Juror 9 was an elderly old man, but quite insightful. Although not physically strong, he was very sharp and had the courage to stand up for what he believed in. He appears to be the most observant in terms of noticing people's behaviours.
Juror #12
Is:
Superficial, easily-swayed, and easy-going; vacillating, lacks deep convictions or belief system; uses interesting analogies such as: "Run this idea up the flagpole and see if anybody salutes it."
jack klugman
This and that
He is compassionate
Henry Fonda
Juror #8 (played by Henry Fonda).
To sit in deliberation with other members of the jury.
Juror 5 gets mad after the second vote, when Juror 3 accuses him of being soft and changing his vote. It turns out Juror 9 (the old man) was the one to change his vote.
Yes. He was the 6th juror to vote not guilty.
Juror Eight is the protagonist in Twelve Angry Men.
Juror #9, later identified as McArdle was the oldest juror.
Henry Fonda
His normal job is not specified, although he did have a job as a juror.
Juror #8 (played by Henry Fonda).
The 12th juror in the play 12 Angry Men originally believes that the boy is guilty. He later changes his vote to not guilty following the deliberation.
People are described by adjectives, not verbs.
To sit in deliberation with other members of the jury.
Juror 5 gets mad after the second vote, when Juror 3 accuses him of being soft and changing his vote. It turns out Juror 9 (the old man) was the one to change his vote.
Yes. He was the 6th juror to vote not guilty.
Well, there really are no leaders in Twelve Angry Men, but those with more 'input' would include Juror #1 (Martin Balsam) the Foreman and Juror #8 (Henry Fonda) who pushes for fellow jury members to consider the possibility the Defendant may not be guilty of the crime.
In the 1957 version, he was played by Joseph Sweeney.