I like this scene. James has been the puppet to Dickenson's puppet-master for too long & he finally grows a backbone & stands up to him for what he knows is the right thing to do & not what others want him to decide
@kevinbutler1955NYC3 жыл бұрын
Judge Wilson finally became a mensch(A decent and wise man)by voting for Independence.
@warlord89542 жыл бұрын
Bullshit! This is a false dramatization. JUDGE Wilson was NOT weak, nor feeble. Judge Wilson was an honorable man.
@stratisification Жыл бұрын
I'm sorry to ask this, but did he? He says in the scene that he's voting for independence because if he voted against, he and Dickinson would be the only ones remembered for it, forever. If he votes for, he's just another voice in the majority demanding America be free.
@mlbrooks40664 ай бұрын
@@stratisification This part is fiction, for the drama. The real Wilson gave his vote after a delay so that he could go back to his constituents and find out what they wanted, which he did. That's why he voted Yea.
@jeffreydoll74262 жыл бұрын
I'm descended from James Wilson I'm happy to see a depiction on film
@GregRohr2 жыл бұрын
Your ancestor was every ounce the brilliant jurist that Adams describes him in the one line here. *salute*
@jeffreydoll74262 жыл бұрын
@@GregRohr thanks my ancestor did have problems with debt but even with all that he went to three different university's in Scotland and after coming to the states he was very anti-brit and got into law school people like Wilson is a dime in a few especially in todays world
@OceanFlan2 жыл бұрын
That's awesome.
@jeffreydoll7426 Жыл бұрын
@ethanschmid4104 1:30 yeah I the part I was amazed that the script writer added in the part about him be a lawyer well know during his time, if I had one wish I would had gone back in time during the war to meet him once
@AlejandroKaplan-hr1vi Жыл бұрын
Came to really respect him after the episode of Ben franklin’s world dedicated to him you should be proud of him
@MaizeAndBlueWahoo4 ай бұрын
Franklin's manipulation of this scene is so good and so well-written. First he waits til the very last second so as to throw Dickinson for a loop. Then he moves closer into Thomson's view, so that he'll be called on first. He knows Wilson, being seated and always in the shadow of Dickinson, will be called on last. If Wilson were called on before either of the other two, the gambit wouldn't work, but he's counting on Wilson's anonymity in more ways than one. Then he lays it all out for Wilson, with the "every mapmaker in the world" line being particularly well-targeted at Wilson's desire to avoid the spotlight as much as possible. Finally, as Dickinson gets increasingly more condescending and nasty, Franklin becomes increasingly supportive, offering Wilson the shelter he needs to break with his pal Dickinson and vote in favor.
@Mousy677 Жыл бұрын
Sidenote about this: during Wilson's legal training, his preceptor (essentially his mentor -- an older lawyer who took him under his wing as it were to teach him how to do law "right") was in fact John Dickinson. Dickinson actually knew Wilson for longer than he (Dickinson) had known his own wife.
@fyodorsliceeater51372 жыл бұрын
AKA the break up scene💀
@Narrowgaugefilms Жыл бұрын
This is a great musical and this moment is a great moment of plot, but it's not quite true. Franklin and Wilson were both pro-independence. Even though Dickinson was anti-independence, he saw Independence coming one way or the other and didn't want to stand in the way. He abstained from the vote and let the other Congressmen vote for Independence. There was a lot more to Judge Wilson than the spineless little man shown in "1776". He eventually became one of the first Supreme Court Justices.
@michaellewyn4099 Жыл бұрын
also, he was very active in the Constitutional Convention, for which he is (I think) much better known than for either his Supreme Court service or the Declaration.
@KristaErrickson13 күн бұрын
The authors of this musical were teachers, incidentally. My grandfather was one of the original producers, and set designer. He won multiple Tony awards for it. And the playwrights as well. But I remember that they were both professional school teachers
@darkhighwayman17573 жыл бұрын
As Wilson saves the Republic...
@edjones29033 ай бұрын
This is MY FAVORITE film/musical of all time!!! And what most people don't know, is that John Dickinson turned out to be a good soldier and a patriot after all.
@patria3023 Жыл бұрын
Wilson: “I’m not like other girls”
@phildunn31952 күн бұрын
Once again, it comes down to Pennsylvania
@Mousy677 Жыл бұрын
Oh actually I can make this EVEN worse, thanks to a biography of Charles Thomson that I'm currently reading. Charles Thomson started out his political career as essentially a Ben Franklin Sycophant, but they completely (and messily) parted ways over Franklin's response to the Stamp Act (popular opinion in Philadelphia being that Franklin had essentially allowed it), and part of the reason for that was John Dickinson. Dickinson didn't particularly like anybody when he was in his late 20s but Franklin was a particular target of his ire and that and the fact that Dickinson and Thomson were both VEHEMENTLY against the Stamp Act naturally drew them to each-other. Thomson was basically Dickinson's only friend for a good eight years (most of the 1760s), and to be a little hyperbolic Thomson essentially left his first wife "for" Dickinson. By 1776 Thomson and Dickinson were still extremely close friends, and Franklin, being friends with Dickinson's wife (and having been friends, before she died, with the first Mrs. Thomson), would absolutely have known that. That basically turns this scene into Franklin making Thomson essentially complicit in the worst thing that's happened to John Dickinson for like... six or eight months.
@ciphernine78242 ай бұрын
Adams and Dickinson may have deeply disliked each other, but they also deeply respected each other. Perhaps it's more important to be respected than be liked. Dickinson resigned from the Continental Congress rather than sign a document he ethically and philosophically opposed. As Dickinson marches towards the door, it's Adams who calls the entire Congress to attention, honoring and recognizing Dickinson's service to Congress, as well as his uncompromising patriotism: "I say ye, John Dickinson!"
@TheCdecisneros4 ай бұрын
Being from Ny it always bothered me when NY would abstain.
@mlbrooks40664 ай бұрын
In the play, it's because the NY legislature couldn't decide what instructions to give their delegate. In the play, after this scene, the delegate basically says, "The hell with the NY legislature. I vote yea."
@stratisification4 ай бұрын
I believe at the time, the law was that NY couldn’t actually vote, though they could attend the meetings. Maybe the filmmakers didn’t want to specify that, so they just had them say “New York abstains, courteously”
@KristaErrickson13 күн бұрын
Courteously!
@williammaddock91797 ай бұрын
This was no easy decision to make, in any case. If he votes nay, then America stays under the tyrannical thumb of George the Third; yet, voting yay-even not bearing arms-he lays his very life upon the altar!
@dajwe2165 ай бұрын
2:10 When Judge Wilson stands up, it becomes the symbolic moment when Judge Wilson stands up for himself and stands up against John Dickinson.
@jameswilspn190711 күн бұрын
James Wilson is my name.
@Alex-oy7ip3 жыл бұрын
Great video!
@timburr44537 ай бұрын
Sadly James Wilson's later life was a difficult one. he actually went to debtors prison
@neil55683 жыл бұрын
St. Andrews graduate!
@thedukeofswellington18272 жыл бұрын
0:30 it is the proper form
@lookinforthe70s2 ай бұрын
My god, that guy (John Dickinson) could be a Bill Murray clone.