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Quiz about The West Wing  In Their Own Words
Quiz about The West Wing  In Their Own Words

"The West Wing" - In Their Own Words Quiz


The multi-award winning "West Wing" was hailed as one of the best shows of its time and gathered legions of devotees. Quotes are from "The Official Companion" to "The West Wing", seasons 1 and 2. (Authorship credits: Ian Jackman & Paul Ruditis.)

A multiple-choice quiz by darksplash. Estimated time: 10 mins.
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Author
darksplash
Time
10 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
329,571
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
15
Difficulty
Tough
Avg Score
9 / 15
Plays
261
Awards
Top 10% Quiz
Question 1 of 15
1. "I have to say, frankly, that in the beginning my discipline was not in line with the program. I was a bit too cavalier and I was not always attentive to the very letter of the word. But gradually I came to realise I was in the wrong. And when I surrendered to the word...I learned a wonderful freedom. Aaron Sorkin is a masterful composer." Which "West Wing" mainstay - who was not initially meant to have a central role - said this? Hint


Question 2 of 15
2. "The thing that first drew me to playing -- was his big soliloquy in the pilot. It was the humor - I knew it was hilarious when I read it...This part, I just felt like everything I had done in my life, every experience I had ever had, everything I've ever read, enjoyed, loved; every failure I've ever had, every success led me to this point to be able to play --"
Which actor looking for redemption from his past said this of playing his character in "The West Wing"?
Hint


Question 3 of 15
3. "I had done 'A Few Good Men' on Broadway in 1990 and met Aaron doing that...I'm just a dear, dear friend of Aaron's. I was in [sic] his wedding. He called me one day and said there's a part of a reporter and possibly love interest with --. I hadn't read the script or read the scene but I said I'm on the plane."
Which "West Wing" actor in the role of a recurring character jumped at the chance to work again with Aaron Sorkin?
Hint


Question 4 of 15
4. "I learned along with -- , as did the American people. The show raises the awareness in a wonderful way . It doesn't talk down to the audience." Which "West Wing" actor said that of her character? It probably also taught her to be wary around swimming pools. Hint


Question 5 of 15
5. "I remember I was pushing for sons for the President. Aaron [Sorkin] said, 'No, no, no. These guys are his sons." I said, 'Oh, they're a little old, aren't they?' But I see his point, Bartlett really is a very strong father figure. The great humanity. The heart he has. And the interplay, He loves to have fun and play these awful word games, geographical games, and Latin. He loves to show off and trap them."
Which chess-playing, Latin-quoting "West Wing" stalwart analysed Jed Bartlett in these words?
Hint


Question 6 of 15
6. Which 'West Wing" actress said of her early appearances:
"I was wearing something with a lot of décolletage. There were a lot of letters saying 'how dare she', while others said, 'how great'. Her style is very womanly. Even though I wear suits all the time. I've got long hair and it's not in a serviceable bob. I like that she's got a little verve to her. There's a great balance to her intelligence"?
The character also needed to know her Latin verbs.
Hint


Question 7 of 15
7. "We're often asked if we aren't idealizing the motivations of these people and I honestly don't think we are. I think if you go and sit down with a bunch of people from the Clinton White House and a bunch of people from the Bush White House, whoever you might disagree with, I guarantee you that they're there because they believe it."
Which actor, whose "West Wing" character had not always been a Bartlett supporter, compared the real and fictional in these words?
Hint


Question 8 of 15
8. "For me it was the realization of a dream. I had been trying to get on television for ten years since I was fifteen years old. To finally make it on with a show such as this, I couldn't ask for anything better. It was definitely worth the wait. Before I even went in and read for the show, I was able to see the pilot. I was amazed. I couldn't believe that something of this caliber was going to be on TV every week. I wanted to be on it."
Which somewhat awe-struck actor revealed in the chance to be part of the "West Wing" in a role that almost became a part of the first family?
Hint


Question 9 of 15
9. Sometimes an actor or actress can bring emotions from their private life to bear on their screen role. Which "West Wing" actress spoke of one of her most moving storylines in this way:
"I have two sons. Fortunately they're both alive. I lived through the Vietnam War. I had brothers that were in Vietnam. I remember families who lost loved ones. As a matter of fact, my sons were a little disturbed by the scene. They didn't like the idea of their mother talking about them being dead...it was very easy to relate to that storyline because it couldn't be that far from the truth"?
Hint


