
Arthur Miller’s timeless tale of truth on trial. A Salem resident attempts to frame her ex-lover’s wife for being a witch in the middle of the 1692 witchcraft trials.
Does The Crucible have end credit scenes?
No!
The Crucible does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.
Explore the complete cast of The Crucible, including both lead and supporting actors. Learn who plays each character, discover their past roles and achievements, and find out what makes this ensemble cast stand out in the world of film and television.

Joan Allen
Elizabeth Proctor

Frances Conroy
Ann Putnam

Winona Ryder
Abigail Williams

Paul Scofield
Judge Thomas Danforth

Michael Gaston
Marshal Herrick

Bruce Davison
Reverend Parris

Mary Pat Gleason
Martha Corey

Peter Vaughan
Giles Corey

Karron Graves
Mary Warren

George Gaynes
Judge Samuel Sewall

Carmella Riley
Hannah Brown

Jeffrey Jones
Thomas Putnam

Ashley Peldon
Ruth Putnam

Charlayne Woodard
Tituba

Peter Maloney
Dr. Griggs

Rob Campbell
Reverend Hale

Will Lyman
Isaiah Goodkind

J.T. Turner
Lout (uncredited)

Daniel Day-Lewis
John Proctor

Ken Cheeseman
Goat Owner

Mara Clark
Goody Barrow

Kali Rocha
Mercy Lewis

Dossy Peabody
Goody Sibber

Elizabeth Lawrence
Rebecca Nurse

Robert Breuler
Judge Hathorne

Taylor Stanley
Joanna Preston

Dale Resteghini
Villager (uncredited)

Dorothy Brodesser
Mrs. Griggs

Rachael Bella
Betty Parris

John Griesemer
Ezekiel Cheever

Tom McDermott
Francis Nurse

Karen MacDonald
Townswoman

Ruth Maleczech
Goody Osborne

Duncan B. Putney
Danforth's Footman (uncredited)

William Preston
George Jacobs

Sheila Ferrini
Townswoman

Sheila Pinkham
Goody Good

Lian-Marie Holmes
Deliverance Fuller

Charlotte Melen
Margaret Kenney

Simone Marean
Rachel Buxton

Jessie Kilguss
Debra Flint

Amee Gray
Lydia Sheldon

Anna V. Boksenbaum
Sarah Pope

Mary Reardon
Esther Wilkens

Alexander Streit
Joseph Proctor

Michael McKinstry
Daniel Proctor

Jane Pulkkinen
Goody Bellows

Katrina Nevin
Dorcas Bellows

June Lewin
Townswoman

Paul Bronk
Villager (uncredited)

Steven Ochoa
Putnam's Servant
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Challenge your knowledge of The Crucible with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.
Which actor portrays John Proctor in the 1996 film?
Daniel Day‑Lewis
Winona Ryder
Bruce Davison
Peter Vaughan
Show hint
Read the complete plot summary of The Crucible, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.
In Salem, Massachusetts, in 1692, a group of village girls venture into the woods with Tituba, Charlayne Woodard, a slave who knows forbidden rites, attempting to conjure love spells and hidden power. Abigail Williams, Winona Ryder, kills a chicken and drinks its blood, hoping to unleash misfortune on Elizabeth Proctor—the wife of John Proctor—so that she can draw closer to the man she once loved. When Abigail’s uncle, Reverend Samuel Parris, Bruce Davison, discovers them, the girls flee into the trees, yet his daughter Betty Rachael Bella collapses and remains unconscious.
Betty’s condition deepens the town’s fear: Ruth Putnam, Ashley Peldon, and Betty refuse to wake, and Giles Corey, Peter Vaughan, who suspects the children are merely acting out, teams up with John Proctor, Daniel Day-Lewis, with whom Abigail had an affair, to check on the Parris household. Convinced that demonic possession explains the girls’ behavior, Parris and the Putnams summon Reverend John Hale, Rob Campbell, to investigate. To deflect punishment, Abigail points the finger at Tituba, and Tituba, under pressure, confesses to seeing the devil, narrowly escaping execution. The girls seize on the new aura of power, accusing a growing roster of townsfolk, including Elizabeth Proctor, lifting the fear to fever pitch: the court becomes a stage for accusing and punishing.
John Proctor seeks to reclaim his name and protect Elizabeth by pressing Mary Warren, one of the afflicted girls, to testify that the witchcraft is a sham. Francis Nurse, Tom McDermott, arrives with a list of names vouched for by neighbors, but the judges order the arrest of all who stand on it. Giles Corey presses a crucial claim about Ruth’s insinuated “gift of land” tied to Putnam’s manipulation, and the court seizes on the confrontation, detouring into a web of fear, pride, and leverage. Mary Warren wavers, then collapses under the pressure of the other girls, recanting only to be pushed back by their collective screams and frightening performances in court. Elizabeth, who is pregnant, hopes for mercy until the baby is born, but John urges that the witnesses be charged with falsehood.
The courtroom erupts as the girls declare Mary Warren is attacking them with spirits, and John’s truth-telling is met with louder accusations. To expose Abigail’s true motive, John confesses to having an affair with Abigail, claiming she used the charges against Elizabeth to remove Elizabeth as a rival and to push him toward her. Abigail denies the affair, prompting Elizabeth to testify in turn; she lies, trying to protect John’s honor in the face of a system primed to believe the girls. Reverend Hale, trying to salvage some measure of reason, pleads for truth, but the chorus of “spirits” swells, and the court’s momentum cannot be halted. The infamous moment arrives as the girls flee to the lake, the “yellow bird” of Mary Warren’s supposed attack sending the room into further hysteria.
John’s attempt to defend himself fails when Mary Warren, overwhelmed by fear, accuses him of witchcraft. In a moment of despair, he calls out a chilling line, and the courtroom watches him crumble under the weight of public accusation: “I say God is dead!” He is then arrested, and the tide of fear carries him toward an uncertain fate. Reverend Hale’s doubts linger, but the machinery of the court keeps turning, and Abigail—after manipulating the crowd and seizing money from Reverend Parris—flees to Barbados, leaving behind a trail of betrayed trust. She approaches John with a final plea, but he rejects the idea of escaping with her, admitting that their fates won’t meet on a ship, but rather in Hell.
Parris worries that John’s public execution could spark chaos in the town, so Elizabeth arranges for John to be confronted with a supposed path to survival through confession. John writes a confession for the court, but when they demand it be read aloud, he refuses to surrender his good name. In a climactic moment on the gallows, John, Rebecca Nurse, and Martha Corey recite the Lord’s Prayer as they are hanged, their defiance echoing through the town.
The aftermath is devastating: nineteen people are executed after refusing to save themselves through false confessions, and the Salem Witch Trials come to a grim close. The town is left scarred by a fever of fear, power, and suspicion that reshaped lives and tested the boundaries between faith, guilt, and justice.
It’s not on a ship we’ll meet again, but in Hell
This version preserves the core events and emotions of the original summary while expanding the narrative to provide clearer context, relationships, and consequences, with careful punctuation, emphasis, and direct quotation where appropriate.
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