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Forget pricey tickets and velvet ropes—this weekend, the circus is coming to town, and you won’t need to shell out a dime to see it. The brand-new Down to Earth Festival is set to turn New York City parks and plazas into open-air stages, with a lineup that mixes contemporary circus, high-wire thrills, opera installations and participatory dance. It all kicks off Friday, August 29, and runs through September 7.
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The festival is the brainchild of the Martin E. Segal Theatre Center at The CUNY Graduate Center, which pulled together an international roster of performers and a patchwork of local partners—from Bushwick Starr to Green-Wood Cemetery—to bring the arts directly to the streets. The goal is to prove that world-class performance doesn’t need a proscenium or a $150 ticket.
Instead of exclusive venues, expect to see circus artists, dancers and musicians take over everyday corners of Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Queens. “Citizen expression beats at the heart of our artistic vision,” organizers explain, framing the festival as both a neighborhood happening and a global exchange.
Unlike the city’s traditional cultural calendar, where cost and exclusivity can feel like built-in bouncers, Down to Earth is intentionally barrier-free. Every event is free, staged in public space, and geared toward students, families, immigrant communities and anyone curious enough to stop and look up. Performances are designed to transform everyday corners of the city, offering fresh ways to see both art and the streets themselves.
It’s also a pointed response to a performing arts landscape where even beloved institutions are struggling to keep doors open. Instead of renting out stages, Down to Earth is stitching together a coalition of CUNY campuses, city parks and community groups to create what organizers call a “crucible of ideas in action.” In practice, that means high-flying circus acts alongside workshops, site-specific theater alongside spontaneous dance, all in spaces that usually host dog walkers and food trucks.
For New Yorkers used to dodging construction scaffolding, seeing an aerialist soar above their neighborhood might feel surreal. But that’s the point: The festival leans into the city’s unpredictability, reminding us that art doesn’t need four walls—it just needs an audience.
Down to Earth Festival runs August 29–September 7, 2025, with events across Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens. All performances are free.