TV's West Wing swops fictional politics for the real thing

A West Wing Special To Benefit When We All Vote is a staged theatrical performance of an episode from 2002. Martin Sheen (above) reprises his role as United States president Jed Bartlet. PHOTO: HBO MAX/YOUTUBE

LOS ANGELES • Fourteen years after television political drama The West Wing shut down its White House set, the show is back with its idealised version of a United States president and a mission to get Americans to the polls on Nov 3 to choose a real one.

American actor Martin Sheen - who played the liberal-leaning US President Jed Bartlet on the show - reunites with fictional White House staffers portrayed by Bradley Whitford, Allison Janney, Rob Lowe, Dule Hill, Janel Maloney and Richard Schiff for a one-off special to promote voting.

A West Wing Special To Benefit When We All Vote, to be broadcast on HBO Max today, is a staged theatrical performance of an episode from 2002, called Hartsfield's Landing, in which the cerebral Bartlet plays chess with his aides while awaiting the results of a state primary election and dealing with a brewing crisis over Taiwan.

West Wing creator Aaron Sorkin said it was chosen "because the episode ended with a feeling that we wanted the audience to have. A feeling about voting".

While Sorkin wrote no updates to the script, the likes of former US President Bill Clinton, former US first lady Michelle Obama and Hamilton musical creator Lin-Manuel Miranda will appear during commercial breaks "giving information about voting, knocking down some untruths about voting, and doing it in their own style", Sorkin said.

Sorkin said he was a firm believer in the influential power of movies and television in shaping ideas, but said The West Wing would be no different if he was writing it in today's political environment.

"What the show was always about was a workplace drama set in a very interesting workplace," Sorkin said.

"In our popular culture, our elected leaders are portrayed either as Machiavellian or as dolts. So I thought, what if there is a show where these people are every bit as confident and dedicated as doctors and nurses on a hospital show or the lawyers on a legal drama."

The West Wing ended its seven-year run in 2006 after winning more than 20 Emmy Awards. The special was shot as a play in an empty theatre in Los Angeles under coronavirus guidelines.

This Is Us star Sterling K. Brown takes the role of chief of staff Leo McGarry following the death in 2005 of actor John Spencer.

"It was moving to have everybody back together," said director Thomas Schlamme.

"What was stunning to me was how quickly these actors slipped right back into their characters."

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on October 15, 2020, with the headline TV's West Wing swops fictional politics for the real thing. Subscribe