Voting Wisely in Twelve Angry Men by Reginal Rose

672 Words2 Pages

Bad days are the worst and when one has to wait in a room for an extended period of time to be placed in another room to decide the verdict of someone’s life; bad results are bound to happen. One unfortunate trait of a bad day is heat from either a loud argument or an excruciating hot day in a crowded city. The time and setting of Reginald Rose’s “Twelve Angry Men” will be used to show how the conditions in the jury room correlate to the jurors’ attitudes but does not ultimately consequent to an irrational verdict.

The play opens to the courtroom scene where the jurors had just spent several hours hearing the case in a very hot room, that mixed with boredom can cause attitudes. It is a blazing hot day in downtown New York and the air conditioning is not working in the courthouse. The courthouse officials realize the problem and attempt to quench it with, “a watercooler, with paper cups and a wastebasket and an electric fan over the bench” (5). Hospitality is always a nice gesture but the uncomfortable weather makes for a sticky situation so off the bat everyone’s temper is agitated. The men try to open windows and take off their hefty suit jackets but only so much can be done without a cool breeze. Complaining begins as the jurors give their opinions of, “Y’know something? …This is the hottest day of the year. The 6th juror nods and gazes out the window. You’d think they’d at least air-condition the place. I almost dropped dead in court” (6). The first vote is in session and all but one juror votes guilty, this juror does not care about the conditions, and the others apparently want to escape the heat and leave.

Quickly some jurors shout at juror eight for disrupting their plan of leaving, for most of them have places to go and...

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... off and more thoughts are shared in the boy’s favor. The verdict for the boy seems to have taken a turn towards more justifiable reasons over respectable discussion; any disrespectable discussion has been abruptly disregarded.

The time and setting of Reginald Rose’s “Twelve Angry Men” were used to show how the conditions in the jury room correlated to the jurors’ attitudes but did not ultimately consequent to an irrational verdict. The hot day and long wait that came with the case of deciding whether or not the boy was guilty of killing his father, was at first taken lightly, then reasoning and discussion filled the room. Careful thought is needed to decide the life of a human being and that is what the eighth juror had in mind, when he took a stand, no matter the conditions.

Works Cited

Rose, Reginald. Twelve Angry Men. New York: Penguin, 2006. Print.

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