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

During its seven seasons the ensemble cast of stars, recurring stars, and guest stars earned 157 acting nominations (often competing in the same category against other members of the cast) across a variety of award-granting organizations, earning 30 awards. Many actors noted for work in sitcoms appeared in dramatic roles on The West Wing, including John Goodman, Alan Alda, John Larroquette, Christopher Lloyd, Ed O'Neill, Matthew Perry, Patricia Richardson, Lily Tomlin, Wayne Wilderson, and Daniel von Bargen.

Main cast

  = Main cast (credited)
  = Recurring cast (2+)
Character Portrayed by Seasons Reunion Special
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Sam Seaborn Rob Lowe Main Does not appear R Main
Mandy Hampton Moira Kelly Main Does not appear
C. J. Cregg Allison Janney Main
Toby Ziegler Richard Schiff Main
Leo McGarry John Spencer Main Does not appear
Sterling K. Brown Does not appear Main
Josh Lyman Bradley Whitford Main
Josiah Bartlet Martin Sheen Main
Charlie Young Dulé Hill Main
Donna Moss Janel Moloney R Main
Abbey Bartlet Stockard Channing Recurring Main Does not appear
Will Bailey Joshua Malina Does not appear Main Does not appear
Kate Harper Mary McCormack R Main Does not appear
Matt Santos Jimmy Smits Does not appear Main Does not appear
Arnold Vinick Alan Alda Does not appear Main Does not appear
Annabeth Schott Kristin Chenoweth Does not appear R Main Does not appear

White House staff

White House Staff
Character Actor Titles
Josiah "Jed" Bartlet Martin Sheen President of the United States (season 1–7)
Former Governor of New Hampshire
Former U. S. Representative from New Hampshire
Nobel laureate in Economics
Joshua "Josh" Lyman Bradley Whitford White House Deputy Chief of Staff (season 1–6)
Campaign Manager for Santos–McGarry Campaign (Seasons 6–7)
White House Chief of Staff (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)
Vice President–elect of the United States (season 7)
Former Secretary of Labor
Vietnam war 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 (Seasons 6–7)
Donnatella "Donna" Moss Janel Moloney Senior Assistant to White House Deputy Chief of Staff (Seasons 1–6)
Media Specialist and Campaign Spokesperson for Bob Russell (season 6)
Deputy Press Secretary for Santos–McGarry Campaign (season 7)
Chief of Staff to the First Lady (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)
Candidate for California 47th congressional district (season 4)
White House Deputy Chief of Staff (season 7)
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 congressional district (season 7)
Annabeth Schott Kristin Chenoweth Deputy Press Secretary for Media Relations (season 6)
Campaign Staffer for Santos–McGarry Campaign (season 7)
Press Secretary to the First Lady (season 7)

Other White House staffers

Office of the White House Counsel

Situation Room

Secret Service/FBI

Politicians

Federal executive branch

Federal legislative branch

State governors

Foreign officials

Campaign staff

Santos campaign

Vinick campaign

Media

Family

Josiah Bartlet's family

Leo McGarry's family

C. J. Cregg's family

Josh Lyman's family

Toby Ziegler's family

Donna Moss's family

Will Bailey's family

Charlie Young's family

Matt Santos's family

Other characters

Pets

See also

References

  1. ^ Gal Perl Finkel, President-elect Trump – the West Wing lesson Archived February 2, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, The Jerusalem Post, November 15, 2016.
  2. ^ Brisbane, Arthur S. (April 30, 2018). "Opinion – Speed and Credibility". The New York Times. Archived from the original on November 2, 2015. Retrieved May 10, 2019.
  3. ^ Clabby, Consuela, "Leaky Politics: The West Wing versus The Bush Administration" Archived February 6, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, SMRT-TV. October 31, 2005.
  4. ^ "'The Ticket': Leak Investigation Archived 2008-04-16 at the Wayback Machine" FootnoteTV. September 25, 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. ^ (({1))} at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  7. ^ Gail the Goldfish Archived May 2, 2009, 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 January 2, 2009.
  8. ^ Aaron Sorkin, Thomas Schlamme, and Alex Graves. DVD Commentary, The West Wing: season 1, episode 10, "In Excelsis Deo."