List of The West Wing characters





The television series The West Wing is a political drama series which was originally broadcast on NBC.


Many actors noted for work in sitcoms, including John Goodman, Alan Alda, John Larroquette, Christopher Lloyd, Ed O'Neill, Matthew Perry, Patricia Richardson, Lily Tomlin, Wayne Wilderson, and Daniel Von Bargen appeared in dramatic roles on The West Wing.




Contents






  • 1 White House staff


    • 1.1 Other White House staffers


    • 1.2 Office of the White House Counsel


    • 1.3 Situation Room


    • 1.4 Secret Service/FBI




  • 2 Politicians


  • 3 Campaign staff


    • 3.1 Santos campaign


    • 3.2 Vinick campaign




  • 4 Media


  • 5 Family


    • 5.1 Josiah Bartlet's family


    • 5.2 Leo McGarry's family


    • 5.3 C.J. Cregg's family


    • 5.4 Josh Lyman's family


    • 5.5 Toby Ziegler's family


    • 5.6 Donna Moss's family


    • 5.7 Will Bailey's family


    • 5.8 Charlie Young's family


    • 5.9 Matt Santos's family




  • 6 Other characters


  • 7 Pets


  • 8 See also


  • 9 Notes





White House staff








































































































Character
Actor
Seasons

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

Sam Seaborn

Rob Lowe
Main

Recurring

Mandy Hampton

Moira Kelly
Main


Charlie Young

Dulé Hill
Main

C. J. Cregg

Allison Janney
Main

Toby Ziegler

Richard Schiff
Main

Leo McGarry

John Spencer
Main

Josh Lyman

Bradley Whitford
Main

Josiah Bartlet

Martin Sheen
Main

Donna Moss

Janel Moloney
Recurring
Main

Abbey Bartlet

Stockard Channing
Recurring
Main

Will Bailey

Joshua Malina

Main
Kate Harper

Mary McCormack

Recurring
Main

Matt Santos

Jimmy Smits

Main

Arnold Vinick

Alan Alda

Main

Annabeth Schott

Kristin Chenoweth

Recurring
Main



  • Josiah "Jed" Bartlet  (Martin Sheen): President of the United States (Seasons 1–7). Former governor of New Hampshire. Nobel laureate in Economics.


  • Joshua "Josh" Lyman  (Bradley Whitford): White House Deputy Chief of Staff (Seasons 1–6); Campaign Manager, Santos-McGarry Campaign (Seasons 6–7); White House Chief of Staff in the Santos Administration (Season 7).


  • Leo Thomas McGarry  (John Spencer): White House Chief of Staff (Seasons 1–6); Special Counselor to the President (Season 6); Democratic vice presidential nominee (Season 6–7) and Vice President–elect of the United States (Season 7). He is also a former Secretary of Labor and a Vietnam veteran.


  • Claudia Jean "C.J." Cregg  (Allison Janney): White House Press Secretary (Seasons 1–6); White House Chief of Staff (Seasons 6–7).


  • Charles "Charlie" Young  (Dulé Hill): personal aide to the President (Seasons 1–6); Deputy Special Assistant to the Chief of Staff (C.J. Cregg) (Seasons 6–7). The final episode reveals he will attend Georgetown University Law Center.


  • Donnatella "Donna" Moss  (Janel Moloney): Senior Assistant to Josh Lyman (Seasons 1–6); Media Specialist and Campaign Spokesperson, Bob Russell for President Campaign (Season 6); Deputy Press Secretary, Santos-McGarry Campaign (Season 7); First Lady's Chief of Staff (Season 7).


  • Tobias Zachary "Toby" Ziegler  (Richard Schiff): White House Communications Director (Seasons 1–7).


  • Samuel Norman "Sam" Seaborn  (Rob Lowe): White House Deputy Communications Director (Seasons 1–4); resigns to run for Congress; White House Deputy Chief of Staff in the Santos Administration.


  • William "Will" Bailey  (Joshua Malina): White House Deputy Communications Director (Seasons 4–5); Chief of Staff to Vice-President Bob Russell (Seasons 5–7); White House Communications Director (Season 7) Congressman from the Oregon 4th (after the end of the series).


  • Annabeth Schott  (Kristin Chenoweth): Deputy Press Secretary for Media Relations (Season 6); Campaign staffer, Santos/McGarry Campaign (Season 7); First Lady's Press Secretary (Season 7).


  • Madeline "Mandy" Hampton  (Moira Kelly): Political consultant during Bartlet's first campaign. Worked as a media consultant at Lennox-Chase after the campaign. Briefly consults for Democratic Senator Lloyd Russell before being hired by the White House as a political consultant and Media Director (Season 1). Disappears after the first season of The West Wing and is never mentioned again.

  • Angela Blake  (Michael Hyatt): Worked for Leo McGarry while he was Secretary of Labor. While a political consultant, she is hired to be Director of Legislative Affairs (Season 5). Vanishes after the budget crisis is over and Josh Lyman regains his effective leadership, and is never mentioned again.

