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{{About||other productions|Twelve Angry Men}}
{{About||other productions|Twelve Angry Men}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2020}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:Twelve Angry Men (''Westinghouse Studio One'')}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2014}}
{{Infobox television episode
{{Infobox television episode
|title = Twelve Angry Men
|series = [[Westinghouse Studio One]]
|series = [[Studio One (U.S. TV series)|Studio One]]
|season = 7
|season = 7
|episode = 1
|episode = 1
|airdate = {{Start date|1954|09|20}}
|airdate = {{Start date|1954|09|20}}
|producer = [[Felix Jackson]]
|producer = [[Felix Jackson]]
|writer = Written especially for ''Studio One'' by [[Reginald Rose]]
|writer = [[Reginald Rose]]
|director = [[Franklin Schaffner]]
|director = [[Franklin Schaffner]]
|length = 60 minutes
|length = 60 minutes
|guests =
|guests =
*[[Robert Cummings]] as Juror #8
* [[Robert Cummings]] as Juror #8
*[[Franchot Tone]] as Juror #3
* [[Franchot Tone]] as Juror #3
*[[Edward Arnold (actor)|Edward Arnold]] as Juror #10
* [[Edward Arnold (actor)|Edward Arnold]] as Juror #10
*[[Paul Hartman]] as Juror #7
* [[Paul Hartman]] as Juror #7
*[[John Beal (actor)|John Beal]] as Juror #2
* [[John Beal (actor)|John Beal]] as Juror #2
*[[Walter Abel]] as Juror #4
* [[Walter Abel]] as Juror #4
|episode_list = List of Studio One episodes
|episode_list = List of Studio One episodes
|prev = The Cliff
|prev = The Cliff
|next = The Education of [[H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L*A*N]]
|next = The Education of H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L*A*N
}}
}}


'''''Twelve Angry Men''''' is a 1954 [[teleplay]] by [[Reginald Rose]] for the ''[[Studio One (U.S. TV series)|Studio One]]'' anthology American television series. Initially staged as a [[CBS]] live production on September 20, 1954, the drama was later rewritten for the stage in 1955 [[Twelve Angry Men (play)|under the same title]] and again for a feature film, ''[[12 Angry Men (1957 film)|12 Angry Men]]'' (1957). The episode garnered three Emmy Awards for writer Rose, director [[Franklin Schaffner]] and [[Robert Cummings]] as Best Actor.<ref>[http://dkholm.typepad.com/cinemonkey/2008/12/tv-on-dvd-review-small-screen-gems-21-angry-men.html Holm, D. K. "TV on DVD Review: Small Screen Gems, 21 Angry Men" (''Cinemonkey'', December 08, 2008)]</ref><ref>[http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/41068/studio-one-twelve-angry-men/ Cornelius, David. "''Studio One'' – ''Twelve Angry Men''" (''DVD Talk'', February 9, 2010)]</ref><ref>[http://www.dvdverdict.com/reviews/twelveangrymen.php Douglas, Judge Clark. "''Twelve Angry Men''" (DVD Verdict, February 9, 2010)]</ref>
"'''Twelve Angry Men'''" is a 1954 [[teleplay]] directed by [[Franklin J. Schaffner]] and written by [[Reginald Rose]] for the American anthology television series ''[[Studio One (U.S. TV series)|Studio One]]''. It follows the titular twelve members of a [[jury]] as they deliberate a supposedly clear-cut murder trial, and details the tension among them when one juror argues that the defendant might not be guilty. Initially staged as a [[CBS]] live production on September 20, 1954, the drama was later rewritten for the stage in 1955 [[Twelve Angry Men (play)|under the same title]], and as a feature film in 1957 titled ''[[12 Angry Men (1957 film)|12 Angry Men]]''. The episode garnered three Emmy Awards for writer Rose, director Schaffner, and [[Robert Cummings]] as Best Actor.<ref>[http://dkholm.typepad.com/cinemonkey/2008/12/tv-on-dvd-review-small-screen-gems-21-angry-men.html Holm, D. K. "TV on DVD Review: Small Screen Gems, 21 Angry Men" (''Cinemonkey'', December 08, 2008)]</ref><ref>[http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/41068/studio-one-twelve-angry-men/ Cornelius, David. "''Studio One'' – ''Twelve Angry Men''" (''DVD Talk'', February 9, 2010)]</ref><ref>[http://www.dvdverdict.com/reviews/twelveangrymen.php Douglas, Judge Clark. "''Twelve Angry Men''" (DVD Verdict, February 9, 2010)]</ref>


