In the play, Inherit the Wind:
the defense attorney (for Cates) is Drummond.
the prosecuting attorney (against Cates) is Brady.
In the real-life Scopes Trial:
the defense attorney (for Scopes) is Darrow.
the prosecuting attorney (against scopes) is Bryan.
I'm not sure what is included when you stand to inherit the wind.
Matthew Harrison Brady, a well-known and experienced prosecutor, represents the prosecution in the play "Inherit the Wind." He is depicted as a fervent fundamentalist Christian seeking to uphold the law and defend traditional beliefs.
The "Scopes Monkey Trial" is the nickname for the real-life trial.
Rachel went to the courthouse in "Inherit the Wind" to support her father, Bert Cates, who was on trial for teaching evolution in a school. She wanted to stand by him and show her support during the trial.
Drummond says that "man is on trial in Inherit the Wind" because the play examines the tension between the freedom of thought and the suppression of ideas, as well as the clash between fundamentalism and modernism. The trial serves as a symbolic representation of the larger societal debate between individual rights and state control.
from the Bible. "sow the wind, inherit the whirlwind"
Inherit the Wind (the book with the blue cover) has 129 pages.
Inherit the wind was written by Jerome Lawrence and Robert Edwin Lee.
1955
No
Inherit the Wind - 1999 TV is rated/received certificates of: Iceland:L USA:PG
Inherit the Wind - 1988 TV was released on: USA: 20 March 1988
Inherit the Wind - 1988 TV is rated/received certificates of: Argentina:13
Gene Kelly played as E.K. Hornbeck, the news reporter, in the 1960 movie, Inherit the Wind.
The proverb used in the play "Inherit the Wind" is "He that troubleth his own house shall inherit the wind." This line implies that those who bring chaos and conflict to their own lives will ultimately gain nothing of real value.
yes.
The quote, "Thou who troubleth his own house shall inherit the wind," is said twice in the book/play, Inherit the Wind. Many other bible verses are recited in the play, though.