  • Clifford "Cliff" Calley  (Mark Feuerstein): Majority Counsel for the House Government Reform and Oversight Committee during the Bartlet censure proceedings (Season 3) and a Republican; White House Deputy Chief of Staff (Season 6-7).


  • Amelia "Amy" Gardner  (Mary-Louise Parker): Head of the Women's Leadership Coalition and influential women's rights activist. Works as a political consultant for Senator Howard Stackhouse when he runs for president. Later hired as the Chief of Staff for the Office of the First Lady. Resigns after she upsets the President (Seasons 3–5). Agrees to become the Director of Legislative Affairs in the Santos administration (Season 7).



Other White House staffers




  • Dolores Landingham (Kathryn Joosten and Kirsten Nelson in flashback in "Two Cathedrals"): The President's executive secretary (Season 1–2). Killed in a car accident (Season 2 episode "18th and Potomac"). Appears in flashbacks (Seasons 3–4). Often referred to simply as "Mrs. Landingham".


  • Deborah "Debbie" Fiderer (Lily Tomlin): The President's executive secretary. Hired after the death of Mrs Landingham (Seasons 4–7). Charlie arranges for her first interview with the President, where she is groggy from prescription medication and behaves ridiculously, and pushes successfully for her to be re-considered afterwards. When President Bartlet learns the reason she lost her previous White House job—she defied the Director of Personnel by hiring Charlie rather than a wealthy Bartlet supporter's unqualified son—and sees she is actually very smart and capable (if still odd), he hires her on the spot.

  • Margaret Hooper (NiCole Robinson): Assistant to Chiefs of Staff Leo McGarry (Seasons 1–6) and C.J. Cregg (Seasons 6–7). She is visibly pregnant in Season 6, with no clear information about the father, and her baby is never seen on the show. Margaret claims to be capable of convincingly forging President Bartlett's signature, but has to be reminded by Leo that use of that skill for official purposes constitutes treason.

  • Bonnie (Devika Parikh): Assistant to Communications Director Toby Ziegler (Seasons 1–5).

  • Ginger (Kim Webster): Assistant to Communications Director Toby Ziegler (Seasons 1–7).

  • Carol Fitzpatrick (Melissa Fitzgerald): Assistant to Press Secretary C.J. Cregg (Seasons 1–7).

  • Cathy (Suzy Nakamura): Assistant to Deputy Communications Director Sam Seaborn (Season 1).

  • Elsie Snuffin (Danica McKellar): Assistant to Deputy Communications Director Will Bailey (Season 4). Also stepsister to Will.

  • Cassie Tatum (Claire Coffee): Intern at the White House Press Office (Season 4).

  • Lauren Romano (Lara Phillips): Intern at the White House Press Office (Season 4).

  • Lauren Shelby (Kimberlee Peterson): Intern at the White House Press Office (Season 4).

  • Lauren Chin (Catherine Kwong): Intern at the White House Press Office (Season 4).

  • Marina ("Rina") (Melissa Marsala): Assistant to Communications Director Toby Ziegler (Season 5).

  • Nancy (Renée Estevez): President's Confidential Assistant (Seasons 1–7). Estevez is the daughter of Martin Sheen, who plays the President.

  • Ed (Peter James Smith): White House staffer usually seen with Larry.

  • Larry (William Duffy): White House staffer usually seen with Ed.

  • Ryan Pierce (Jesse Bradford): White House intern assigned to Josh and nephew of a powerful senator; related to the 14th U.S. President, Franklin Pierce (Season 5). Alternates between reasonable ambition and inappropriate behavior, driven by Josh deliberately being rude and dismissive to him. Becomes a top aide to a Democratic Congressman whom Josh hates by the end of Season 5, and is never seen or mentioned afterwards.

  • Curtis Carruthers (Ben Murray): Succeeds Charlie Young as personal aide to the President (Season 6).



Office of the White House Counsel





  • Lionel Tribbey (John Larroquette): The fourth White House Counsel of the Bartlet administration, but the first to appear in the series. He is shown to have extremely liberal views and to be incredibly animated and theatrical in his displeasure that the President tends to be more moderate in action. Argues with Sam and Ainsley over Gilbert and Sullivan.

  • Oliver Babish (Oliver Platt): The fifth and final White House Counsel of the Bartlet administration, but the second of the only two characters to be shown in that position during the series. Diligent and zealous, he first appears advising President Bartlet when the President is considering revealing his diagnosis of multiple sclerosis to the public. He appears connected to this plotline into season three, then returns to the series in season seven to participate in the White House's internal investigation into the military shuttle leak. He later decamps to a law firm in the wake of the outgoing Bartlet Administration and later mentioned by Santos as a potential choice for Attorney General. Described by Josh Lyman as "smart and tough".