==Plot==
==Cast and production credits==
===Act I===
Starring:
The program opens as a judge instructs the jury in a murder case that their verdict must be unanimous. In the jury room, an initial vote is 11 to 1 in favor of guilty. Juror #8 ([[Robert Cummings]]) is the holdout voting not guilty. Juror #3 ([[Franchot Tone]]) criticizes Juror #8 as being "out in left field." They go once around the table, each juror having an opportunity to express his point of view. Juror #10 ([[Edward Arnold (actor)|Edward Arnold]]) focuses on the neighbor who testified that she saw the defendant stab his father. Juror #7 ([[Paul Hartman]]) focuses on the defendant's record – reform school at age 15 for stealing a car, arrested for knife fighting, and he comes from slums that are breeding grounds for criminals. Juror #5 ([[Lee Phillips (actor)|Lee Phillips]]) takes offense and points out that he's lived in a slum his whole life – "maybe it still smells on me."
{{col-begin}}{{col-break}}
;Opening credits
{|class=wikitable
|-
|''Starring'' [[Robert Cummings]]
|-
|[[Franchot Tone]]
|-
|[[Edward Arnold (actor)|Edward Arnold]]||[[Paul Hartman]]
|-
|[[John Beal (actor)|John Beal]]||[[Walter Abel]]
|}
;End credits
{|class=wikitable
|-
|''Starring'' [[Robert Cummings]] as Juror #8
|}
{|class=wikitable
|-
|[[Franchot Tone]] as Juror #3
|}
{|class=wikitable
|-
|[[Edward Arnold (actor)|Edward Arnold]] as Juror #10||[[Paul Hartman]] as Juror #7
|}
{|class=wikitable
|-
|[[John Beal (actor)|John Beal]] as Juror #2||[[Walter Abel]] as Juror #4
|}
{|class=wikitable
|-
|''with'' [[George Voskovec]] as Juror #11||[[Joseph Sweeney (actor)|Joseph Sweeney]] as Juror #9||[[Bart Burns]] as Juror #6
|}
{|class=wikitable
|-
|[[Norman Feld]] as Foreman||[[Lee Phillips (actor)|Lee Phillips]] as Juror #5||Will West as Juror #12
|}
*Note: Sweeney and Voskovec repeated their parts in the 1957 film.
{{col-break|gap=3em}}
;Production personnel
* Written especially for ''Studio One'' by [[Reginald Rose]]
* Produced by [[Felix Jackson]]
* Directed by: [[Franklin Schaffner]]


Juror #8 asks for the alleged murder weapon, a switchblade, to be brought into the jury room. Juror #4 points out that the shopkeeper where the defendant purchased the knife testified that it was the only one he had in stock and that it is a very strange knife. When the knife is brought into the jury room, Juror #8 pulls an identical knife from his pocket, and reveals he bought one from a junk shop around the corner from the defendant's house, suggesting it is less "strange" than what the shopkeeper thought.


Juror #8 asks for a secret ballot. If there are still 11 guilty votes, Juror #8 will go along. But if anyone votes not guilty, they will stay and talk it out. The votes are handed in.
* Title drawing by Howard Mandel
* Set decorator Wes Laws
* Settings by Willard Levitas
* Story editor Florence Britton
* Associate producer William M. Altman


===Act II===
The Foreman then reads the votes to everyone and, to their surprise, finds that another juror voted “not guilty”. There are now only 10 guilty votes. Juror #10 demands to know who it was, & Juror #3 believes it was #5 and berates him for it. Juror #9 ([[Joseph Sweeney (actor)|Joseph Sweeney]]) defends him and admits that he was the one who changed his vote.