Question 10 of 15
10. Many of the stars who appeared on "The West Wing" had extensive acting experience and were not to be easily awed. But which previously Academy-Award winner said of her role:
"Aaron has created one of the most ideal roles that I could have ever hoped for. -- is the role that's closest to how I am in everyday life"?
Hint


Question 11 of 15
11. When "The West Wing" was first mooted, one of the soon-to-be leading stars had not been interested in doing television. She later recalled "I was filming "American Beauty" and "Nurse Betty" at the same time. And also doing a film for a friend on mine on the weekends. So I was a little crazy. I wasn't really looking to do a television series at all. I got the script and I just responded to the snappy writing. I loved the banter and I thought, God if I were to to television, this would be the type of television I would do." Which star probably thinks "Good decision" when she looks at the awards that "The West Wing' brought her? Hint


Question 12 of 15
12. "I actually read for C.J.'s role first. And I read for -- and I just loved the part right away; even though it was petite, it was fully formed. The character was there. All of the elements that are there now were there just like golden nuggets in the first show." Which "West Wing" actress was disappointed not to get the role she wanted, but ended up delighted with the one she got?
Hint


Question 13 of 15
13. One "West Wing" actor was in the right place at the right time to get the role and later said: "I heard about the pilot, and the agents and managers were saying this is the one of the year. This is the really well-written one. I didn't want to do TV at all. The only reason I was even interested was because a movie fell through."
Which stalwart found that his new role meant enduring for seven years some changes in his appearance?
Hint


Question 14 of 15
14. "Aaron Sorkin called me and said he had written a pilot for a show about the White House and asked if I'd like to be a consultant. I said I would since I thought the pilot was really good. But I didn't think anyone would ever make it. I thought, gosh, the last thing that people are going to want at the end of a day of news dominated by White House is a TV show about White House intrigue"
Which crew member with experience of a real West Wing need not have worried?
Hint


Question 15 of 15
15. One of the trademarks of "The West Wing" was the 'walk-and-talk' sequences in which the actors moved through the rooms of the White House speaking their lines as they went.
It reminded one of the actors of his early days in the business (probably before his time in a Golden State legal drama).
Who said: "As an actor, I adore walk-and-talk because I spent the first twenty years of my career onstage and it's the closest to stage work in that there's not inter-cutting. So I like them. I find them very exciting"?
Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. "I have to say, frankly, that in the beginning my discipline was not in line with the program. I was a bit too cavalier and I was not always attentive to the very letter of the word. But gradually I came to realise I was in the wrong. And when I surrendered to the word...I learned a wonderful freedom. Aaron Sorkin is a masterful composer." Which "West Wing" mainstay - who was not initially meant to have a central role - said this?

Answer: Martin Sheen

Martin Sheen was the last to join the cast for the pilot. He later said: "When I agreed to do the pilot, the character of President Bartlett was a sometime thing, only appearing in about 20 percent of the episodes as a so-called recurring character. The focus of the series was the people who staff the West Wing rather than the Oval Office and the First Family."
2. "The thing that first drew me to playing -- was his big soliloquy in the pilot. It was the humor - I knew it was hilarious when I read it...This part, I just felt like everything I had done in my life, every experience I had ever had, everything I've ever read, enjoyed, loved; every failure I've ever had, every success led me to this point to be able to play --" Which actor looking for redemption from his past said this of playing his character in "The West Wing"?

Answer: Rob Lowe (Sam Seaborn)

"The West Wing" was, in part, intended to be a vehicle to bring Rob Lowe back out of the cold after the controversies of his private life. A fully-signed up member of the talented 'Brat Pack', Lowe had a tangled love life that stalled his career.
3. "I had done 'A Few Good Men' on Broadway in 1990 and met Aaron doing that...I'm just a dear, dear friend of Aaron's. I was in [sic] his wedding. He called me one day and said there's a part of a reporter and possibly love interest with --. I hadn't read the script or read the scene but I said I'm on the plane." Which "West Wing" actor in the role of a recurring character jumped at the chance to work again with Aaron Sorkin?

Answer: Timothy Busfield (Danny Concannon)

The growing love affair between Danny and C. J. Cregg was exquisitely drawn by the writers and was as welcomed by viewers as it was inevitable.
Referring to the first two seasons Busfield said: "I came down and did one episode and that turned into eighteen". (Eventually Busfield was to appear in a total of 28 episodes).
Allison Janney's name went into that final blank space.
4. "I learned along with -- , as did the American people. The show raises the awareness in a wonderful way . It doesn't talk down to the audience." Which "West Wing" actor said that of her character? It probably also taught her to be wary around swimming pools.