  • Ainsley Hayes (Emily Procter): Associate (and proposed Deputy) White House Counsel (Seasons 2–3). Conservative Republican from North Carolina. Graduate of Harvard Law School. After she soundly defeats and embarrasses Sam during a debate on the political talk show Capital Beat, President Bartlet tells Leo McGarry to offer her a job, which she initially thinks is either a joke or a terrible idea, but seeing the staff in action leads her to accept the Associate White House Counsel's post. Briefly reappears in Season 7, wanting to become White House Counsel for the Santos Administration with Josh planning on getting her a meeting with Santos.

  • Joe Quincy (Matthew Perry): Associate White House Counsel (Seasons 4–5). Republican. Uncovers Vice President Hoynes's leaking of information during an affair with local socialite Helen Baldwin, ultimately leading to Hoynes' resignation. He is later tasked by Toby to find out if the ailing Chief Justice would be willing to resign, which he has strong ethical objections about doing because he clerked for the Chief Justice and reveres him despite their polar opposite political views, but does what Toby asked him to.

  • Mike Wayne (Benjamin Brown): Associate White House Counsel (Season 4–7). Is consulted by Toby and Josh in regards to dealing with a chemical company executive (who is Toby's former roommate) who wants to revise his written testimony to the House Committee on Natural Resources and seeks whistleblower protection, who Wayne reveals to the dismayed senior staffers is guilty of crimes and has to be granted immunity, leading Toby to later bitterly "praise" his old roommate and friend for making sure to have gotten himself out of legal trouble after his cowardice led to huge suffering for others. Deals with Toby after he admits to being the source of the military space shuttle leak.

  • Richard Squire (Michael Kostroff): Associate White House Counsel (Season 6). Graduate of Yale Law School and a Rhodes Scholar.



Situation Room



  • Admiral Percy "Fitz" Fitzwallace (John Amos): Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff[1] (Seasons 1–5). Fitzwallace is a career surface warfare officer. He is killed by terrorists while on a diplomatic mission following his retirement.

  • General Nicholas Alexander (Terry O'Quinn): an ex-Green Beret. He succeeds Admiral Fitzwallace as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (Season 5-6).

  • Dr. Nancy McNally (Anna Deavere Smith): National Security Advisor. It is suggested that she becomes U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations (Season 2–7).

  • Lieutenant Commander Jack Reese (Christian Slater): Aide to National Security Advisor Nancy McNally (Season 4) and briefly dates Donna.

  • Commander Kate Harper (Mary McCormack): Deputy National Security Advisor (Seasons 5–7).

  • Lieutenant General Alan Adamle (Gerald McRaney): A three-star general in the USAF. Meets with Leo to discuss the International Criminal Court in episode (3.05) and stuns Leo by revealing Leo once (completely inadvertently) bombed a non-military target and killed innocent civilians, telling a devastated Leo this story to lead to his view that "All wars are crimes." Also briefs then President-elect Bartlet on a small delegation of military advisers being sent to the Philippines three days after the presidential election in episode (5.22). Served with Leo in Vietnam.

  • General Shannon (Daniel Von Bargen): Appears in episodes (2.01) and (2.10). A four-star general in the USAF; Leo calls him "Jack" in his first episode and "Ken" in his second appearance. He seems to be the senior officer in the Situation Room in episode (2.01) until Nancy McNally arrives.

  • Lieutenant General Ed Barrie (Tom Bower): Army Chief of Staff. Appears in episode (2.05) berating C.J. for reprimanding his intentions to criticize the President on TV before his retirement, but is left silent when C.J. tells him he is wearing a Distinguished Combat Service Medal he had not earned; President Bartlet, however, later says the General served his country bravely and would face no White House censorship of any of his views. Despite being identified as Army Chief of Staff, he is portrayed as a three-star lieutenant general.

  • General Mitch Jensen (Christopher Kriesa): A three-star Army general. Present in the Situation Room during discussions of retaliatory options to Morris Tollivers' USAF medical transport being shot down in episode (1.03). Also advises the President on the India-Kashmir crisis in episodes (1.11) and (1.12).

  • Colonel Mark Chase (David Graf): Air Force officer who advises Leo on a crisis with Iraqi oil smugglers in episode (2.07), and monitors the Missile Defense Shield test in episode (2.12).

  • CIA Director George Rollie (Ryan Cutrona): President Bartlet does not trust or like him, but as C.J. and Toby note in "365 Days", his pariah status is useful because it prevents the President from tearing down anyone else during tense situations.

  • Mr. Cashman : often mentioned alongside Secretaries Hutchinson and Berryhill, implied to be a senior official at one of the Executive Branch departments, the department of either State or Defense (Seasons 1–2).

  • Bobby Dunn (Gary Cervantes): Appears in episodes (1.11), (1.22), (2.01), (2.10), and (2.21); apparently a State Department official.

  • Albie Duncan (Hal Holbrook): Assistant Secretary of State (office unstated). Longtime Republican and State Department elder (more than 40 years); is brought in by Leo (to the President's displeasure) to counsel the President on the submarine crisis off of North Korea in episode (3.06); later brought in by Toby during the reelection campaign to help C.J. spin the post-debate in episode (4.06).

