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Inherit the Wind

 
Inherit the Wind

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Inherit the Wind



 
 
Inherit the Wind is a play by Jerome Lawrence
Jerome Lawrence

Jerome Lawrence was an American playwright and author.Born Jerome Schwartz in Cleveland, Ohio, he worked for several small newspapers as a reporter/editor before moving into radio as a writer for CBS....
 and Robert Edwin Lee
Robert Edwin Lee

Robert Edwin Lee , was an United States playwright and lyricist. With his writing partner, Jerome Lawrence, Lee worked for Armed Forces Radio during World War II; Lawrence and Lee became the most prolific writing partnership in radio, with such long-running series as Favorite Story among others....
, which opened on Broadway
Broadway theatre

Broadway theatre, commonly called simply Broadway, refers to theatrical performances presented in one of the 39 large professional theaters with 500 seats or more located in the Theatre District, New York in Manhattan, New York City....
 in January 1955; a 1960
1960 in film

The year 1960 in film involved some significant events....
 Hollywood
Hollywood, Los Angeles, California

Hollywood is a district in Los Angeles, California, situated west-northwest of Downtown Los Angeles. Due to its fame and cultural identity as the historical center of movie studios and movie stars, the word "Hollywood" is often used as a metonym of cinema of the United States....
 film
Film

Film encompasses individual motion pictures, the field of film as an art form, and the film industry. Films are produced by recording images from the world with cameras, or by creating images using animation techniques or special effects....
 based on the play; and three television remakes. It was recently brought back onto Broadway in a revival. The play's title comes from Proverbs
Book of Proverbs

The Book of Proverbs is a book of the Hebrew Bible , included in the collected works known as the "Writings" or Ketuvim....
 11:29, which in the King James Bible
King James Version of the Bible

The Authorized King James Version is an English language translation of the Christian Bible begun in 1604 and first published in 1611 by the Church of England....
 reads:

He that troubleth his own house shall inherit the wind:
and the fool shall be servant to the wise of heart.


Inherit the Wind is a fictionalized account of the 1925 Scopes "Monkey" Trial
Scopes Trial

"'Scopes Trial'" was an United States legal case that tested the Butler Act, which made it unlawful, in any state-funded educational establishment in Tennessee, "to teach any theory that denies the story of the Creation according to Genesis of man as taught in the Bible, and to teach instead that man has descended from a lower order of anima...
, which resulted in John T. Scopes
John T. Scopes

John Thomas Scopes , a teacher in Dayton, Tennessee, was charged on May 25, 1925 with violating Tennessee's Butler Act, which prohibited the teaching of evolution in Tennessee schools....
' conviction for teaching Charles Darwin
Charles Darwin

Charles Robert Darwin Royal Society was an English people natural history who realised and presented compelling evidence that all species of life have evolution over time from common descent, through the process he called natural selection....
's theory of
Darwinism

Darwinism is a term used for various movements or concepts related to ideas of transmutation of species or evolution, including ideas with no connection to the work of Charles Darwin....
 evolution
Evolution

In biology, evolution is change in the heritability trait of a population of organisms from one generation to the next. These changes are caused by a combination of three main processes: variation, reproduction, and selection....
 to a high school science class
Science education

Science education is the field concerned with sharing science content and process with individuals not traditionally considered part of the scientific community....
, contrary to a Tennessee
Tennessee

Tennessee is a U.S. state located in the Southern United States United States. In 1796, it became the sixteenth state to join the United States....
 state law
Butler Act

The Butler Act was a 1925 Tennessee law forbidding public school teachers to deny the literal Creationism of human origin and to teach in its place the evolution human evolution from lower orders of animals....
 that prohibited the teaching of anything besides creationism
Creationism

Creationism is the religious belief that humanity, life, the Earth, and the universe were Creation myth in their original form by a deity or deities....
.






Discussion
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Quotations


Melinda:It's the Devil! Hornbeck: Hello Devil, welcome to Hell.

Drummond: All shine, and no substance! Turning to Cates Bert, whenever you see something bright, shining, perfect-seeming—all gold, with purple spots—look behind the paint! And if its a lie—show it up for what it really is!