Answer: Allison Janney (C.J. Cregg)

Allison Janney started off playing the Press Secretary in the opening seasons of "The West Wing". Later her character became Chief of Staff following the illness of the actor John Spencer. When we first me C.J., she was working in California and fell into a swimming pool when Toby arrived to recruit her for the Bartlett campaign.
5. "I remember I was pushing for sons for the President. Aaron [Sorkin] said, 'No, no, no. These guys are his sons." I said, 'Oh, they're a little old, aren't they?' But I see his point, Bartlett really is a very strong father figure. The great humanity. The heart he has. And the interplay, He loves to have fun and play these awful word games, geographical games, and Latin. He loves to show off and trap them." Which chess-playing, Latin-quoting "West Wing" stalwart analysed Jed Bartlett in these words?

Answer: Martin Sheen (Jed Bartlett)

In the series, Jed and Abbey Bartlett had three daughters. It was clear, though, that he regarded Charlie Young as the closest he had to a son. (With regard to the clue in the question, Martin Sheen has admitted that he barely knows any Latin and "I don't play chess.")
6. Which 'West Wing" actress said of her early appearances: "I was wearing something with a lot of décolletage. There were a lot of letters saying 'how dare she', while others said, 'how great'. Her style is very womanly. Even though I wear suits all the time. I've got long hair and it's not in a serviceable bob. I like that she's got a little verve to her. There's a great balance to her intelligence"? The character also needed to know her Latin verbs.

Answer: Stockard Channing (Abbey Bartlett)

Stockard Channing actually only appeared in 61 episodes of the show. Channing also said of her character: "I believe she does not have a lot of time for the politics of the West Wing."
7. "We're often asked if we aren't idealizing the motivations of these people and I honestly don't think we are. I think if you go and sit down with a bunch of people from the Clinton White House and a bunch of people from the Bush White House, whoever you might disagree with, I guarantee you that they're there because they believe it." Which actor, whose "West Wing" character had not always been a Bartlett supporter, compared the real and fictional in these words?

Answer: Bradley Whitford (Josh Lyman)

Previously Josh had supported John Hoynes, a rival candidate, but had been frustrated because Hoynes would not listen to him. Leo McGarry persuaded him to join the Bartlett campaign.
John wells, the executive producer, said: "An aspiration of the show is the idea that people who choose government service, or public service, are not suspect. They are, in fact, sacrificing their chance to make more money and have better career opportunities to try and make a difference."
8. "For me it was the realization of a dream. I had been trying to get on television for ten years since I was fifteen years old. To finally make it on with a show such as this, I couldn't ask for anything better. It was definitely worth the wait. Before I even went in and read for the show, I was able to see the pilot. I was amazed. I couldn't believe that something of this caliber was going to be on TV every week. I wanted to be on it." Which somewhat awe-struck actor revealed in the chance to be part of the "West Wing" in a role that almost became a part of the first family?

Answer: Dulé Hill (Charlie Young)

Charlie Hill was the President's personal aide. He began a relationship with Bartlett's daughter, Zoey, which lead to a campaign of vilification because he was an African-American. At one time it looked as if Charlie might even marry Zoey.
9. Sometimes an actor or actress can bring emotions from their private life to bear on their screen role. Which "West Wing" actress spoke of one of her most moving storylines in this way: "I have two sons. Fortunately they're both alive. I lived through the Vietnam War. I had brothers that were in Vietnam. I remember families who lost loved ones. As a matter of fact, my sons were a little disturbed by the scene. They didn't like the idea of their mother talking about them being dead...it was very easy to relate to that storyline because it couldn't be that far from the truth"?

Answer: Kathryn Joosten (Mrs Landingham)

The spectre of the Vietnam War cast a shadow of the Season One episode "In Excelsis Deo" in which Toby was shattered to find that his card had been found in the coat pocket of a homeless Vietnam Veteran who died on the streets. The show was also set at Christmas and Mrs Landingham told Charlie Young of her twin sons who had been medical students and even though they could have deferred service, they went to Vietnam as paramedics and died together at Da Nang on Christmas Eve 1970. Kathryn Joosten later said of making that episode" "We did a complete funeral. And all of the personnel, the chaplains, those were all real people. My brother, who is in the navy, knew the chaplain. All that was real, which was very moving. Even though there was no body, we were all in tears by the end of it."
10. Many of the stars who appeared on "The West Wing" had extensive acting experience and were not to be easily awed. But which previously Academy-Award winner said of her role: "Aaron has created one of the most ideal roles that I could have ever hoped for. -- is the role that's closest to how I am in everyday life"?