  • Ted Barrow (Ron Canada): Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs. Appears in Seasons 5-7. In Season 5, tends to be harsh with the senior staffers and notably sympathetic to the views of North Korea; in later appearances, he is more measured and diplomatic.

  • Bob Slattery (Thomas Kopache): Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs. Appears in Seasons 3-7.

  • Miguel "Mickey" Troop (Tony Plana): Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs. Appears in Season 2; advises the President on the DEA hostage crisis in Colombia, where he pushes for negotiations over a military solution and later outlines how dangerous and deadly a U.S. war against the major cartels would be.

  • Mike Chysler (Glenn Morshower): (occasionally "Jack"); adviser to the President during his first term, regularly appearing in the Situation Room. Briefs the President on the DEA hostage crisis; also advises the President during the prelude to the assassination of Abdul Shareef near the end of Season 3. Appears in Seasons 2-4.



Secret Service/FBI



  • Ron Butterfield (Michael O'Neill): Head of the President's Secret Service detail (Seasons 1–7).

  • Simon Donovan (Mark Harmon): Secret Service agent assigned to protect C.J. Cregg and develops a close relationship with her. Killed when he walks into an armed robbery (Season 3).

  • Gina Toscano (Jorja Fox): Secret Service agent assigned to protect Zoey Bartlet (Seasons 1–2).

  • Wesley Davis (Taye Diggs): In charge of Zoey Bartlet's secret service detail when she is abducted (Season 4).

  • Molly O'Connor (Kimberly Bigsby): A young agent on Zoey's detail. Shot dead during the kidnapping of Zoey. Toby and Andy's daughter is named in her memory (Season 4).

  • Randy Weathers (Shannon Marshall): Another young agent on Zoey Bartlet's detail (Season 4).

  • Jamie Reed (John Antonini): Another young agent on Zoey Bartlet's detail (Season 4).

  • Tom Connelly: FBI Director. Referred to in episode (Ep. 1.03).

  • George Arnold (Michael Kagan): FBI Director (Ep. 5.18; 6.1).

  • Mike Casper (Clark Gregg): FBI Special Agent, usually acting White House liaison (Seasons 2–5).



Politicians


See List of politicians in The West Wing



Campaign staff



  • Bruno Gianelli (Ron Silver): A sharp political operative and consultant introduced in the third season as the campaign manager of Bartlet's 2002 bid for reelection, and continues in this role through the fourth season. His unmatched track record of victories includes a House district that no Democrat has won for decades, several different U.S. senators and state governors, as well as a win for an unspecified Israeli prime minister. The character reappears as Eric Baker's campaign manager for the 2006 Democratic primary, only to become an independent consultant to Republican nominee Arnold Vinick after Baker withdraws from the race. The change of political affiliations mirrored Ron Silver's real-world change of party affiliation, as the noted liberal actor campaigned for President George W. Bush in the 2004 presidential election.


  • Josephine "Joey" Lucas (Marlee Matlin): A political consultant and pollster who is often hired by the White House and Democratic campaigns. Usually her interactions with Bartlet or Matt Santos are arranged by Josh Lyman, who has a crush on her early on. However, their relationship remains platonic and professional. Lucas first appears in the first season as the hard-hitting, sarcastic campaign manager for a Democratic House candidate whom the White House does not take seriously. She is then contracted to conduct a secret poll to determine whether the American public would accept the president's MS. Like Matlin, Lucas is deaf.

  • Kenny Thurman (Bill O'Brien): Joey Lucas's sign language interpreter (Seasons 1–7).

  • Connie Tate (Connie Britton): Bartlet-Hoynes re-election campaign staffer (Season 3); a likable woman who quickly befriends Sam Seaborn. Often wins points by smoothing feathers ruffled by her acerbic co-worker Doug Wegland.

  • Doug Wegland (Evan Handler): Bartlet-Hoynes re-election campaign staffer and speechwriter (Season 3); he's acerbic and finds himself offside with Toby Ziegler, but ends up winning the staffers' respect with his good ideas and staunch belief in them (particularly his push for a presidential veto on the "death tax" that leads to a major political victory for the administration).

  • Kevin Kahn (Patrick Breen): Former friend of Sam Seaborn. Staffer on Ritchie's 2002 presidential campaign (Season 3), who ends up humiliating Sam by leaking an attack ad that makes the Bartlet campaign look vindictive and stupid.

  • Dylan Clark (Tim Kelleher): Hoynes' campaign manager (Season 6).



Santos campaign



  • Louise "Lou" Thornton (Janeane Garofalo): an intelligent lobbyist described by Santos as having a "completely different take on the campaign" and by Josh as knowing "image stuff backwards and sideways", she only reluctantly agrees to Josh's request to join the Santos-McGarry campaign as Director of Communications, when Santos agrees she can report to him directly. Very tough and experienced, she successfully argues that many loyal Santos campaign operatives are not up to snuff and gets them cut loose, and later tells Josh she has run Democratic campaigns that destroyed the careers of smart, well-intentioned Republican candidates because (as she says) they're still the GOP and the enemy of what she believes is right. With Josh considering her to have enough campaign experience to potentially replace him as Campaign Manager, she acts as Josh's de facto deputy through to the very end, and at Josh's persuasion, accepts her appointment as Santos's Director of Communications (Season 7).