Encyclopedia


Inherit the Wind is a play by Jerome Lawrence
Jerome Lawrence

Jerome Lawrence was an American playwright and author.Born Jerome Schwartz in Cleveland, Ohio, he worked for several small newspapers as a reporter/editor before moving into radio as a writer for CBS....
 and Robert Edwin Lee
Robert Edwin Lee

Robert Edwin Lee , was an United States playwright and lyricist. With his writing partner, Jerome Lawrence, Lee worked for Armed Forces Radio during World War II; Lawrence and Lee became the most prolific writing partnership in radio, with such long-running series as Favorite Story among others....
, which opened on Broadway
Broadway theatre

Broadway theatre, commonly called simply Broadway, refers to theatrical performances presented in one of the 39 large professional theaters with 500 seats or more located in the Theatre District, New York in Manhattan, New York City....
 in January 1955; a 1960
1960 in film

The year 1960 in film involved some significant events....
 Hollywood
Hollywood, Los Angeles, California

Hollywood is a district in Los Angeles, California, situated west-northwest of Downtown Los Angeles. Due to its fame and cultural identity as the historical center of movie studios and movie stars, the word "Hollywood" is often used as a metonym of cinema of the United States....
 film
Film

Film encompasses individual motion pictures, the field of film as an art form, and the film industry. Films are produced by recording images from the world with cameras, or by creating images using animation techniques or special effects....
 based on the play; and three television remakes. It was recently brought back onto Broadway in a revival. The play's title comes from Proverbs
Book of Proverbs

The Book of Proverbs is a book of the Hebrew Bible , included in the collected works known as the "Writings" or Ketuvim....
 11:29, which in the King James Bible
King James Version of the Bible

The Authorized King James Version is an English language translation of the Christian Bible begun in 1604 and first published in 1611 by the Church of England....
 reads:

He that troubleth his own house shall inherit the wind:
and the fool shall be servant to the wise of heart.


Inherit the Wind is a fictionalized account of the 1925 Scopes "Monkey" Trial
Scopes Trial

"'Scopes Trial'" was an United States legal case that tested the Butler Act, which made it unlawful, in any state-funded educational establishment in Tennessee, "to teach any theory that denies the story of the Creation according to Genesis of man as taught in the Bible, and to teach instead that man has descended from a lower order of anima...
, which resulted in John T. Scopes
John T. Scopes

John Thomas Scopes , a teacher in Dayton, Tennessee, was charged on May 25, 1925 with violating Tennessee's Butler Act, which prohibited the teaching of evolution in Tennessee schools....
' conviction for teaching Charles Darwin
Charles Darwin

Charles Robert Darwin Royal Society was an English people natural history who realised and presented compelling evidence that all species of life have evolution over time from common descent, through the process he called natural selection....
's theory of
Darwinism

Darwinism is a term used for various movements or concepts related to ideas of transmutation of species or evolution, including ideas with no connection to the work of Charles Darwin....
 evolution
Evolution

In biology, evolution is change in the heritability trait of a population of organisms from one generation to the next. These changes are caused by a combination of three main processes: variation, reproduction, and selection....
 to a high school science class
Science education

Science education is the field concerned with sharing science content and process with individuals not traditionally considered part of the scientific community....
, contrary to a Tennessee
Tennessee

Tennessee is a U.S. state located in the Southern United States United States. In 1796, it became the sixteenth state to join the United States....
 state law
Butler Act

The Butler Act was a 1925 Tennessee law forbidding public school teachers to deny the literal Creationism of human origin and to teach in its place the evolution human evolution from lower orders of animals....
 that prohibited the teaching of anything besides creationism
Creationism

Creationism is the religious belief that humanity, life, the Earth, and the universe were Creation myth in their original form by a deity or deities....
. The fictional characters Matthew Harrison Brady, Henry Drummond, Bertram Cates and E. K. Hornbeck correspond to the historical figures of William Jennings Bryan
William Jennings Bryan

William Jennings Bryan was the Democratic Party nominee for President of the United States in 1896, 1900 and 1908, a lawyer, and the 41st United States Secretary of State under President Woodrow Wilson....
, Clarence Darrow
Clarence Darrow

Clarence Seward Darrow was an United States lawyer and leading member of the American Civil Liberties Union, best known for defending teenage thrill killing Leopold and Loeb in their trial for murdering 14-year-old Bobby Franks and defending John T....
, John Scopes, and H. L. Mencken
H. L. Mencken

Henry Louis "H. L." Mencken , was an United States journalist, essayist, magazine editing, satire, acerbic Social criticism of American American way and Culture of the United States, and a student of American English....
, respectively.