Juror #8 focuses on the noise from the elevated train that passed by as the murder took place. One of the witnesses, an old man, claimed that he heard the defendant say, "I'm going to kill you," and then heard the body drop one second later. He questions how the witness could have heard these things, at a distance, with the train roaring by. Juror #5 changes his vote to not guilty. The vote is now 9–3.
;Uncredited cast
* [[Vincent Gardenia]] as Bailiff
{{col-end}}


Juror #8 next questions how the old man who's had a stroke and walks with two canes could have gotten up out of bed and run through his apartment to see the defendant running down the stairs. The old man testified this happened only 15 seconds after the murder. Juror #3 notes the old man was confused during the trial and suggests he may not have been precise when he stated it was 15 seconds. Juror #3 and the others pause, reacting to the import of Juror #3's question. Juror #8 performs a reenactment to show that the old man could not have gotten up and walked that distance in 15 seconds. Juror #2 times him with a watch and reveals the reenactment took 41 seconds. #8 then tells everyone that the old man must have assumed it was the defendant as soon as he heard footsteps before opening the door. Juror #3 complains about Juror #8's dishonesty and insists the defendant must face punishment. When Juror #8 calls Juror #3 a sadist, Juror #3 lunges and threatens to kill him.
==Critical reception==

The performance received generally positive reviews. Steve Rhodes wrote when reviewing it in 1997:
===Act III===
:The show starts with a dramatic charge by an excessively somber judge. "I urge you to deliberate earnestly and thoughtfully," he intones with the low bass voice of an old preacher at a funeral. "You are faced with a grave responsibility.".... This idea of a ''[[fait accompli]]'' decision is shattered when one lone juror has the audacity to vote not guilty on the first ballot. "You think he's not guilty," another juror shouts out in anger to him about the defendant. "I've never seen a guiltier man in my life." This group of 12 strangers slowly but sometimes explosively begin to express their opinions.... Robert Cummings plays the persistent juror who wants to slow down the process at least enough so that the young kid charged with murder gets a fair hearing in the jury room. As Cummings begins to raise questions about a few of the obvious facts of the case, his voice is hesitant. Since it was live TV, one can never be sure why, but he gets his words a bit mixed up at first and almost starts to stutter. It was probably planned, and it is just the kind of realistic event that would happen in such circumstances. Cummings gives the best of several outstanding performances. When the racist barks at him, "That's a stupid question," he does not cower but summons up strength from deep within himself. Like a freight train gathering speed, he gains more confidence by the moment, especially when others slowly decide to change their votes.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.svtoday.com/svt/sr/twelve54.htm |title=Steve Rhodes Reviews: Twelve Angry Men (Studio One, 1957) |last1= Rhodes|first1=Steve |date=August 18, 1997 |website=Silicon Valley Today |access-date=December 22, 2015 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120426072451/http://www.svtoday.com/svt/sr/twelve54.htm |archivedate=April 26, 2012}}</ref>
A new vote is taken. It is now 6–6. Juror #2 ([[John Beal (actor)|John Beal]]) is troubled by the angle of the stab wound. Juror #5 has knowledge about switch blades, having seen a knife fight, and says they are typically used with an underhand motion, but the wound here was from an overhand motion. Juror #7 changes his vote out of boredom of all the discussion. Juror #11 is disappointed and calls him out for playing with the boy’s life and his lazy reasoning. He demands the #7 take it seriously and provide a legitimate vote and reasoning for it. Another vote is taken, and it's 9–3 in favor of acquittal. Jurors 3, 4 and 10 are now the holdouts.

