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| Teleplay by Aaron Sorkin |
| Story by Paul Redford |
| Directed by Scott Winant |
| Rob Lowe as | Sam (Samuel Norman) Seaborn | Deputy Communications Director |
| Dulé Hill as | Charlie (Charles) Young | Personal Aide to the President |
| Allison Janney as | C.J. (Claudia Jean) Cregg | Press Secretary |
| Janel Moloney as | Donna (Donnatella) Moss | Assistant to Deputy Chief of Staff |
| Richard Schiff as | Toby {Zachary} Ziegler | Communications Director |
| John Spencer as | Leo {Thomas} McGarry | Chief of Staff |
| Bradley Whitford as | Josh (Joshua) Lyman | Deputy Chief of Staff |
| Martin Sheen as | Jed (Josiah) Bartlet | President of the United States |
| Felicity Huffman as | Ann Stark | Senate Majority Leader's Chief of Staff |
| Corbin Bernsen as | Congressman Shallick | Rep. Henry (first name) |
| NiCole Robinson as | Margaret | Assistant to Chief of Staff |
| Melissa Fitzgerald as | Carol | Assistant to the Press Secretary |
| William Duffy as | Staffer Larry | |
| Peter James Smith as | Staffer Ed | |
| Kim Webster as | Ginger | Assistant to Communications Director |
| Patrick Falls as | Steward | Billy |
| Bruce Winant as | Henry Hanson | |
| Lesley D. Van Arsdall as | Reporter | |
| Dude Walker as | Simon | Reporter |
| Charles Noland as | Steve | Reporter |
| Tom McCarthy as | Senator Thomas | Randall (first name) |
| Rhonda Overby as | Reporter | |
| Tim Williams as | Reporter | Craig |
| Ivan Allen as | Newscaster | Roger Salier |
| Marc Goldsmith as | Staff Aide #1 | |
| Kevin Fry as | Staff Aide #2 |
... it may have occurred to you that "Karen Cahill," the New York Times columnist everyone on the president's staff seemed to be trying to placate because of some imagined insult, sounded an awful lot like the Times' Maureen Dowd, of whom many politicians are, perhaps justifiably, a little frightened.No coincidence, said the show's creator, Aaron Sorkin, who spent much of an NBC press party Wednesday evening urging reporters to cut out early so they wouldn't miss the episode. In early drafts, he'd even referred to the character as "Maureen Dowd," he admitted.
One reporter definitely planning to watch was Dowd herself. She was at the party, too, making like the rest of the working press and talking to actress Dyan Cannon.
Dowd later said she was aware of the story line but wasn't yet sure she'd admit to being Cahill. If the character turned out to be "vengeful," she said, she planned to tell people he'd really meant fellow Times columnist Gail Collins.
"Councilman's kid a co-star"
By Ellen Gray
January 12, 2001
Philadelphia Daily News
The realization hit while watching a recent West Wing episode dubbed "The Leadership Breakfast," in which idealistic yet cantankerous Democratic White House communications director Toby Ziegler (Richard Schiff) gets outfoxed by the new chief of staff of the Republican House majority leader (Sports Night alum Felcity Huffman).A-ha! I thought. This is how they'll deal with a Bush presidency and the ascendancy of right wing politics in the real world. The Republicans finally get some power.
That simplistic thinking was dashed to bits during a recent conversation with creator/writer Aaron Sorkin, who was calling from the show's Burbank production office at 8:30 a.m. on a recent Monday, despite winning a Golden Globe award for best TV drama the night before.
"It really isn't about ... the new Bush White House. ... It's about opposition," he says. "You're going to see opposition on the show, and you're going to see them making strong, compelling arguments. In our parallel West Wing universe, which is two years off from the actual universe, Bartlet's going to need to start running for re-election. And he's facing all kinds of opposition -- including, by the way, opposition to his left."
"New opponents to besiege 'West Wing'"
By Eric Deggans
February 6, 2001
St. Petersburg Times
Take the January 10 episode ("The Leadership Breakfast"). The script bulged with real-life plot points, from a fire in the White House to an aborted eviction of the press corps from their perch above FDR's boarded-up indoor swimming pool. Both really happened. In the show's first scene, the staff frets over the seating chart for an upcoming event. Will strict protocol reign, or will a breach be allowed for a guest's special need? Applying Baryshnikov's precision to simple musical chairs was a political ballet we danced every day of the week.President Clinton, like President Bartlet, could not have cared less about such things. Put him in his seat, give him his talking points, and let him go to work. What Clinton and Bartlet both go to extremes to ensure, however, is that hometown delicacies make it on the menu. In "The Leadership Breakfast," Granite State-native Bartlet whines that Vermont maple syrup, rather than pancake topping from neighboring New Hampshire, has found its way onto the high-profile bill-of-fare. Forget the policy implications. Never mind the agenda. The President wants his favorite syrup served up to his guests. In real life, Arkansas-native Clinton made sure that his hometown was on the map for more than just his birthplace. The Town of Hope (for those not among the fruit cognoscenti) boasts America's largest watermelons. A papier-mâché replica of 1985's record-breaking 260-pounder sits in the window of the chamber of commerce. On the South Lawn of the White House it became an annual August rite that a truckload of Hope's bounty would arrive on the eve of the town's annual Watermelon festival. The White House staff, members of Congress, and other VIPs would regularly drop their official duties, loosen their ties, and bite into a juicy noonday feast under the sun.
On a Hollywood soundstage, of course, a can of maple syrup is a more manageable prop than a truck oozing with ripened watermelon. Truth, as always, is stranger than fiction.
"Do you recognize the Clinton West Wing in The West Wing?"
By Joshua King
March 2001
The Atlantic Monthly (Web-Only Sidebar)
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