Despite numerous similarities between the play and history, the play was not intended as a documentary-drama
Docudrama

A docudrama is a dramatization of actual historical events. As a neologism, the term is often confused with docufiction....
 about the Scopes trial, but instead as a warning against dogmatism
Dogmatism

Sorry, no overview for this topic
 and McCarthyism
McCarthyism

McCarthyism is the politically motivated practice of making accusations of disloyalty, subversion, or treason without proper regard for evidence....
.

The film


The play is the basis of a 1960 Hollywood film of the same name, starring Spencer Tracy
Spencer Tracy

Spencer Tracy was a two-time Academy Award winning actor of theatre and film, who appeared in 74 films from 1930 in film to 1967 in film. He is generally regarded as one of the finest actors in motion picture history....
 (Drummond) and Fredric March (Brady), and featuring Gene Kelly
Gene Kelly

Eugene Curran "Gene" Kelly was an United States dancer, actor, singer, film director, Film producer, and choreographer.A major exponent of 20th century filmed dance, Kelly was known for his energetic and athletic dancing style, his good looks and the likeable characters that he played on screen....
 (Hornbeck), Dick York
Dick York

Richard Allen York was an United States actor in radio, Broadway theatre, and television....
 (Cates), Harry Morgan
Harry Morgan

Harry Morgan is an Emmy-winning United States television actor. Morgan is perhaps best-known as Colonel Sherman T. Potter on M*A*S*H , "Pete" on Pete and Gladys and December Bride, and Detective Bill Gannon on Dragnet ....
 (Judge), Donna Anderson
Donna Anderson

Donna Anderson is an American leading lady who had a film career as a character actress during the 1960s and '70s. On American television, she appeared in the series The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters and Little House on the Prairie ....
 (Rachel Brown), Claude Akins
Claude Akins

Claude Marion Akins was an American actor. He was born in Nelson, Georgia and grew up in Bedford, Indiana. He was a 1949 graduate of Northwestern University , where he studied theatre....
 (Rev. Brown), Noah Beery, Jr.
Noah Beery, Jr.

Noah Lindsey Beery , known professionally as Noah Beery, Jr. or just Noah Beery, was an United States actor specializing in warm, friendly character parts similar to the ones played by his legendary uncle Wallace Beery, although Noah Beery, Jr., unlike his uncle, seldom broke away from playing supporting roles....
 (Stebbins), Florence Eldridge
Florence Eldridge

Florence Eldridge was a Tony Award-nominated American actress....
 (Mrs. Brady), and Jimmy Boyd
Jimmy Boyd

Jimmy Boyd was an United States of America singer, musician, and actor....
 (Howard). The movie was adapted by Nedrick Young
Nedrick Young

Nedrick Young was a screenwriter often Hollywood blacklist during the 1950's and 1960's. He is credited with writing the screenplay for Jailhouse Rock in 1957, which starred Elvis Presley....
 (originally as Nathan E. Douglas) and Harold Jacob Smith
Harold Jacob Smith

Harold Jacob Smith was an American Academy Award winning screenwriter.External links...
, and directed by Stanley Kramer
Stanley Kramer

Stanley Kramer was an Academy Award-nominated Jewish-American film director and film producer responsible for some of Hollywood's most famous Social problem film....
.

At the Berlin International Film Festival
Berlin International Film Festival

The Berlin International Film Festival , also called the Berlinale, is one of the world's leading film festivals and most reputable media events held in Berlin, Germany....
, March received the Silver Bear Award for Best Actor, and the film was nominated for the Golden Bear
Golden Bear

According to legend, the Golden Bear was a large Gold en Ursus arctos. Members of the Ursus arctos species can reach masses of 130?700 kg . The Grizzly Bear and the Kodiak Bear are North American subspecies of the Brown Bear....
 award. The movie was also nominated for the following Academy Awards
Academy Awards

The Academy Awards, popularly known as the Oscars, are presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to recognize excellence of professionals in the film industry, including directors, actors, and writers....
: Best Actor in a Leading Role
Academy Award for Best Actor

Performance by an Actor in a Leading Role is one of the Academy Award presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to recognize an actor who has delivered an outstanding performance while working within the film industry....
 (Spencer Tracy), Best Cinematography, Black-and-White
Academy Award for Best Cinematography

