Recommendations of Light Switch

  • Andrew Rosendorf: Light Switch

    There's a reason Light Switch has so many recommendations. Dave Osmundsen's work is filled with heart, love, and empathy. Characters yearning for connection. The last scene between Henry and his mom slayed me. A beautiful piece of writing. As is his play My Brother Jake.

    There's a reason Light Switch has so many recommendations. Dave Osmundsen's work is filled with heart, love, and empathy. Characters yearning for connection. The last scene between Henry and his mom slayed me. A beautiful piece of writing. As is his play My Brother Jake.

  • John David Westby: Light Switch

    A tender, insightful play about a brilliant, neuro-divergent young man navigating love, friendship, and the bewildering circuitry of human connection. Dave Osmundsen writes with wit and compassion, capturing the humor, frustration, and longing of a mind that experiences the world differently. By the end, Light Switch illuminates the quiet courage it takes to reach for connection.

    A tender, insightful play about a brilliant, neuro-divergent young man navigating love, friendship, and the bewildering circuitry of human connection. Dave Osmundsen writes with wit and compassion, capturing the humor, frustration, and longing of a mind that experiences the world differently. By the end, Light Switch illuminates the quiet courage it takes to reach for connection.

  • Daniel Prillaman: Light Switch

    The best representation reminds us that beneath our unique and individual struggles, we are all human. It’s so refreshing that LIGHT SWITCH is a play not about an autistic, gay person, but about a person who is autistic and gay. Osmundsen’s masterful & eloquent protagonist, Henry, is a young man fully drawn, deeply layered beyond any mere stereotypes of either label. The crash course in 19th century Brit lit is the cherry upon a moving & powerful journey. Highly recommend.

    The best representation reminds us that beneath our unique and individual struggles, we are all human. It’s so refreshing that LIGHT SWITCH is a play not about an autistic, gay person, but about a person who is autistic and gay. Osmundsen’s masterful & eloquent protagonist, Henry, is a young man fully drawn, deeply layered beyond any mere stereotypes of either label. The crash course in 19th century Brit lit is the cherry upon a moving & powerful journey. Highly recommend.

  • Izzy Salant: Light Switch

    It is always wonderful to find plays with neurodiverse protagonists that... actually correctly represent the neurodiverse protagonists. Couple that with an wonderful dialogue, humor, heartbreak, and a well-written story that allows us to follow Henry on his path through life, allowing us to grow up with him and watch his triumphs, obstacles and failures, and you have Osmundsen's light switch. Add this to your reading list, or production list, if you haven't already.

    It is always wonderful to find plays with neurodiverse protagonists that... actually correctly represent the neurodiverse protagonists. Couple that with an wonderful dialogue, humor, heartbreak, and a well-written story that allows us to follow Henry on his path through life, allowing us to grow up with him and watch his triumphs, obstacles and failures, and you have Osmundsen's light switch. Add this to your reading list, or production list, if you haven't already.

  • Franky D. Gonzalez: Light Switch

    There is not much more that I can add to the very worthy praise that this play has received. Osmundsen has created a play that is not only engaging but creates a necessary and important work for the autistic community in the arts. In an industry which relegates people with autism into tropes and secondary plot points, it is so refreshing--and vitally needed--to see the journey of Henry play out with so much heart and truth. This play needs to be more widely read and produced.

    There is not much more that I can add to the very worthy praise that this play has received. Osmundsen has created a play that is not only engaging but creates a necessary and important work for the autistic community in the arts. In an industry which relegates people with autism into tropes and secondary plot points, it is so refreshing--and vitally needed--to see the journey of Henry play out with so much heart and truth. This play needs to be more widely read and produced.

  • Michael Gravante: Light Switch

    (02/09/2025) I joined NPX so I could read this play! Dave Osmundsen masterfully illustrates the obstacles of being both LGBTQ+ AND neurodivergent, with its protagonist Henry on a journey to find a Victorian-esque romantic connection in 2017. As a queer theatre maker with autism, I saw a lot of myself in Henry and enjoyed his character arc from beginning to end. I also enjoyed its many literary references and allusions to iconic 19th-century works. I would love to work on this one day!

    (02/09/2025) I joined NPX so I could read this play! Dave Osmundsen masterfully illustrates the obstacles of being both LGBTQ+ AND neurodivergent, with its protagonist Henry on a journey to find a Victorian-esque romantic connection in 2017. As a queer theatre maker with autism, I saw a lot of myself in Henry and enjoyed his character arc from beginning to end. I also enjoyed its many literary references and allusions to iconic 19th-century works. I would love to work on this one day!

  • Sam Heyman: Light Switch

    10/4/24: This play turned a light switch on in me! Dave Osmundsen centers the autistic experience so beautifully in all of his plays, but Henry, the central protagonist of Light Switch, is a character with such magnetism and specificity that he transforms the world around him at times into a version of the Victorian era literature he so adores. This play is earnest, heartfelt, and written from a marvelous and caring perspective. I was so glad to see it at Open Space Arts!

    10/4/24: This play turned a light switch on in me! Dave Osmundsen centers the autistic experience so beautifully in all of his plays, but Henry, the central protagonist of Light Switch, is a character with such magnetism and specificity that he transforms the world around him at times into a version of the Victorian era literature he so adores. This play is earnest, heartfelt, and written from a marvelous and caring perspective. I was so glad to see it at Open Space Arts!

  • Alex Kingsley: Light Switch

    I love this script! I was lucky enough to do the sound design for its production at Open Space Arts. Charming, funny, heartbreaking, and relatable. The dialogue is quick-witted and feels true to life. I've seen it so many times and it never gets old!

    I love this script! I was lucky enough to do the sound design for its production at Open Space Arts. Charming, funny, heartbreaking, and relatable. The dialogue is quick-witted and feels true to life. I've seen it so many times and it never gets old!

  • Andy Boyd: Light Switch

    Light Switch is a profound and funny play that smashes stereotypes about autistic adults while also telling a great story. As an autistic playwright, I found reading this play very inspiring. Henry is a character who learns and grows throughout the show, but that growth is on his own terms, not in search for some neurotypical "normal." I also appreciated the ways this play depicts autism as a strength, particularly in Henry's single-mided devotion to scholarly study.

    Light Switch is a profound and funny play that smashes stereotypes about autistic adults while also telling a great story. As an autistic playwright, I found reading this play very inspiring. Henry is a character who learns and grows throughout the show, but that growth is on his own terms, not in search for some neurotypical "normal." I also appreciated the ways this play depicts autism as a strength, particularly in Henry's single-mided devotion to scholarly study.

  • Jackson Tucker-Meyer: Light Switch

    Euphoric, messy, confusing, frightening – these adjectives can apply to being in love, or being autistic in a neurotypical world, and Osmundsen evokes both experiences with warmth and clarity. Henry, the protagonist, is obsessed with the classics of nineteenth-century literature, and like those great novels, the romantic misadventures of this play's characters are depicted with a minimum of sentimentality and a wealth of empathy. Everyone in this play is yearning for something or someone they can't quite reach, but they never stop trying, and Osmundsen leaves the audience with the hope that...

    Euphoric, messy, confusing, frightening – these adjectives can apply to being in love, or being autistic in a neurotypical world, and Osmundsen evokes both experiences with warmth and clarity. Henry, the protagonist, is obsessed with the classics of nineteenth-century literature, and like those great novels, the romantic misadventures of this play's characters are depicted with a minimum of sentimentality and a wealth of empathy. Everyone in this play is yearning for something or someone they can't quite reach, but they never stop trying, and Osmundsen leaves the audience with the hope that someday, maybe, they just might succeed.