REVIEW: Azuka Theatre’s Lights Rise on Grace

It’s easy to see the value for the artists involved in Chad Beckim's evolving stagework. As for what audiences are getting – that’s a different question.

Bi Jean Ngo and Ashton Carter in Lights Rise on Grace | Photo by AustinArt.Org

Bi Jean Ngo and Ashton Carter in Lights Rise on Grace | Photo by AustinArt.Org

Lights Rise on Grace by Chad Beckim arrives at Azuka as part of the National New Play Network’s ambitious Rolling World Premiere initiative, in which several theaters produce a work in succession. The idea is that each production is an opportunity to continue the development process. In this case, Azuka is the third stop – previously it was done at Woolly Mammoth in Washington, D. C., and at Stageworks in Florida.

It’s easy to see the value for Beckim and all the artists involved. As for what audiences are getting – that’s a different question.

I understand the appeal of Lights Up on Grace, which hits many benchmarks regional theaters are looking for – it’s just under 90 minutes, has a small cast (three actors, each playing one principal character and assorted others), and is notable for racial diversity. Grace, a teenage schoolgirl, is Chinese; her boyfriend, Large, is black; Riece, who is Large’s prison buddy, is white.

This description requires context. Light Up on Grace covers a number of years in the interlocking lives of its three main characters. It’s probably best to discover the details on your own – I’ll add only that the story is emotionally fraught and full of grit. Beckim’s style is punchy and deliberately fragmented.

Keith Conallen and TK in Lights Rise on Grace | Photo by AustinArt.Org

Keith Conallen and Bi Jean Ngo in Lights Rise on Grace | Photo by AustinArt.Org

There’s some pleasure to the virtuosic riffing and short, energetic scenelets. But it wears thin quickly, and there’s not enough development of characters and relationships to make us care. Similarly, director Kevin Glaccum’s production is polished and visually accomplished (fine light and scenic design by J. Dominic Chacon and Colin McIlvane), but I sometimes wished for something simpler and more straightforward. Among the three talented actors – Bi Jean Ngo as Grace, Ashton Carter as Large, and Keith Conallen as Riece – only Conallen was free of unwelcome artifice.

Beckim’s seriousness is not in doubt – he wants Lights Rise on Grace to be a deep examination of three linked lives, as well as a study of their circumstances. But the shorthand style robs the story of nuance, and the quick interjections of supporting characters – delineated mostly by accents – feel perilously close to racial stereotypes.

Lights Rise on Grace runs at Azuka Theatre at the Adrienne through November 22nd. For tickets and more information, go to azukatheatre.org.


David Fox teaches theater and runs academic programs at the University of Pennsylvania. For 16 years, he was theatre critic for the Philadelphia City Paper; he has also written for The New York Times and other publications. He also blogs on arts topics at recliningstandards.org.

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