Can be for some, depends on your ethnic background. My father's side is Sicilian and growing up in NYC, we had some type of pasta every holiday. Or, as we Italian-American NYers would say, some type of macaroni. (We never used the term "pasta", macaroni was the catch-all term.) There were always a lot of courses. Some of the ever present dishes would be, antipasto (usually roasted red peppers, fresh mozzarella, prosciutto, sopressatta, olives, marinated mushrooms, provolone, and on one of the trays, anchovies, because not everyone liked them), stuffed artichokes, then we would have the soup with the little meatballs (tiny veal meatballs in a lovely broth with escarole), and then our macaroni of some kind. Usually with meat sauce. The rich tomato sauce was loaded with meatballs, pieces of beef, sausage, pork neck bones, and either beef brascoile or pork cotenne (Sicilians say, agodina instead of cotenne and with us IA NYers, it sounds like agoudina.) The latter two are rolled and stuffed meats. The beef braciole is just like thin cut of normal beef, like flank steak or something, but the pork contenne is actually pig skin. We would have spaghetti or some other short macaroni, and then have a meat ball and or some other pieces of meat. Sometimes, instead of the spaghetti or other macaroni, my great grandmother would make lasagna, or ravioli, or even more rare, manacotti. These days, carrying on some traditions, my father usually always makes the antipasto and lasagna and the meat sauce every holiday now. (Sometimes not all that meat, in the sauce though. He may just use leftover sauce and make the lasagna) But he does a ham (Xmas) or a turkey (usually Thanksgiving), too. He will make me rack of lamb on Easter in addition to ham, if I ask nicely and bat my big brown eyes, cause he likes lamb, too. I think it's just the two of us though.
Christmas Eve, we would also usually do some pasta. But there was a lot of fish. Which is very traditional for Italians. We would do linguini and clams and maybe some fishcakes, as an early dinner. Then later at night, like after mass, at midnight I also remember they would make a ring of Italian sausage. It was so good. Also remember them making the fish salad on Xmas Eve. Had shrimp, calamari, scungilli, scallops, mussels, clams and octopus.