Actress Marissa Bode, known for playing Nessarose in Wicked, has accused Southern Airways of refusing to let her board a connecting flight because she uses a wheelchair, touching off fresh criticism of how smaller regional carriers handle disabled passengers. In a video posted this week, Bode said she was traveling to a speaking event in Pennsylvania when airline staff told her she could not board because the aircraft required passengers to climb stairs and she could not do so.
Bode said the denial came after an earlier leg of the trip had gone ahead without issue. According to her account, she had landed from a United flight and was expecting to catch a short Southern Airways connection to a small Pennsylvania town. Instead, she says, she was stopped at the gate and told that because she could not stand or walk up the steps into the aircraft, she would not be allowed on board. She also said airline staff raised concerns about her wheelchair, which she described as weighing about 35 pounds.
The actress said the situation was especially frustrating because, in her telling, her team had tried to arrange assistance ahead of time. When the flight fell through, she ended up making the rest of the trip by car, a drive of roughly three and a half hours, in order to reach her event. Bode called the experience humiliating and discriminatory, and used the moment to speak more broadly about what disabled travelers deal with every day in air travel.
One of the more striking parts of her account was her claim that, when she asked whether disabled passengers had flown the airline before, the answer she got was essentially no. That detail, widely repeated in follow-up coverage, helped push the story beyond a single bad travel day and into a bigger debate over accessibility, training, and whether some carriers are still treating disabled passengers as exceptions rather than customers with rights.
Southern Airways had not issued a detailed public rebuttal in the coverage I reviewed, though reports say the airline indicated it was looking into the incident and had contacted Bode after the fact. The carrier’s publicly available disability and carriage materials do note limitations tied to some of its smaller aircraft. Southern says certain planes in its network require passengers to be able to go up and down stairs and notes that some small aircraft are exempt from certain accessibility requirements that apply more broadly across commercial aviation.
That exemption language matters, but it does not erase the larger legal framework. The U.S. Department of Transportation says the Air Carrier Access Act makes it illegal for airlines to discriminate against passengers because of disability, and DOT rules apply to flights to, from, or within the United States. The department also says travelers with disabilities have the right to be treated with dignity and to receive information about an aircraft’s capabilities and limitations, while airlines are required to provide requested wheelchair or guided assistance in the airport.
So the real question now is not just whether Southern Airways’ aircraft had physical limitations. It is whether the airline handled the situation lawfully, clearly, and humanely — and whether a passenger who says accommodations were requested in advance was given every option that should have been on the table. That distinction is likely to matter if the complaint draws regulatory attention.
For Bode, the episode fits into a pattern she has been speaking about for months. She has repeatedly used her platform to describe the stress of flying as a wheelchair user, from inaccessible aircraft features to damage involving mobility equipment and interactions with airline staff who, she says, often do not know how to properly assist disabled travelers.
What happened this time has landed hard partly because Bode is hardly a fringe figure. She is a visible young actor from one of Hollywood’s biggest recent franchises, and she framed the issue in very direct terms: not as a misunderstanding, but as exclusion. That has made the story resonate far beyond entertainment news, especially among disability-rights advocates who have long argued that air travel still routinely fails wheelchair users, despite years of promises and regulation.
For now, the public record still rests heavily on Bode’s account and the airline’s published policies. But even at that stage, the incident has reopened an uncomfortable truth about modern flying: for many disabled passengers, getting a ticket is one thing. Getting treated like they belong on the plane is another.