  • Ronna Beckman (Karis Campbell): Santos's personal assistant. She is present from the very beginning of Matt Santos's campaign for the presidency in season 6 (appearing as part of his Congressional staff), and appears in almost every episode in season 7, as Lou considers her work good enough to continue. In one episode, she mentions that she regards Josh, Annabeth and Lou as her only friends, which Lou claims makes Ronna more pathetic than herself (who hasn't spoken to any of her friends in two months) or Annabeth (who believes she doesn't have friends anymore). In her final appearance, Deborah Fiderer trains her as Santos's executive secretary, warning her never to revoke the First Lady's walk-in privileges, even as the President is certain to request it. She has a relationship with another female staffer (Cindy) on the Santos campaign.

  • Edie Ortega (Diana-Maria Riva): Santos-McGarry Deputy Campaign Manager for Strategic Planning (Season 7).

  • Bram Howard (Matthew Del Negro): Staffer, Santos-McGarry Campaign (Seasons 6–7); Santos Administration counsellor to the President (Season 7). Moves into Charlie Young's former office on Inauguration Day.

  • Ned Carlson (Evan Arnold): A day-one aide to Congressman Santos (Season 6); Staffer, Santos-McGarry Campaign (Seasons 6–7). Has somewhat of an adversarial relationship with Lou, who highlights Ned as a staffer who is not up to the demands of a national campaign and says he needs to go precisely because he's a trusted assistant to Santos. Ned is reassigned by Josh to Santos's Congressional office early in Season 7 with the intention of giving him a spot in the administration after the election. Ned angrily tells off Josh and it's left unclear if he's quit the entire campaign or not. He does not appear after his demotion takes place.

  • Otto (Ramon De Ocampo): Speechwriter, Santos-McGarry Campaign (Season 7); Staffer in the Santos Administration (Season 7). Very young but capable man who has a campaign fling with Lou Thornton. Josh irrationally vents his post-election stress and anger at Otto, who is saved when Sam Seaborn shuts Josh's behavior down permanently; it is implied he will have a speechwriting role in the Santos Administration.



Vinick campaign



  • Sheila Brooks (Patricia Richardson): Senator Vinick's chief of staff and Vinick-Sullivan campaign manager; She, like Vinick, is portrayed as level-headed and not overtly partisan. Often at odds with the more conservative voices in the party, she leaves the campaign weeks before election day to placate the Republican base (Season 6–7). In her final appearance, Brooks is mentioned as possibly being hired as Chief of Staff to the Republican Senate Majority Leader. Having renewed her friendship with Vinick, she makes an argument that convinces the Senator that he shouldn't run for president again—and that he should accept President-elect Santos' offer to become the next Secretary of State.

  • Jane Braun (Melinda McGraw): Vinick-Sullivan campaign manager after Brooks' resignation (Season 7); A far to the right conservative activist who replaces Sheila in order to energize hard-core GOP voters. However, she disgusts the rest of the campaign leadership by attempting to make an election night issue of Leo McGarry's death. Her outspoken partisanship puts her at odds with both Vinick, Sheila and Bruno Gianelli.

  • Bruno Gianelli (Ron Silver): (See above).

  • Bob Mayer (Stephen Root): Vinick-Sullivan speechwriter (Season 6–7). Frequently mocked for his messy eating habits but extremely smart and effective (and, like Vinick and Sheila Brooks, level-headed in his conservatism), Mayer becomes fast friends with Gianelli. On election night, the two briefly discuss forming a consulting firm when Mayer firmly declares he is never going to become involved in daily governance, but Gianelli politely declines because the campaign life has worn him down and he plans to retire to his home in upstate New York. Along with Sheila, Bob advises Vinick to accept Santos' offer as the next Secretary of State.



Media



  • Danny Concannon; (Timothy Busfield): senior White House correspondent for The Washington Post (Seasons 1–2, 4–5, 7).

  • Greg Brock (Sam Robards): White House correspondent for The New York Times. Greg Brock is also the name of a real editor for The New York Times.[2] One of the most regularly referred to White House correspondents, second only to Danny Concannon. Writes a story that alleges the existence of a classified military space shuttle which could be used to help three astronauts on the International Space Station who are running out of oxygen. His source is initially suspected to be C.J. Cregg, whose phone records show a surprisingly large number of calls to Greg Brock. Brock goes to jail after being held in contempt of court for failing to reveal the name of his source. White House Communications Director Toby Ziegler eventually confesses to the leak, saying that he acted alone, and that Brock was the only reporter to whom he leaked the information. The storyline regarding the leak and subsequent investigation has been compared by some to the Valerie Plame affair.[3][4] (Seasons 5-7).

