

Beast of a Different Burden
Faith Whitehill
It starts with the sound of a spoon scraping against glass and the wet noise of lips smacking together.
June and Lurie have a haunting new houseguest – and she’s ravenously hungry.
They do their best to keep her fed and happy, but Beatrice always demands more.
As she burrows deeper and deeper into their lives, the couple faces a horrific question: What will it cost to exorcise Beatrice forever?
Kirsten Greenidge's spine-chilling gothic tale, about a contemporary Black couple haunted by the ghost of a young white girl, deftly explores questions of race, class and the American Dream.
"Fascinatingly offbeat... Greenidge succeeds in weaving a tapestry that’s as hilarious as it is haunting... it’s unquestionably a captivating experience."
— Calvin Wilson, St. Louis Post-Dispatch
"An arresting and thought-provoking ghost story filled with the specter of racism as well as the supernatural."
— Mark Bretz, Ladue News
"This play is a thought-provoking, sobering, but often times laugh-out-loud gothic tale, smartly crafted to work on many complex intellectual levels. Its haunting metaphors explore racism, classism, and the cleanliness/dirtiness of the American Dream."
— Tanya Seale, Broadway World St. Louis
"The play is a piercing, graphic and haunting illustration of one couple’s attempt to assimilate and achieve their idea of the American dream at all costs."
— Kenya Vaughn, St. Louis American
"Plenty of cringe-inducing twists and gripping, edge-of-your-seat moments."
— Richard T. Green, Talkin' Broadway
| Character |
|---|
| Lurie Walker A home owner in his mid-thirties, June’s husband. Black. |
| Leroy Walker Lurie’s younger brother, in his early to mid-thirties. Black. |
| Beatrice A young guest. White. |
| June Walker A home owner in her mid-thirties, Lurie’s wife. Black. |
Feeding Beatrice - Repertory Theatre of St. Louis Trailer
Feeding Beatrice is a comedy play written by Kirsten Greenidge and published by Samuel French .
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