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One of the most moving and meaningful plays in American theatrebased on the famed Scopes Monkey Trial of 1925, in which a Tennessee teacher was tried for teaching evolutionnow on Broadway starring Tony Award® Winners Christopher Plummer and Brian Dennehy, and Directed by Tony Award® Winner Doug Hughes
The accused was a slight, frightened man who had deliberately broken the law. His trial was a Roman circus, the chief gladiators being the two great legal giants of the century. Locked in mortal combat, they bellowed and roared imprecations and abuse. The spectators sat uneasily in the sweltering heat with murder in their hearts, barely able to restrain themselves. At stake was the freedom of every American.
“Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee were classic Broadway scribes who knew how to crank out serious plays for thinking Americans. . . . Inherit the Wind is a perpetually prescient courtroom battle over the legality of teaching evolution. . . . We’re still arguing this case–all the way to the White House.”
–Chicago Tribune
“Powerful . . . a crackling good courtroom play . . . [that] provides two of the juiciest roles in American theater.”
–Copley News Service
“[This] historical drama . . . deserves respect.”
–The Columbus Dispatch
115 pages, Mass Market Paperback
First published January 1, 1955
Be it resolved, that men are descendants of monkeys and not created from the image and likeness of God.I heard about this play when I was 8 or 9 years old. I was then in a Pacific island and it was late morning of a Good Friday and my mother told me to buy something from a store. In the Philippines, Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Black Saturdays were the days of a year in the island when there was an eerie silence all around the town. All you could hear were mournful singing of the pasyon, written in a local language, being sung and it recounted the passion and resurrection of Jesus Christ. However, on that Good Friday morning, I heard the local translation of this book, Inherit the Wind being dramatized over the local radio of our neighbor.
"All motion is relative. Maybe it's you who've moved away by standing still."