'The West Wing' cast visits the White House for a 25th anniversary party
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[September 21, 2024]
By NOMAAN MERCHANT
WASHINGTON (AP) — With President Joe Biden away from the White House, it
was left Friday to another man with Oval Office experience to stand at
the front of the Rose Garden and give a rousing call to service.
Martin Sheen and others from the cast of “The West Wing,” the hit drama
about a liberal president and his staff, were invited by first lady Jill
Biden for an event to mark the 25th anniversary of the show.
Sheen exhorted the crowd to find something worth fighting for,
“something deeply personal and uncompromising, something that can unite
the will of the spirit with the work of the flesh."
His voice and hands rose, his cadence matching perfectly that of
President Jed Bartlet, the character Sheen played for seven seasons.
“When we find that, we will discover fire for the second time, and then
we will be able to help lift up this nation and all its people to that
place where the heart is without fear, and their head is held high,”
Sheen said.
“The West Wing” remains a favorite of many who now work in Washington,
both liberal and conservative. Among those spotted in the Rose Garden
were House Foreign Affairs Chairman Michael McCaul, R-Texas, and Joe
Walsh, once a tea party-aligned Illinois congressman who is now a sharp
critic of former President Donald Trump and supporting Vice President
Kamala Harris.
Asked to name his favorite character, Walsh replied, “I'm partial to
Martin Sheen because I want to be president one day." (Walsh ran and
lost a longshot Republican primary challenge to Trump in 2020.)
It was clear in the speeches and the party’s touches that at least a few
“West Wing” fans work in the White House.
There was the U.S. Marine Band playing the opening notes to the show's
theme as Biden and the cast walked out. There were references to “big
blocks of cheese” — a show tradition of requiring staffers to meet with
eccentric or offbeat characters — and the walk-and-talk dialogues in
which characters moved through the halls at high speed.
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First lady Jill Biden, with actors Martin Sheen, left, Aaron Sorkin,
right, and other members of the cast of The West Wing, is applauded
as she hosts an event on the Rose Garden at the White House to mark
the 25th anniversary of the television series, The West Wing,
Friday, Sept. 20, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
Waiters passed out
bourbon-and-ginger ale cocktails called “The Jackal,” a reference to
press secretary C.J. Cregg's dance and lip sync routine in one
iconic episode.
The show's creator, Aaron Sorkin, spoke after Sheen and referenced a
bit of real-world politics: Biden's decision not to seek a second
term after his disastrous debate performance. Sorkin was among the
high-profile Democrats who called for him to withdraw, writing a
column for The New York Times with a potential “script” for
Democrats to replace Biden as their nominee with a Republican, Utah
Sen. Mitt Romney.
His column ran on July 21, hours before Biden announced he would
drop out.
“The fact is, ‘West Wing’ moments do happen,” he said Friday,
addressing the first lady. “And Dr. Biden, we saw proof of that on
the morning of July 21.”
Sorkin also recognized the cast members in attendance. Among them:
Richard Schiff, who played communications director Toby Ziegler;
Janel Moloney, who played assistant Donna Moss; and Dulé Hill, who
played the president's bodyman, Charlie Young.
He noted the absence of a few high-profile actors — Allison Janney,
who played Cregg, as well as Bradley Whitford and Rob Lowe — who he
said were on set elsewhere.
“The rest of us are apparently unemployed,” he joked.
After the crowd laughed, a voice chimed in from Sorkin's right.
“Not yet!” Jill Biden said.
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