Inherit the Wind, Arena Stage, Washington, DC
The company of Inherit the Wind, playing at Arena Stage through April 5. Photo credit: Daniel Rader.
I am an artificial intelligence (AI) skeptic. But, just out of curiosity, and because so many things are described as superlatives of the century, I asked Google for the most significant trials of the 20th century. You may (or may not) be surprised at the four that Google’s AI gave me: three murder trials (Sacco and Vanzetti, 1921; the Lindbergh Kidnapping case, 1932; and O. J. Simpson, 1994), as well as the so-called “Scopes Monkey Trial” from 1925.
Jerome Lawrence and Robert Edwin Lee dramatized the Scopes
trial in their 1955 play, Inherit the Wind. Like many current “ripped
from the headlines” dramatizations, the playwrights changed some details in reimagining
true events, but the essence of that trial and its central ideas remained.
First produced during the McCarthy Era, when attempts were made to limit
expressions of free thought, the play resonated with its audiences. Now, 70
years after the play was written and 100 years after the events portrayed, it
continues to resonate as science is disbelieved and freedom of thought
challenged.
In a fictional town called Hillsboro in a never-specified
state (although the real Scopes trial was held in Dayton, Tennessee), a high
school biology teacher has been jailed for sharing with his class excerpts from
Charles Darwin’s The Origin of the Species, in which Darwin describes the
theory of evolution. Darwin challenged Biblical interpretations of creation; by
teaching about the theory the teacher has broken state law, setting the stage
for a fiery confrontation between faith and science.
The importance of the question is reinforced when two of the
most prominent attorneys in the country, Matthew Harrison Brady (based on
three-time presidential contender William Jennings Bryan) for the state and
Henry Drummond (based on Clarence Darrow) defending teacher Bertram Cates.
Cates is dating another teacher, Rachel Brown, who is the daughter of the
town’s fundamentalist minister. Rachel is torn between Cates and her father.
Following the action is a writer (a critic, he says, not a reporter) from a
Baltimore newspaper, E. K. Hornbeck.
The ensuing trial is a clash of opposites in every respect.
Bible-thumper Brady is clearly the favorite of the small-town folks, who treat
the smooth-talking, science-supporting Drummond with disdain. The judge makes
his leanings obvious as he disqualifies all of the scientific experts Drummond
has enlisted to build his case for scientific proof. The case, after all, is
that the teacher has broken a state law relative to the sanctity of teaching
the Biblical version of creation. Left with no other alternatives, agnostic
Drummond decides in a highly unusual move to question Brady himself as an
expert on the Bible. Unflappable, Brady submits to Drummond’s questioning,
insisting that the Bible is to be taken literally, from God creating the world
in six days to Jonah being swallowed by a whale, and Noah and his family
surviving the flood.
Ultimately, Brady wins the verdict, but Drummond’s case has
brought the question of evolution to the national conscience. Though Cates is
found guilty of breaking the state’s anti-evolution law, the judge unexpectedly assesses a
fine of just $100. Brady complains that the sentence is unreasonably lenient and
attempts to launch into another impassioned address, only to be cut off by the
judge.
Billy Eugene Jones as Henry Drummond, Dakin Matthews as Matthew Harrison Brady, and Holly Twyford as Mrs. Brady in Inherit the Wind. Photo credit: Daniel Rader.
Inherit the Wind has an important role in the history
of Arena Stage: in 1973, Arena founder Zelda Fichandler took a company of
American actors to the Soviet Union, the first time an American company had
performed there. While it might appear to be an unlikely choice since it
portrays opposing beliefs among Americans, the play reinforces the importance
of individual thought. Ultimately, this dichotomy is the essence of the
American character.
Brady and Drummond are undoubtedly two of the juiciest roles
in American drama for mature actors. Consider those who have brought the roles
to life: the original 1955 Broadway production starred Ed Begley and Paul Muni;
a 1996 revival starred Charles Durning and George C. Scott; and in 2007, Brian
Dennehy and Christopher Plummer took on the roles. The 1960 film starred
Fredric March and Spencer Tracy. Subsequent television productions starred Ed
Begley and Melvyn Douglas (1965), Kirk Douglas and Jason Robards (1988), and George
C. Scott and Jack Lemmon (1999). (Note: in these pairings, the actor playing
Brady is listed first. George C. Scott played both roles: Drummond in the 1996
Broadway revival and Brady in the 1999 television version.) Dakin Matthews and
Billy Eugene Jones of Arena Stage are the current inhabitants of those
cherished roles.