The Academy Award for Best Cinematography is an Academy Award awarded each year to a cinematographer for work in one particular motion picture....
, Best Film Editing
Academy Award for Film Editing

The Academy Award for Film Editing was first given for films issued in 1934. The name of this award is occasionally changed; in 2008, it was listed as the Academy Award for Achievement in Film Editing....
 and Best Writing, Screenplay Based on Material from Another Medium
Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay

The Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay is one of the Academy Awards, the most prominent film awards in the United States. It is awarded each year to the screenwriter of a Adapted_screenplay from another source ....
. It was also nominated for BAFTA Best Film and Best Foreign Actor.

The film deviates from the play, most notably by reducing the unidimensionality of some of the characters. Furthermore, the friendship of Drummond and Brady is emphasized as they respectfully explain their positions in a cordial private conversation.

The film incorporates more of the actual trial transcript than does the stage play, most notably the incident in which Clarence Darrow
Clarence Darrow

Clarence Seward Darrow was an United States lawyer and leading member of the American Civil Liberties Union, best known for defending teenage thrill killing Leopold and Loeb in their trial for murdering 14-year-old Bobby Franks and defending John T....
 is cited for contempt of court. The film includes a sequence where a mob harasses Cates in his jail cell and then threatens Drummond at his hotel. That same night, a conversation with Hornbeck inspires Drummond to call Brady as a witness, to expose the contradictions that result from a literal interpretation of the Bible.

The blurb for the 2002 DVD release of the film included the following factoid
Factoid

A factoid is a spurious?unverified, incorrect, or fabricated?statement formed and asserted as a fact, but with no wikt:Veracity. The word appears in the Oxford English Dictionary as "something which becomes accepted as fact, although it may not be true."...
: "In 1960,
Inherit the Wind became the world's first in-flight movie when Trans World Airlines used it to lure first-class passengers!"
Cast
  • Spencer Tracy
    Spencer Tracy

    Spencer Tracy was a two-time Academy Award winning actor of theatre and film, who appeared in 74 films from 1930 in film to 1967 in film. He is generally regarded as one of the finest actors in motion picture history....
    as Henry Drummond
  • Fredric March as Matthew Harrison Brady
  • Gene Kelly
    Gene Kelly

    Eugene Curran "Gene" Kelly was an United States dancer, actor, singer, film director, Film producer, and choreographer.A major exponent of 20th century filmed dance, Kelly was known for his energetic and athletic dancing style, his good looks and the likeable characters that he played on screen....
    as E. K. Hornbeck
  • Dick York
    Dick York

    Richard Allen York was an United States actor in radio, Broadway theatre, and television....
    as Bertram T. Cates
  • Donna Anderson
    Donna Anderson

    Donna Anderson is an American leading lady who had a film career as a character actress during the 1960s and '70s. On American television, she appeared in the series The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters and Little House on the Prairie ....
    as Rachel Brown
  • Harry Morgan
    Harry Morgan

    Harry Morgan is an Emmy-winning United States television actor. Morgan is perhaps best-known as Colonel Sherman T. Potter on M*A*S*H , "Pete" on Pete and Gladys and December Bride, and Detective Bill Gannon on Dragnet ....
    as Judge Mel Coffey
  • Claude Akins
    Claude Akins

    Claude Marion Akins was an American actor. He was born in Nelson, Georgia and grew up in Bedford, Indiana. He was a 1949 graduate of Northwestern University , where he studied theatre....
    as Rev. Jeremiah Brown
  • Elliott Reid
    Elliott Reid

    For the fictional character on the TV show Scrubs , see Elliot ReidElliott Reid , is a character actor who has performed on radio and television, and in the movies....
    as Prosecutor Tom Davenport
  • Paul Hartman as Deputy Horace Meeker - Bailiff
  • Philip Coolidge as Mayor Jason Carter
  • Jimmy Boyd
    Jimmy Boyd

    Jimmy Boyd was an United States of America singer, musician, and actor....
    as Howard - Biology Student
  • Noah Beery, Jr.
    Noah Beery, Jr.

