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the cast does not have one in this very Southern Gothic play.The situation is that her soldier brother is getting married: Frankie decides that she will leave with the bride and groom on their honeymoon and become the third member of the marriage.Her antagonistnd source of emotional support?is the olored?housekeeper Berenice Sadie Brown. She is Frankie surrogate mother, and full of contradictions herself. Being a black housekeeper in Georgia was a hard row to hoe in 1945 when Jim Crow Laws were enforced by lynching (over 3,000 lynched in 50 years) and the word?was accepted parlance. African Americans were treated as children: as the character is written, it is easy to see how that influence nd being cooped up with children all day?could make one a bit of a child who might bite back when bitten.Instead of an interesting and complex character, which would add much more compelling conflict to the play, Berenice is played by Alexaendrai Bond as an exemplar of nurturing sweetness. She expresses herself in that breathless, hopeful intonation that draws out the vowels interrupted by lots of pauses in the fashion of Maya Angelou reading a poem. A saving grace is the inclusion of her heavenly singing of a few hymns.There are two stand outs, both mature character roles: Mr. Addams is played by Joe Fitzgerald whose voice fills the wide, spacious house and whose Southern accent never waivers, and T. T. Williams, Berenice man friend, played by Dorian Lockett whose expression lends humor and believability to the production.The play is taken from the novel of the same name by Lula Carson