The Arena production is in association with the Feast, a
Seattle-based regional theatre founded by Ryan Guzzo Purcell, who directs this production.
Purcell’s direction is clean and even-handed, making effective use of the Arena’s
Fichandler stage: though it seems to me that the playwrights favor the science
approach to the Biblical literalists, Purcell ensures that there is a balance
between the two systems of belief.
Purcell directs a strong cast. Dakin Matthews is one of
those actors that you know you have seen but aren’t necessarily sure where, a
veteran of numerous Broadway productions, some 200 regional theatre
productions, 30 films, and 300 television appearances. He wears Matthew
Harrison Brady as comfortably and naturally as his white suit and Southern
drawl, casting a spell over the courtroom and the theatre audience
simultaneously. His is a masterful performance.
Noah Plomgren as Bertram Cates and Billy Eugene Jones as Henry Drummond in Inherit the Wind. Photo credit: Daniel Rader.
Billy Eugene Jones as Henry Drummond faces an uphill battle
as a voice of liberalism and “freedom of thought” against his Bible-quoting antagonist.
Jones, however, is up to the task, matching Matthews’s Brady step by step,
fighting the good fight while trying to remain respectful of the opposing side.
Jones’s Drummond is idealistic and forward-looking: he recognizes that he may
lose this particular battle, but is steadfast in his belief that his ideology
will eventually win the war.
Noah Plomgren is suitably earnest and sincere as the
aggrieved teacher Cates. His love for Rachel is sincere, but so is his
commitment to the science that he believes tells the truth. Rebecca Madeira as
Rachel effectively portrays the angst her character experiences as she is torn
between her love for Cates and her devotion to her evangelical minister father.
The only other “named” character is journalist E. K. Hornbeck, well played by
Alyssa Keegan. Keegan’s Hornbeck provides some necessary exposition but remains
largely outside the main action. As the outsider, Hornbeck is the character who
can challenge the beliefs of some of the townspeople and eventually both
attorneys.
Six actors are credited as “Ensemble,” taking on numerous
roles, sometimes of different genders, as “minor” but essential characters in
the play. I wish that the program had delineated which one played which roles.
Some were more convincing than others as they play characters of both genders
and a variety of ages, but all fulfilled the challenges of their missions
admirably. I salute Jordan Friend, Natalya Lynette Rathnam, Todd Scofield,
Tristan Turner, and Holly Twyford. For instance, Twyford, one of DC theatre’s
most honored and recognizable performers, played (among others) a jail
employee/bailiff, Brady’s long-suffering but concerned wife, and the jury
foreman.
Changes from one character to another among the ensemble
were largely accomplished by adding or subtracting costume pieces (designed by
An-Lin Dauber), so that actors could effectively slip into roles without
accompanying dialogue (for example, two ensemble members “suited up” in lab
coats as potential scientific defense witnesses, only to discard their new
costumes as they were dismissed from the courtroom). While this conceit
generally worked, I found myself wondering what the time period it is supposed
to be. (Some costume pieces seemed wholly contemporary, while others had a
period feel.) This was also reiterated in other ways: a 50-star United States
flag adorned one of the entrances, which would not have been correct until
1960. This may be an effort to place the time period as “sometime in the 20th
century,” just as the setting is described in the program as “Hillsboro, an
obscure country town.”
The company of Inherit the Wind at Arena Stage. Photo credit: Daniel Rader.
Tanya Orellana’s set design suits the play: what appears
to be a floor of an orangish sand with a number of wooden palette-like pieces
that are moved into various positions to simulate the courtroom and other
locales. Xavier Pierce’s lighting design is mostly subtle (but sometimes less
so at appropriate times) in adding to the play’s emphasis. Paul James Prendergast’s
musical composition and sound design similarly add to the production, ensuring
that the dialogue is understood and enhancing transitions from one scene to
the next. Additionally, on-stage instruments being played and religious songs
being sung (the play begins with the hymn “Abide with Me”) seem very much organic
to the play.
See Inherit the Wind at Arena Stage before it closes
on April 5 if you are interested in a thoughtful, serious, timely discussion of
free thinking and dogma, as well as if you want to see a first-class cast of expert
performances. It is a fascinating look at a moment of great significance in
American history with lessons for us in 2026.
So well written, Paul. Your honest descriptions help us understand this production. Your explanations of former movie casts is thorough and illustrates the importance of this work through the years. Attention to detail (costumes, flag) is an effective critical touch. Thank you for writing a review that causes me to want to trek to The Arena Stage! Congratulations to the cast, crew, and production company. Bonnye Fleming
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