Juror #10 focuses on race, insisting the defendant must be guilty because, among other assumptions, "There isn't one of them that's got any good in them." The other jurors react in shock at Juror #10's tirade, and Juror #4 threatens Juror #10 to not speak again for the rest of the deliberation.

Juror #4 is still persuaded by the old lady who said she saw the defendant stab his father. One of the jurors recalls that the old lady wore glasses. She wouldn't have been wearing her glasses in bed, which is where she said she was, tossing and turning. Juror #8 says that all the old lady could have seen, without her glasses and through the train windows, was a blur. Juror #3 is left as the only guilty vote, but he finally gives in. The defendant is found not guilty.

==Cast==
The cast included performances by:<ref name=Kine>Credits are as listed on screen from the broadcast, as captured by the 16 mm film that has been preserved.</ref>
{{Div col|colwidth=25em}}
* [[Robert Cummings]] as Juror #8
* [[Franchot Tone]] as Juror #3
* [[Edward Arnold (actor)|Edward Arnold]] as Juror #10
* [[Paul Hartman]] as Juror #7
* [[John Beal (actor)|John Beal]] as Juror #2
* [[Walter Abel]] as Juror #4
* [[George Voskovec]] as Juror #11
* [[Joseph Sweeney (actor)|Joseph Sweeney]] as Juror #9
* [[Bart Burns]] as Juror #6
* [[Norman Fell]] as Foreman
* [[Lee Phillips (actor)|Lee Phillips]] as Juror #5
* Will West as Juror # 12

===Uncredited cast===
* [[Vincent Gardenia]] as Bailiff{{Citation needed|date=October 2020}}
{{Div col end}}

[[Betty Furness]] presents Westinghouse appliances in breaks after each of the acts.<ref name=Kine/>

==Production==
The production was staged in New York City and aired live on September 20, 1954, as the first episode in the seventh season of the program, ''[[Studio One (American TV series)|Studio One]]''. A [[kinescope]] recording was made for rebroadcast later on the west coast.<ref name=Kine/>

It was written by [[Reginald Rose]] especially for ''Studio One''. [[Felix Jackson]] was the producer and [[Franklin Schaffner]] the director. Wes Laws was the set decorator, and Willard Levitas provided the settings.<ref name=Kine/>

The production won three Emmy Awards: for Rose's writing, Schaffner's direction, and for [[Robert Cummings]] as Best Actor.

==Reception==
The performance received generally positive reviews. In 1997, Steve Rhodes wrote: "Cummings gives the best of several outstanding performances."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.svtoday.com/svt/sr/twelve54.htm |title=Steve Rhodes Reviews: Twelve Angry Men (Studio One, 1957) |last1= Rhodes|first1=Steve |date=August 18, 1997 |website=Silicon Valley Today |access-date=December 22, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120426072451/http://www.svtoday.com/svt/sr/twelve54.htm |archive-date=April 26, 2012}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
Line 92: Line 82:


==Sources==
==Sources==
* {{cite news | author=Cynthia Littleton | title=Mt&r Finds '54 'Angry Men' | url=https://www.backstage.com/news/tv-museum-finds-angry-men-lindbergh-tape/ | work=The Hollywood Reporter | date=April 17, 2003 | accessdate=November 4, 2008}} Revised link to article retrieved April 23, 2017.
* {{cite news | author=Cynthia Littleton | title=Mt&r Finds '54 'Angry Men' | url=https://www.backstage.com/news/tv-museum-finds-angry-men-lindbergh-tape/ | work=The Hollywood Reporter | date=April 17, 2003 | access-date=November 4, 2008}} Revised link to article retrieved April 23, 2017.
* Rose, Reginald, [https://fischersoph.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/12-angry-men-script.pdf ''Twelve Angry Men''], teleplay
* Rose, Reginald, [https://fischersoph.files.wordpress.com/2010/09/12-angry-men-script.pdf ''Twelve Angry Men''], teleplay