    Noah Lindsey Beery , known professionally as Noah Beery, Jr. or just Noah Beery, was an United States actor specializing in warm, friendly character parts similar to the ones played by his legendary uncle Wallace Beery, although Noah Beery, Jr., unlike his uncle, seldom broke away from playing supporting roles....
    as John Stebbins
  • Norman Fell
    Norman Fell

    Norman Noah Fell was an United States actor of film and television, most famous for his role as landlord Stanley Roper on the sitcom Three's Company and its spin-off, The Ropers....
    as WGN Radio Technician
  • Gordon Polk as George Sillers - Juror Accepted
  • Hope Summers as Mrs. Krebs - Righteous Townswoman


Inherit the Wind and history


Although the play quotes extensively from the trial transcript, the play and filmscript indulge in much poetic license
Poetic License

The Poetic License is both a poem and a permissive software license BSD licenses license, originally based on the text of the MIT License and ISC license licenses....
, in that they did not try to present the Scopes trial as it actually happened, but instead use it as the historical launching point for a fictional story, embellishing events for dramatic effect. In this respect,
Inherit the Wind resembles Arthur Miller
Arthur Miller

Arthur Miller was an United States playwright and essayist. He was a prominent figure in Theater in the United States and film for almost 100 years, writing a wide variety of dramas, including celebrated Play such as The Crucible, A View from the Bridge, All My Sons, and Death of a Salesman, which are studied and performed w...
's play
The Crucible
The Crucible

The Crucible by Arthur Miller is a play based on the actual events that, in 1692, led to the Salem Witch Trials, a series of hearings before local magistrates to prosecute over 150 people accused of witchcraft in colonial Massachusetts between February 1692 and May 1693....
. Both employ historical events to comment on controversies at the time they were written.

The play was intended to criticize the anti-Communist investigations of the House Committee on Un-American Activities (HCUA) and Senator
United States Senate

The United States Senate is the upper house of the Bicameralism United States Congress, the lower house being the United States House of Representatives....
 Joseph McCarthy
Joseph McCarthy

Joseph Raymond McCarthy was an United States politician who served as a Republican Party United States Senate from the state of Wisconsin from 1947 until his death in 1957....
. The authors used the historical Scopes trial as the background for a drama that comments on and explores the threats to intellectual freedom
Intellectual freedom

Intellectual freedom is a human right, as defined by Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Article 19 states:Intellectual freedom is promoted by several professions and movements....
 presented by the anti-communist hysteria.

The play includes a note reminding the reader that "
Inherit the Wind is not history." The characters have different names from the historical figures on whom they are based, and the play "does not pretend to be journalism." The authors go on to argue that "the issues of [Bryan and Darrow's] conflict have acquired new dimension and meaning" in the 30 years since the actual courtroom clash. They do not set the play in 1925 but instead say that "It might have been yesterday. It could be tomorrow." This timelessness of the setting can be seen as a warning about repeating the wrongs of the past, which can recur unless we are vigilant. During the play's original Broadway run, it was widely understood as a critique of McCarthyism, but subsequent interpretations have been more literal, given the resurgence of the creation-evolution controversy
Creation-evolution controversy

The creation-evolution controversy is a recurring theology and culture wars about the origins of Age of the Earth, human evolution, origin of life, and Big Bang, between the proponents of evolution, backed by scientific consensus, and those who espouse the validity and/or superiority of various literal interpretations of creation myth....
 after the play and film appeared, and the events of the film are sometimes incorrectly taken as a near recreation of the trial.

Inherit the Wind has been criticized for stereotyping Christian
Christian

A Christian is a person who adheres to Christianity, a Monotheism#Christian view religion centered on the life and teachings of Jesus and interpreted by Christians to have been prophesied in the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament....
s as hostile, hate-filled bigots. For example, the character of Reverend Jeremiah Brown whips his congregation into a frenzy and calls down hellfire on his own daughter for being in love with Bertram Cates. In fact, no such event took place — Scopes had no girlfriend and the character of Rev. Brown is fictitious. The 1960 film depicts a prayer meeting during which some express hostility about Drummond and Cates, but Brady intervenes to calm the situation, urging a gentler and more forgiving strain of Christianity than the minister's.

In reality, the people of Dayton were generally very kind and cordial to Darrow, who attested to this fact during the trial as follows:

"I don't know as I was ever in a community in my life where my religious ideas differed as widely from the great mass as I have found them since I have been in Tennessee. Yet I came here a perfect stranger and I can say what I have said before that I have not found upon any body's part — any citizen here in this town or outside the slightest discourtesy. I have been treated better, kindlier and more hospitably than I fancied would have been the case in the north." (trial transcript, pp. 225–226)


The film does justice to this fact in the scene where Drummond first meets the Hillsboro town mayor, and also in Drummond's interactions with Cates' students.