Answer: Marlee Matlin (Joey Lucas)

After seeing Aaron Sorkin's "Sports Night" Matlin had written a fan letter to him. "We started corresponding by e-mail and the next thing I knew he asked me if I would like to be on his new show. I didn't have to think twice."
Marlee Matlin lost her hearing at the age of 18 months. In 1986 she won the Academy Award for Best Actress in a Leading Role for "Children Of A Lesser God". She was aged just 21 and was at the time the youngest woman to win a 'Best Actress' Oscar.
11. When "The West Wing" was first mooted, one of the soon-to-be leading stars had not been interested in doing television. She later recalled "I was filming "American Beauty" and "Nurse Betty" at the same time. And also doing a film for a friend on mine on the weekends. So I was a little crazy. I wasn't really looking to do a television series at all. I got the script and I just responded to the snappy writing. I loved the banter and I thought, God if I were to to television, this would be the type of television I would do." Which star probably thinks "Good decision" when she looks at the awards that "The West Wing' brought her?

Answer: Allison Janney (C.J. Cregg)

Allison Janney was nominated for six Emmys between 2000 and 2006 for her role as C.J. Cregg and won four times. In all, six of the West Wing cast were Emmy winners: Alan Alda, Stockard Channing, Allison Janney, Richard Schiff, John Spencer and Bradley Whitford. Martin Sheen won a Golden Globe. The show picked up a host of writing and technical awards.
12. "I actually read for C.J.'s role first. And I read for -- and I just loved the part right away; even though it was petite, it was fully formed. The character was there. All of the elements that are there now were there just like golden nuggets in the first show." Which "West Wing" actress was disappointed not to get the role she wanted, but ended up delighted with the one she got?

Answer: Janel Moloney (Donna Moss)

The quick-fire verbal exchanges between Donna and Josh are cited by some critics as the relationship that other pairings who try for the same must be measured against, with most failing.
At times when others among the West Wing staff became entangled in their own high-flying idealism, it was frequently Donna who brought them down to earth as a voice of 'normality'. Hers was often the conscience of everyday folk that the others overlooked.
13. One "West Wing" actor was in the right place at the right time to get the role and later said: "I heard about the pilot, and the agents and managers were saying this is the one of the year. This is the really well-written one. I didn't want to do TV at all. The only reason I was even interested was because a movie fell through." Which stalwart found that his new role meant enduring for seven years some changes in his appearance?

Answer: Richard Schiff (Toby Zeigler)

Schiff recalled: "I just happened to grow a beard for the other part. I went wouldn't it be great if this guy Toby had a beard? Who knew that I'd have to keep it for seven years..."
14. "Aaron Sorkin called me and said he had written a pilot for a show about the White House and asked if I'd like to be a consultant. I said I would since I thought the pilot was really good. But I didn't think anyone would ever make it. I thought, gosh, the last thing that people are going to want at the end of a day of news dominated by White House is a TV show about White House intrigue" Which crew member with experience of a real West Wing need not have worried?

Answer: Dee Dee Myers

Dee Dee Myers was Press Secretary for the first two years of the Clinton administration. It is often said that the character of C.J. Cregg was based on her.
15. One of the trademarks of "The West Wing" was the 'walk-and-talk' sequences in which the actors moved through the rooms of the White House speaking their lines as they went. It reminded one of the actors of his early days in the business (probably before his time in a Golden State legal drama). Who said: "As an actor, I adore walk-and-talk because I spent the first twenty years of my career onstage and it's the closest to stage work in that there's not inter-cutting. So I like them. I find them very exciting"?

Answer: John Spencer (Leo McGarry)

John Spencer played Leo McGarry, the man who persuaded Jed Bartlett to run for President. He was the Chief of Staff, until a heart attack forced him to take a lower profile. In the final season, he became the vice-presidential running mate of Matt Santos. In real life, John Spencer had a heart attack during the making of the show, and died in December 2005 before filming of Season Seven was complete. His character's death was then written into the storyline.
The Golden State clue is a reference to John Spencer's role in "L.A. Law" between 1990 and 1994.
Source: Author darksplash

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