==External links==
==External links==
* {{IMDb episode| 0122737 }}
* {{IMDb episode|0122737}}
* {{AllMovie title|471463}}
* {{TV.com episode| studio-one/twelve-angry-men-217867 }}

* {{AllMovie title| 471463 }}
{{Twelve Angry Men}}
{{Twelve Angry Men}}
{{Franklin Schaffner}}
{{Franklin Schaffner}}
{{EmmyAward DramaWriting 1960s}}
{{EmmyAward DramaWriting 1960s}}


[[Category:Black-and-white television programs]]
[[Category:Black-and-white television episodes]]
[[Category:Television courtroom dramas]]
[[Category:Television courtroom dramas]]
[[Category:1954 television plays]]
[[Category:1954 television plays]]
[[Category:Television anthology episodes]]
[[Category:Television anthology episodes]]
[[Category:Juries in fiction]]
[[Category:Fiction about juries]]
[[Category:Screenplays by Reginald Rose]]
[[Category:Television shows written by Reginald Rose]]
[[Category:Emmy Award-winning programs]]
[[Category:Emmy Award-winning programs]]
[[Category:Twelve Angry Men]]
[[Category:Studio One (American TV series)]]
[[Category:1954 American television episodes]]

Revision as of 13:12, 31 May 2024

"Twelve Angry Men"
Westinghouse Studio One episode
Episode no.Season 7
Episode 1
Directed byFranklin Schaffner
Written byReginald Rose
Original air dateSeptember 20, 1954 (1954-09-20)
Running time60 minutes
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
← Previous
"The Cliff"
Next →
"The Education of H*Y*M*A*N K*A*P*L*A*N"
List of episodes

"Twelve Angry Men" is a 1954 teleplay directed by Franklin J. Schaffner and written by Reginald Rose for the American anthology television series Studio One. It follows the titular twelve members of a jury as they deliberate a supposedly clear-cut murder trial, and details the tension among them when one juror argues that the defendant might not be guilty. Initially staged as a CBS live production on September 20, 1954, the drama was later rewritten for the stage in 1955 under the same title, and as a feature film in 1957 titled 12 Angry Men. The episode garnered three Emmy Awards for writer Rose, director Schaffner, and Robert Cummings as Best Actor.[1][2][3]

Plot

Act I

The program opens as a judge instructs the jury in a murder case that their verdict must be unanimous. In the jury room, an initial vote is 11 to 1 in favor of guilty. Juror #8 (Robert Cummings) is the holdout voting not guilty. Juror #3 (Franchot Tone) criticizes Juror #8 as being "out in left field." They go once around the table, each juror having an opportunity to express his point of view. Juror #10 (Edward Arnold) focuses on the neighbor who testified that she saw the defendant stab his father. Juror #7 (Paul Hartman) focuses on the defendant's record – reform school at age 15 for stealing a car, arrested for knife fighting, and he comes from slums that are breeding grounds for criminals. Juror #5 (Lee Phillips) takes offense and points out that he's lived in a slum his whole life – "maybe it still smells on me."

Juror #8 asks for the alleged murder weapon, a switchblade, to be brought into the jury room. Juror #4 points out that the shopkeeper where the defendant purchased the knife testified that it was the only one he had in stock and that it is a very strange knife. When the knife is brought into the jury room, Juror #8 pulls an identical knife from his pocket, and reveals he bought one from a junk shop around the corner from the defendant's house, suggesting it is less "strange" than what the shopkeeper thought.

Juror #8 asks for a secret ballot. If there are still 11 guilty votes, Juror #8 will go along. But if anyone votes not guilty, they will stay and talk it out. The votes are handed in.

Act II

The Foreman then reads the votes to everyone and, to their surprise, finds that another juror voted “not guilty”. There are now only 10 guilty votes. Juror #10 demands to know who it was, & Juror #3 believes it was #5 and berates him for it. Juror #9 (Joseph Sweeney) defends him and admits that he was the one who changed his vote.