Specific differences

The specific differences between the events of the Scopes trial and the dramatized versions of events in the play and in the film are as follows:

= the published play = the 1960 movie = both versions

  • (M) When Bertram Cates is arrested in the classroom and the sheriff asks his name, Cates replies "Come off it Sam, you've known me all my life." In reality, Scopes was born in Kentucky, went to high school in Illinois, and moved to Dayton in 1924 after graduating from the University of Kentucky.
  • (M/P) Brady, in answer to Drummond's question about the Origin of Species, says he has no interest in "the pagan hypotheses of that book". In reality, Bryan was familiar with Darwin's writings and quoted them extensively during the trial.
  • (M/P) In answer to a question from Drummond, Brady declares that the original sin
    Original sin

    Original sin is, according to a doctrine in Christian theology, humanity's state of sin resulting from the Fall of Man. While the Old Testament and the New Testament, which frequently speak of the sinfulness of humans, do not contain the terms "original sin" or "ancestral sin", the doctrine expressed by these terms is claimed to be based on t...
     of Adam and Eve
    Eve (Bible)

    Eve was, according to the Book of Genesis, the First man or woman created by God, and an important figure in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Her husband was Adam, from whose rib God created her to be his helpmate....
     was their discovery of sexual intercourse
    Sexual intercourse

    Sexual intercourse, also known as copulation or coitus, commonly refers to the act in which the Penis enters the Vagina. The two entities may be of opposite sexes or not, or they may be hermaphrodite, as is the case with snails....
    . In reality, the confrontation between Bryan and Darrow never mentioned sex, and virtually all forms of Christianity approve marital intercourse.
  • (P) Brady dogmatically affirmed Bishop Ussher's belief that the world was created on October 23, 4004 B.C. In the actual trial, Darrow introduced Ussher's dates, not Bryan. When Darrow asked Bryan if he was aware of the bishop's calculations, Bryan replied, "Yes, but I do not consider them accurate."
  • (M/P) Brady betrays Cates' girlfriend, the local preacher's daughter, by questioning her in court about information she told him in confidence. In real life, Scopes did not have a girlfriend, and Bryan did not ask anyone who was under oath to betray any confidences.
  • (M/P) When the verdict is announced, Brady protests, loudly and angrily, that the fine is too lenient. In reality, Scopes was fined the minimum the law required, and Bryan offered to pay the fine.
  • (M) The plot line regarding Mr and Mrs Stebbins and the death of their son by drowning is allegedly based on a true incident. In fact the event occurred several years earlier — before Scopes ever moved to Dayton — and is believed to have motivated George Rappleyea
    George Rappleyea

    George Washington Rappleyea , a New Yorker, was a metallurgical engineer and the manager of the Cumberland Coal and Iron Company in Dayton, Tennessee....
     to turn against fundamentalist Christianity.
  • (M/P) After the sentence is pronounced, Brady protests loudly and collapses from an apparent heart attack. A short time later, Drummond and Hornbeck are informed that that Brady is dead. In fact, Bryan died in his sleep during an afternoon nap six days after the trial had concluded.
  • (M/P) Even though Cates is found guilty, Drummond declares victory because he had made a mockery of the state's law against the teaching of evolution. In fact, Scopes' conviction was later overturned on a technicality (the judge had determined the fine instead of the jury). Tennessee's law against the teaching of evolution was not repealed until 1967.
  • (M/P) After the trial and Brady's death, Drummond says that Brady had once been a great man. E.K. Hornbeck brushes that aside saying that the man had died of a "busted belly." According to Jeffery P. Moran's The Scopes Trial, it was Darrow who claimed that Bryan had died of a busted belly, with Mencken gloating "Well, we killed the poor man."
  • (P) Hornbeck is depicted as an atheist. H. L. Mencken
    H. L. Mencken

    Henry Louis "H. L." Mencken , was an United States journalist, essayist, magazine editing, satire, acerbic Social criticism of American American way and Culture of the United States, and a student of American English....
     was in fact an agnostic whose writings attacked only certain aspects of Christianity, such as infant damnation, Biblical literalism, predestination
    Predestination

    Predestination is a religion concept, which involves the relationship between God and His creation. The religious character of predestination distinguishes it from other ideas about determinism and free will....
    , and hostility to Darwin. But he had no real quarrel with the Protestant mainstream of his day, and admired Catholic
    Catholic

    Catholic is an adjective derived from the Greek language adjective , meaning "whole" or "complete". In the context of Christianity ecclesiology, it has a rich history and several usages....
     ritual.

