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| BRADLEY WHITFORD | |
September 16, 2000 |
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"The West Wing" actor who plays Deputy Chief of Staff Josh Lyman looks at the program's tone and its differences from press coverage of the real White House. The following are extended excerpts of his interview with the NewsHour. The NewsHour Media Unit is funded by a grant from the Pew Charitable Trusts. |
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TERENCE SMITH: How important for this show is it to be real and credible? BRADLEY WHITFORD: You need to be real enough to be believable, but you don't necessarily have to be real enough to be real. And there is a distinction. We're telling a story. And the demands of that are different from the demands of, really, a documentary. The audience must believe in order to keep faith in the story, and that's the sort of level of reality that you go to. |
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| Checking reality | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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TERENCE SMITH: So to get that, how much research or work did you do about the role of a deputy chief of staff? BRADLEY WHITFORD: Well, it was interesting, because in the end it came down pretty quickly. The Stephanopoulos book--which I retitled "Everything Brad Whitford Needs To Know To Do This TV Show"--was very helpful, just because it gave a sense of the sort of smell and the texture and the level of intimacy with the president, which I was just unaware of.
And the reservation the networks always had was, "Well, everybody hates politicians"; to which my answer was always, "More than they hate lawyers?" So you know, I think just in terms of research, though, I mean, we're constantly--We are fed by, you know, each trip here [to Washington, D.C.] and any contact that we have. TERENCE SMITH: Well, did you go and meet and talk to your counterpart? BRADLEY WHITFORD: Yeah. And you know, the White House's view of us was always, I think, kind of comical. They were happy to be heroicized and happy to be played by people wearing makeup with music behind them. But I think they didn't have a lot of time for us to sit around their office. |
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| Drama and news | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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TERENCE SMITH: Can a show like this, with dramatic license, convey the truth about a White House, even better than conventional news reporting?
I think the difficulty of making those decisions is something that we can show in a way that the press doesn't. I think the press feels as though it loses its credibility if it isn't critical in a way that sometimes verges on a kind of bitchiness. |
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