Juror #8 focuses on the noise from the elevated train that passed by as the murder took place. One of the witnesses, an old man, claimed that he heard the defendant say, "I'm going to kill you," and then heard the body drop one second later. He questions how the witness could have heard these things, at a distance, with the train roaring by. Juror #5 changes his vote to not guilty. The vote is now 9–3.

Juror #8 next questions how the old man who's had a stroke and walks with two canes could have gotten up out of bed and run through his apartment to see the defendant running down the stairs. The old man testified this happened only 15 seconds after the murder. Juror #3 notes the old man was confused during the trial and suggests he may not have been precise when he stated it was 15 seconds. Juror #3 and the others pause, reacting to the import of Juror #3's question. Juror #8 performs a reenactment to show that the old man could not have gotten up and walked that distance in 15 seconds. Juror #2 times him with a watch and reveals the reenactment took 41 seconds. #8 then tells everyone that the old man must have assumed it was the defendant as soon as he heard footsteps before opening the door. Juror #3 complains about Juror #8's dishonesty and insists the defendant must face punishment. When Juror #8 calls Juror #3 a sadist, Juror #3 lunges and threatens to kill him.

Act III

A new vote is taken. It is now 6–6. Juror #2 (John Beal) is troubled by the angle of the stab wound. Juror #5 has knowledge about switch blades, having seen a knife fight, and says they are typically used with an underhand motion, but the wound here was from an overhand motion. Juror #7 changes his vote out of boredom of all the discussion. Juror #11 is disappointed and calls him out for playing with the boy’s life and his lazy reasoning. He demands the #7 take it seriously and provide a legitimate vote and reasoning for it. Another vote is taken, and it's 9–3 in favor of acquittal. Jurors 3, 4 and 10 are now the holdouts.

Juror #10 focuses on race, insisting the defendant must be guilty because, among other assumptions, "There isn't one of them that's got any good in them." The other jurors react in shock at Juror #10's tirade, and Juror #4 threatens Juror #10 to not speak again for the rest of the deliberation.

Juror #4 is still persuaded by the old lady who said she saw the defendant stab his father. One of the jurors recalls that the old lady wore glasses. She wouldn't have been wearing her glasses in bed, which is where she said she was, tossing and turning. Juror #8 says that all the old lady could have seen, without her glasses and through the train windows, was a blur. Juror #3 is left as the only guilty vote, but he finally gives in. The defendant is found not guilty.

Cast

The cast included performances by:[4]

Uncredited cast

Betty Furness presents Westinghouse appliances in breaks after each of the acts.[4]

Production

The production was staged in New York City and aired live on September 20, 1954, as the first episode in the seventh season of the program, Studio One. A kinescope recording was made for rebroadcast later on the west coast.[4]

It was written by Reginald Rose especially for Studio One. Felix Jackson was the producer and Franklin Schaffner the director. Wes Laws was the set decorator, and Willard Levitas provided the settings.[4]

The production won three Emmy Awards: for Rose's writing, Schaffner's direction, and for Robert Cummings as Best Actor.

Reception

The performance received generally positive reviews. In 1997, Steve Rhodes wrote: "Cummings gives the best of several outstanding performances."[5]

References

  1. ^ Holm, D. K. "TV on DVD Review: Small Screen Gems, 21 Angry Men" (Cinemonkey, December 08, 2008)
  2. ^ Cornelius, David. "Studio OneTwelve Angry Men" (DVD Talk, February 9, 2010)
  3. ^ Douglas, Judge Clark. "Twelve Angry Men" (DVD Verdict, February 9, 2010)
  4. ^ a b c d Credits are as listed on screen from the broadcast, as captured by the 16 mm film that has been preserved.
  5. ^ Rhodes, Steve (August 18, 1997). "Steve Rhodes Reviews: Twelve Angry Men (Studio One, 1957)". Silicon Valley Today. Archived from the original on April 26, 2012. Retrieved December 22, 2015.

Sources