  • Roger Salier (Ivan Allen): Television anchor on News Center 4 (Seasons 1–7).

  • Mark Gottfried (Ted McGinley): Talk show host of Capital Beat (Episodes 2.04, 2.13 & 2.14).

  • Diane Mathers (Kathrin Middleton): Tough talk show host who interviews Zoey Bartlet about her kidnapping and John Hoynes about his intentions to run for president again (Episodes 5.07 & 6.07).

  • Taylor Reid (Jay Mohr): Conservative talk show host, baits C.J. Cregg by calling her a "chicken" (Season 5). Some reviewers have likened the character to Bill O'Reilly, the combative host of the news commentary show The O'Reilly Factor.[5]

  • Katarina "Katie" Witt (Kris Murphy): White House Press Corps Reporter (Seasons 1–7).

  • Mark O'Donnell (Timothy Davis-Reed): White House Press Corps Reporter. Episode 3:08 - says he is from Canada. (Season 2-7)

  • Steve (Charles Noland): White House Press Corps Reporter, from AP. (Season 1-7)

  • Chris (Mindy Seeger): White House Press Corps Reporter. (Season 1-7)

  • Charlayne (Joyce Guy): White House Press Corps Reporter. (Season 5-7)



Family



Josiah Bartlet's family




  • Abigail Ann 'Abbey' Bartlet, M.D. (Stockard Channing): First Lady of the United States (Seasons 1–7).

  • Jonathan Bartlet: Younger brother of Josiah Bartlet (mentioned, never seen).

  • Elizabeth "Liz" Bartlet Westin (Annabeth Gish): The President's eldest daughter, married with two children. (Seasons 5–7). President Bartlet thinks she's the real political mind in her marriage (not her husband) and she should run for office instead of him.


  • Eleanor Emily "Ellie" Bartlet Faison, M.D. (Nina Siemaszko): The President's middle daughter.(Seasons 2, 5, 7). Loves her father and he loves her but they're very different in personality and President Bartlet has said that Ellie is "her mother's daughter".


  • Zoey Patricia Bartlet (Elisabeth Moss): The President's youngest daughter (Seasons 1–2, 4–7).

  • Dr. Bartlet (Lawrence O'Donnell): The President's father. Though deceased, he appears during flashbacks in the episode "Two Cathedrals" (Season 2). In flashback form, he is an overbearing man described by Mrs Landingham as a "prick who was jealous of his more successful brothers" and took out his limitations on his brilliant leader of a son.

  • Doug Westin (Steven Eckholdt): Liz's husband. Neither the President nor his senior staff think much of him: the President because he doesn't think Doug is really worthy of marrying Elizabeth, the staff because they view him as an empty suit. Has an adulterous affair with the family's nanny exposed and unsuccessfully runs for the House of Representatives representing New Hampshire in 2006 (Seasons 5–7).

  • Vic Faison (Ben Weber): Ellie's fiancé, later husband. A scientist studying fruit flies, he earned President Barlet's respect when he admitted that he wasn’t marrying Ellie due to her being pregnant but has known Ellie was the one during their third date. Vic has difficulty coping with the fact that his wedding has become a state occasion, but comes to terms with it.(Season 7).

  • Annie Westin: The President's granddaughter and Liz's daughter. Age 12 in Season 1. (Season 5, Episode 1).

  • Gus Westin (Michael Krepack): The President's grandson and Liz's son (Season 5).



Leo McGarry's family



  • Mallory O'Brien (Allison Smith): Leo McGarry's daughter (Seasons 1–2, 4–7).

  • Jenny McGarry (Sara Botsford): Leo McGarry's wife. Divorces him due to his work commitments (Season 1).

  • Josephine McGarry (Deborah Hedwall): Leo McGarry's sister, who works as an educator (Season 2). Avowedly against school prayer, and is forced to withdraw from consideration for a position with the Department of Education when Leo finds out she ordered the arrest of students who were praying and arranging for the arrest to be publicized.

  • Elizabeth McGarry: Leo McGarry's sister, mentioned in the episode "In Excelsis Deo" (Season 1).



C.J. Cregg's family



  • Hogan Cregg (Evan Rachel Wood): C.J.'s niece (Season 3).

  • Molly Lapham Cregg (Verna Bloom): C.J.'s stepmother and her former high school English teacher (Season 4).

  • Talmidge Cregg (Donald Moffat): C.J.'s father, a retired math teacher with Alzheimer's (Season 4).

  • Grammy Cregg: Mentioned as the Midwestern source of C.J.'s "Hay is for Horses" witticism.

  • Two older brothers: Mentioned in "The Black Vera Wang".



Josh Lyman's family



  • Joanie Lyman: Josh's older sister who died in a fire when she was babysitting him.

  • Noah Lyman: Josh's father, a hugely successful lawyer and longtime Democratic Party supporter, who was good friends with Leo McGarry. Died on the night of the Illinois primary (during Bartlet's first presidential campaign).

  • Mrs. Lyman: Josh's mother and only living relative. She lives in Florida and Josh usually goes down to visit her during holidays.



