This juror puts a show ahead of the life of a young man accused of murder
Who is juror number 7?
This is the setting of the story. (Remember both parts!)
What is a city in the 1950s, also deliberation room?
This is the person accused of the crime.
What is the defendant?
When Number 10 talks about "those" people and "they" all get what they deserve, what can we infer about him.
What is: he is a racist?
His standing at the window and being the last to join the group is symbolic of this.
What is juror 8 stands alone in standing for justice in discussing the case?
This is the primary conflict of the play.
What is man vs. man, when Juror Number 8 must stand up to Juror Number 3 and all the others.
This is the person who accuses the person of the crime.
Who is the prosecutor?
This is the reason that Number 11 is so careful to follow procedure.
What is that he is from a place with no justice so he feels that he wants to make justice work in this case?
These are two of the four pieces of reasonable doubt that Number 8 establishes in Act II.
What is the knife (Act I)? What is the sound of the train is too loud to hear the boy yell? What is that the elderly man could not walk to the door in 15 seconds as he said? What is that the woman who looked out the window wore bifocals?
This juror sees people not as individuals, but as groups with all the same faults and problems and unethical choices.
Who is juror number 10?
There are two climaxes in this play; name one.
What is the knife being produced at the end of Act I as the first cause of reasonable doubt? What is Juror Number 3 lunging at Juror Number 8 screaming, "I'll kill him!" at the end of Act II?
This is what the jurors do to figure out whether or not the defendant is guilty or not guilty.
What is deliberate?
This is reason that Juror Number 9 knows that the witness is lying.
What is he must feel the same way at times and can relate to the witness?
This is the reason that Number 8 puts his knife into the wall.
What is to establish reasonable doubt over the weapon?
This juror beat his son, and his son hit him and left home.
Who is Juror Number 3?
This is the resolution of the primary conflict.
What is when 3 surrenders and gives in at the end of Act III.
This is what the jury does to the accused that causes him to go to jail.
What is convict?
This juror represents logic and justice.
Who is juror 8?
This is the leader of the jurors and is Juror Number 1's job.
What is the Foreman?
This juror is most likely a Jewish immigrant who escaped Hitler's persecution?
Who is Juror Number 11?
Name a theme of the play.
What is, "It takes courage to stand alone" and do what you believe is right?
or What is Justice is fragile?
This is what the jury does that causes the accused to go home a free man.
What is acquit?
This is a reason that explains why Juror Number 3 is so angry and bitter.
What is that he feels guilt and shame over the way he treated his own son? He fears his son might hate him also. He wants to seek punishment for his own son for what happened in the past.
This is the reason that the jurors are all different but very familiar to the reader/viewer.
What is they are all stereotypes.