Inherit the Wind on television

In 1965 the play aired on television with Melvyn Douglas
Melvyn Douglas

Melvyn Edouard Hesselberg , better known as Melvyn Douglas, was an American actor. He won all three of the entertainment industry's highest awards, two Academy Awards, one Tony Award and an Emmy Award....
 as Drummond and Ed Begley
Ed Begley

Edward James Begley was an United States award winning actor....
 as Brady. In 1988, a rewrite of the Kramer movie shown on NBC starred Jason Robards
Jason Robards

Jason Nelson Robards, Jr., was an Academy Award & Emmy Award-winning United States actor and a World War II United States Navy combat veteran. He became famous playing works of United States dramatist Eugene O'Neill, and would regularly play O'Neill's works throughout his career....
 as Drummond, Kirk Douglas
Kirk Douglas

Kirk Douglas is an Academy Award-nominated United States actor and film producer known for his cleft chin, his gravelly voice and his recurring roles as the kinds of characters Douglas himself once described as "sons of bitches"....
 as Brady and Darren McGavin
Darren McGavin

Darren McGavin was an United States actor best known for playing the title role in the television horror film series Kolchak: The Night Stalker, and also his portrayal in the movie A Christmas Story of the grumpy father given to bursts of profanity that he never realizes his son overhears....
 as Hornbeck. Another version aired in 1999 with another pair of Oscar
Academy Awards

The Academy Awards, popularly known as the Oscars, are presented annually by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to recognize excellence of professionals in the film industry, including directors, actors, and writers....
 winners, Jack Lemmon
Jack Lemmon

'John Uhler "Jack" Lemmon III' was an United States actor known principally for his comedic roles. He starred in over 60 films including Some Like It Hot, The Apartment, Days of Wine and Roses , Irma La Douce, The Odd Couple , The Out-of-Towners , Glengarry Glen Ross , The China Syndrome and JFK ....
 and George C. Scott
George C. Scott

George Campbell Scott was an American stage and film actor, film director, and Film producer. He was best known for his Academy Award-winning portrayal of General George S....
, as Drummond and Brady respectively, and Beau Bridges
Beau Bridges

Lloyd Vernet ?Beau? Bridges III is a U.S. three-time Emmy Award-winning actor....
 as Hornbeck. For their performances, Douglas
Melvyn Douglas

Melvyn Edouard Hesselberg , better known as Melvyn Douglas, was an American actor. He won all three of the entertainment industry's highest awards, two Academy Awards, one Tony Award and an Emmy Award....
, Begley
Ed Begley

Edward James Begley was an United States award winning actor....
, and Bridges
Beau Bridges

Lloyd Vernet ?Beau? Bridges III is a U.S. three-time Emmy Award-winning actor....
 received Emmy nominations, Robards won the Emmy Award and Lemmon won a Golden Globe award and an Emmy nomination. The 1988 production also won the Emmy for Outstanding Drama/Comedy Special.

See also

  • Trial movies
    Trial movies

    Trial movies is a film genre, also commonly referred to as courtroom drama....
  • Scopes Trial
    Scopes Trial

    "'Scopes Trial'" was an United States legal case that tested the Butler Act, which made it unlawful, in any state-funded educational establishment in Tennessee, "to teach any theory that denies the story of the Creation according to Genesis of man as taught in the Bible, and to teach instead that man has descended from a lower order of anima...


External links and references

  • at Internet Broadway Database
    Internet Broadway Database

    The Internet Broadway Database is an online database of Broadway theatre productions and their personnel. It is operated by the Research Department of The Broadway League, a trade association for the North American commercial theatre community....
  • from a "Creationist" web site.
  • , which alleges it is ahistorical and anti-Christian in nature.
  • Larson, Edward J., 1998. Summer for the gods: the Scopes trial and America's continuing debate over science and religion ISBN 0-674-85429-2
  • - Audio from a pivotal scene in the movie