Toby Ziegler's family




  • Andrea Wyatt (Kathleen York): Ex-wife of Toby Ziegler, Congresswoman from Maryland.

  • Molly Wyatt: Toby and Andrea's daughter, named after Molly O'Conner, the secret service agent shot and killed the night of Zoey Bartlet's kidnapping (Seasons 4, 7), the night of her and Huck's birth.

  • Huckleberry "Huck" Wyatt: Toby and Andrea's son, named after Andrea's grandfather (Seasons 4, 7).

  • Jules "Julie" Ziegler (Jerry Adler): Toby's father, former New York gangster, retired ladies raincoat maker (Season 4).

  • David Ziegler: Toby's brother, NASA astronaut, commits suicide in Season 6 (mentioned, never seen). He had been diagnosed with cancer but as Toby recounts, he would have had at least a few years with his loved ones if he'd fought the disease, instead of just giving up and taking his life.



Donna Moss's family



  • Aunt Barbara: Aunt from Wisconsin whom Donna leads on private tour. (Season 5)

  • Uncle Ted: Uncle from Wisconsin whom Donna leads on private tour. (Season 5)

  • Cousins in Oklahoma: Mentioned in "Disaster Relief" (Season 5)

  • Mother: Comes to visit when Donna is hospitalized in Germany after the Gaza attack.



Will Bailey's family



  • Elsie Snuffin (Danica McKellar): Will Bailey's stepsister, an undiscovered comedy writer. The character is named after the birth name of the actress Kayla Blake, a cast member of Sorkin's previous show Sports Night. (Season 4)

  • Thomas Bailey: Will's father, a former Supreme Allied Commander Europe whom President Bartlet describes as "the very model of a modern Major General".



Charlie Young's family



  • Deanna Young: Charlie's little sister.

  • Mrs. Young: Charlie's mother, a Washington, D.C. police officer who was shot and killed in the line of duty prior to the start of the series by a gunman who was never arrested. (Mentioned, seen only in a photo.)



Matt Santos's family



  • Helen Santos (Teri Polo): Matt Santos's wife (Season 6–7)

  • Peter Santos (Joshua Cabrera): Matt Santos's son (Season 6-7)

  • Miranda Santos (Ashlyn Sanchez): Matt Santos's daughter (Season 6-7)

  • Jorge Santos (David Barrera): Matt's Santos's brother (Season 7), a failure in life who nearly ruins his brother's presidential bid when the Vinick campaign thinks they have evidence Matt Santos has an illegitimate child (in fact, Matt discovered that Jorge refused to support his ex-girlfriend, and therefore set up secret payments to help her on his own).



Other characters



  • Laurie (Lisa Edelstein): Sam Seaborn's friend. Law student working as a call girl (Season 1 and mentioned several times in 2).

  • Al Kiefer (John de Lancie): Democratic pollster who had a short relationship with Joey Lucas. The senior staff can't stand him and when Joey's abilities became apparent, she takes over his previous role as the Bartlet Administration's top pollster. (Season 1)

  • Larry Claypool (John Diehl): Freedom Watch lawyer (Seasons 1, 4) who spends his time filing lawsuits against President Bartlet and his staff in hopes of bringing down the administration.

  • Bernard Thatch (Paxton Whitehead): Head of the White House Visitor's Office (Ep 2.10, Ep 6.07).

  • Ann Stark (Felicity Huffman): Toby Ziegler's former friend, until she betrays him when he tries to broker a compromise on patients' rights. Chief of Staff to the Senate Majority Leader (Ep 2.11)

  • Lisa Sherborne (Traylor Howard): Sam Seaborn's former fiancée who now works for Vanity Fair. Sam broke off their engagement because he wanted to leave the New York scene and work at the White House (Ep 3.11).

  • Dr. Stanley Keyworth (Adam Arkin): A psychiatrist from San Francisco who specializes in trauma cases. He is asked by Leo McGarry to see Josh after Josh yells at the President. Staff Therapist for the American Trauma Victims Association (ATVA), has several sessions as the President's therapist as well. (Seasons 2–4)

  • Jordon Elaine Kendall (Joanna Gleason): Leo McGarry's lawyer during the Bartlet MS hearings and love interest for several months. (Season 3–4)

  • Alana Waterman (Lee Garlington): Toby Ziegler's attorney, called upon when Toby confesses to the White House leak. (Season 7)

  • Jean Paul Pierre Claude Charpentier, Vicomte de Condé de Bourbon (Trent Ford): Zoey Bartlet's French boyfriend. (Season 4)

  • Colin Ayres (Jason Isaacs): Photographer who has a fling with Donna Moss in "Gaza". (Season 5–6)

  • Lt. Colonel Gantry: pilot of Air Force One, heard several times on personal announcements on the plane.

  • Colonel Jesse Weisskopf: pilot of Air Force One, seen in the episode "Angel Maintenance" (Season 4) informing the President on the status of the plane.

