Carlo Pellegrini takes on the role of ringmaster, storyteller and mill boss as North Adams' history is revealed through acrobatics.
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — The circus has come to town for this year's Fall Foliage Festival.
In line with this year's parade theme of Berk du Soleil, Mill Town Circus's bright yellow and blue tent went up this week at Noel Field Athletic Complex and will open on Friday night with a 90-minute production inspired by the city's manufacturing history. The performances will run this weekend and next.
Ringmaster and storyteller Carlo Pellegrini and Hilary Sweeney, founder of Westchester Circus Arts, are promising innovative and acrobatic performances by talented and experienced artists from circuses including Cirque du Soleil and from Ringling Brothers.
"These are the people that like, make it all happen. We wear so many hats," Sweeney said of the half-dozen or so crew who pitched in to put up the tent and take on other duties. "They're multi-talented performers.
Mayor Jennifer Macksey said the hope is that this will become an annual event that will provide something new and exciting for Fall Foliage.
The couple moved to the Berkshires five years ago, purchasing a home and few acres on Florida Mountain (Pellegrini says he loves snow and plowing). During the summer, they run circus camps in New York State.
Pellegrini's been in the business close to 50 years as a clown, juggler and ringmaster and Sweeney, who also has a background in ballet, has been an aerialist for nearly 20 years. She founded Westchester Circus Arts in 2012.
Things went sour for the circus performers during the pandemic and Pellegrini said they had to rethink their careers.
"We were up on the mountain saying, is there the possibility to transform our business? Let's just keep doing tent shows and performing for schools and educational purposes," he said.
Pellegrini said the performances illustrate a story, and their North Adams debut was inspired by the city's manufacturing history and its transformation. Sweeney came up with the name Mill Town Circus (no relation to Mill Town Capital in Pittsfield).
"Once she did that, I wrote it, and we just spent a couple days fixing it, like the mills did. So I'm trying to squeeze 200 years of history in the 90 minutes," he said. "I'm the boss of the mill. Each act represents a different piece of the history, whether it's the mill shutting, opening, or some mill owner realizing that, oh, there's a factory empty. Now, I could raise some money and do something good for the community, keep the community employed."
The Sprague act will include the company's contributions to the space race, particularly the Apollo 11 silicon disk fill with goodwill messages from 74 countries. Made in North Adams, it was left on the moon.
"The history here is so huge I know its going to take five years to tell it all," said Pellegrini, who's already thinking about baseball and railroad tunnels.
Macksey cut a ribbon at the circus tent on Thursday and a few guests were treated to a sneak peak of the acts.
"I am excited about this," said the mayor. "I was amazed that we had this much talent sitting up on Florida Mountain. ...
"We're excited to have you join our community and you're one of the family."
The tent seats 240 and performances will be Friday, Oct. 4, at 7 p.m.; Saturday, Oct. 5, at 2 and 6 p.m.; and Sunday, Oct. 6, at 4 p.m.; and again on Friday, Oct. 11, at 7 p.m.; Saturday, Oct. 12, at 2 and 6 p.m.; Sunday, Oct. 13, at 2 and 6 p.m. and Monday, Oct. 14, at 2 p.m.
General admission tickets are $15 and ringside/front row are $25, plus a fee for online purchase. They can be purchased here.
If you would like to contribute information on this article, contact us at info@iberkshires.com.
Your Comments
iBerkshires.com welcomes critical, respectful dialogue. Name-calling, personal attacks, libel, slander or foul language is not allowed. All comments are reviewed before posting and will be deleted or edited as necessary.
No Comments
SteepleCats Earn Their First Home Win of Summer
By Ben McDonoughFor iBerkshires.com Sports
NORTH ADAMS, Mass. — It took nearly three weeks and plenty of heartbreak, but the North Adams SteepleCats finally had their breakthrough moment at Joe Wolfe Field.
Behind six strong innings from starter Niklas Pavia and a game-changing three-run third inning, the SteepleCats earned their first home victory of the 2026 season Sunday afternoon, defeating the Upper Valley Nighthawks 4-1.
The SteepleCats wasted little time getting on the scoreboard. Chris Diaz opened the bottom of the first with a double into the gap and immediately put pressure on the Nighthawks by stealing third base. One batter later, Bobby Stang hit a ground ball that allowed Diaz to race home and give North Adams an early 1-0 advantage.
That was all the support Pavia needed to settle into a groove.
The right-hander was electric from the start, striking out the side in the second inning and consistently attacking hitters with confidence. Pavia struck out seven batters over six innings of work, allowing just one run while repeatedly pitching out of trouble.
Upper Valley’s lone run came in the third inning when Frank Kelly launched a solo home run to left field, knotting the game at one apiece.
Northern Berkshire Community Coalition celebrated a community hero, its 40th anniversary and kicked off its $10 million campaign drive for a new home on Thursday.
click for more
The college community bid farewell to President Jamie Birge last week as he ended his 10-year tenure at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. click for more
The School Building Committee was updated on the progress on Tuesday night by Todd Ashford, project manager with Collier's International, the city's owner's project manager.
click for more
The Finance Committee in the last two weeks reviewed Public Safety, auditor, Zoning Board of Appeals, City Council, election and registration, Office of Community Development, city solicitor, License Commission, information technology, Planning Board, and vital statistics. click for more