’s father, weary of hiding, did not survive the war. He was deported and murdered at Auschwitz concentration camp in 1944.
It’s a story I never heard before this day, one that feels almost too amazing to believe. That astonishing bit of history gives the play its powerful emotional foundation, a framework that hangs in the air like invisible smoke. But here, in Marcel on the Train, Slater, delivering one of the most captivating physical performances currently playing Off Broadway, unmasks a Marcel who is not yet the famous performer. He is simply a young man discovering how imagination can become a form of protection, and how silence can serve us. In this story, performance is not merely entertainment. It is camouflage. It is survival.
Marcel entertains the children on that train ride with imaginary juggling acts, invisible walls, and silent pantomime. He makes them laugh because laughter keeps them quiet. A laughing child is a quiet child, and quiet children have a far better chance of surviving the journey. Marceau would later call mime the art of silence. In this tense, but beautiful, theatrical retelling, that quiet fills the air, becoming more than a giggle, but a matter of life and death.

Slater elevates the room with his clarity and conviction, becoming the emotional center of the ride. His physical work is nimble and inventive, but it is the transparency of his emotional life that gives the performance its power. Marcel’s humour is playful and generous, yet behind each comic flourish sits the steady pressure of fear. Slater allows the audience to see the calculation beneath the clowning, even when he cracks. Every joke carries a sliver of truth and a quiet urgency.
Even when the play’s structure reveals a few awkward turns in its railway storytelling, Slater continues to anchor the experience with clarity and warmth. His Marcel understands instinctively that performance can become a shield, and Slater’s expressive physical vocabulary communicates that idea with remarkable precision.
Pailet’s direction wisely embraces the intimacy of the Classic Stage Company space. The production confines most of the action to the train compartment, allowing tension to build inside the narrow geography of the train’s journey. The benches rise to shape the playing space while Studio Luna’s lighting design fills the stage with sharp angles and shadows that evoke both wartime uncertainty and the noir-like tension of a border crossing. Jill BC Du Boff’s sound design quietly underscores the movement of the train and the shifting emotional rhythms of the story. As a unified team, including Sarah Laux‘s smart costume choices, the staging creates a sense that the audience is riding along with these children, listening carefully for the sound of footsteps in the corridor and feeling the dread that lingers just outside.

But without those children, played by adult performers portraying twelve-year-olds traveling under false identities, Marcel on the Train would lose much of its emotional weight. Together, they form the living landscape of the play, carrying a mixture of bravado, suspicion, and quiet terror as the train rattles toward the border. Inside the cramped compartment, their reactions to Marcel’s antics shift constantly between laughter and fear.
Max Gordon Moore, Maddie Corman, Tedra Milan, and Alex Wyse create vivid and believable personalities within that fragile ecosystem. Wyse’s meticulous Henri is immediately captivated by Marcel’s antics, while Milan’s Berthe carries a storm of anger and grief that she hides behind sharp sarcasm. She insists Marcel is not funny, no matter how many imaginary knives he can juggle. Marcel becomes determined to win her over anyway, which says a lot about his inner need for acceptance and sense of duty.
Moore’s Adolphe drifts between those emotional poles, clinging to Marcel’s humour while struggling to understand the complex world around him. Yet it is Corman’s quiet Etiennette who proves the most intricate presence of all. She watches everything with careful concentration, her silence suggesting either profound shyness or an inner life that words cannot easily reach. Her eventual interaction with Marcel’s future world lands with unexpected force, pushing forth a narrative that fear and grief rarely resolve themselves neatly, or even kindly. Together, these children give the play its human texture. They are not symbols or metaphors. They are frightened young people learning how to trust a stranger who insists that invisible objects might offer real protection.

Aaron Serotsky carries the unusual assignment of playing nearly everyone else in the story. He first appears as Marcel’s father, a tired butcher who senses the danger closing in on his family, but, while supportive, he gently explains that he can no longer keep running. Later, he becomes cousin Georges, whose absence at a critical train stop heightens the play’s tension. But most memorably, Serotsky (Broadway’s August: Osage County) embodies a Nazi soldier who enters the train compartment searching for suspicious activity. His presence as he marches through the back door transforms the stage into a chamber of dread. The soldier ransacks the room, yet, wisely, he remains an unsettling question mark throughout the encounter. Is he a merciless investigator or something more ambiguous? The uncertainty fuels one of the play’s most gripping sequences, and leaves us hanging alongside the children, wondering, frightened, and unsure.
What makes Marcel on the Train especially compelling is the sense that its story emerges from a place of thoughtful reflection. The writing often feels shaped by an understanding that heroism rarely arrives in neat narrative form. People act for complicated reasons. Others hesitate. Some remain silent. The play allows those questions to remain unresolved, trusting the audience to sit with that uncertainty long after the train has disappeared into the dark, like an imaginary butterfly, filled with abstract meaning and emotion.
At the center of it all remains Slater’s quietly radiant Marcel. His Marcel is mesmerizing, a performance of rare physical precision and emotional openness that commands the stage even when he says nothing at all. He is the engine of this train, as we witness a young artist discovering that imagination can do more than entertain. It can hold fear at bay long enough for hope to appear. By the time the train reaches its final destination, the story settles into something quietly profound. Humour, creativity, and courage can coexist even in moments of extreme danger. We also understand something Marceau himself always knew: silence, in the right hands, can be louder than any applause.