  • Dr. Millicent Griffith (Mary Kay Place): Close family friend of the Bartlets, Ellie's godmother, occasional medical adviser to the President, and President Bartlet's Surgeon General (Ep. 2.15, Ep. 6.08, Ep. 6.09; mentioned in Ep. 2.18).

  • Reverend Don Butler (Don S. Davis): A conservative televangelist from Virginia, who is a candidate for the Republican Party's nomination for President of the United States in the 2006 election, but is defeated by Arnold Vinick and politely declines Vinick's offer of the Vice President spot because he cannot support Vinick's pro-choice positions.

  • Bobby Zane (Noah Emmerich): Defense lawyer for a convicted murderer and high school bully of Sam Seaborn. He contacts Sam in order to persuade the White House to commute his client's death sentence (Ep. 1.14).

  • Marco (Matthew Modine): A horologist and high school classmate of C. J. Cregg who helps her deal with her father's steady mental decline due to Alzheimer's disease. Appears in the episode "The Long Goodbye" (Ep. 4.13).

  • Morris Tolliver (Ruben Santiago-Hudson): He was a physician and Navy officer (Captain), who served as a temporary replacement at the position of Physician to the President of the United States. Despite his relatively low rank for the position, Jed Bartlet liked him and Leo McGarry asked him to stay on full-time. Before he could assume the position, however, a plane he was on during a diplomatic mission was shot down over the Middle East, which prompted the President to "overreact" in the next episode "A Proportional Response". Dr. Tolliver was married to Angela and their daughter's name was Cory. The child was named for her great-grandmother, who had been named after her great aunt, who got it from the first free woman she ever met. Appears in the episode "Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc" (Ep. 1.2).[6]

  • Steve Atwood (Željko Ivanek): Republican Chief of Staff to Glen Allen Walken when he was Speaker of the House. Follows Walken to the White House when the Speaker resigns from his post to step in for Bartlet as President. Finds himself at odds with Josh Lyman, who accuses Atwood of conspiring with Walken and the Republican Party for pushing their agenda during the presidency. Atwood denies it, citing that he and the party are in awe of Bartlet for his actions under the 25th Amendment (Ep. 5.1, Ep. 5.2).



Pets



  • Bess: Glen Allen Walken's pug.

  • Gail: C.J. Cregg's pet goldfish. A gift from Danny Concannon. In "The Short List" (Ep. 1.9), Josh Lyman tells Danny that C.J. likes "goldfish." Although Josh is referring to the snack crackers of the same name, Danny mistakenly believes he is referring to the aquatic creature;[7] after giving C.J. the fish, Danny mentions that the pet-store owner had named it "Gail". On the DVD commentary track for Ep. 1.10, "In Excelsis Deo", Aaron Sorkin, Thomas Schlamme, and Alex Graves mention that the prop masters created a miniature Christmas ornament to place on the floor of Gail's fish bowl and that from then on, the prop masters often crafted tiny decorations related to the themes in a given episode, for example when hostilities were escalating in India and Pakistan, the bowl contained a tiny bomb shelter.[8] They also mention that many scenes set in C.J.'s office throughout the succeeding seasons include shots of Gail's bowl and that as of the commentary's recording at the end of season four, the prop masters insisted that the specific goldfish used had never been replaced.[8]

  • Henry: Amy Gardner's basset hound.



See also



  • The West Wing

  • List of The West Wing episodes



Notes





  1. ^ Gal Perl Finkel, President-elect Trump – the ‘West Wing’ lesson Archived 2017-02-02 at the Wayback Machine, The Jerusalem Post, November 15, 2016.


  2. ^ Brisbane, Arthur S. (30 April 2018). "Opinion - Speed and Credibility". Archived from the original on 2 November 2015. Retrieved 30 April 2018 – via NYTimes.com..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  3. ^ Clabby, Consuela, "Leaky Politics: The West Wing versus The Bush Administration" Archived 2012-02-06 at the Wayback Machine, SMRT-TV. 31 October 2005.


  4. ^ "'The Ticket': Leak Investigation Archived 2008-04-16 at the Wayback Machine" FootnoteTV. 25 September 2005.


  5. ^ Joel Brown, New York Times Syndicate. "Time for first clips from 'Barbershop'," Ventura County Star (CA), February 25, 2004, "Life, Arts, and Living" section, page 4: "C.J. takes another turn jousting with obvious Bill O'Reilly clone Taylor Reid (guest star Jay Mohr)."


  6. ^ "Post Hoc, Ergo Propter Hoc". 29 September 1999. Archived from the original on 8 February 2017. Retrieved 30 April 2018 – via www.imdb.com.


  7. ^ Gail the Goldfish Archived 2009-05-02 at the Wayback Machine, describing Gail's introduction on the show, with screen shots that include some of the bowl ornaments from different episodes. Retrieved Jan. 2, 2009.


  8. ^ ab Aaron Sorkin, Thomas Schlamme, and Alex Graves. DVD Commentary, The West Wing: Season 1, Episode 10, "In Excelsis Deo."










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