Leo McGarry

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Leo McGarry
The West Wing character
Leo McGarry.jpg
John Spencer as Leo McGarry
First appearance "Pilot"
Last appearance "The Cold"
Created by Aaron Sorkin
Portrayed by John Spencer
Information
Full name Leo Thomas McGarry
Gender Male
Occupation United States Secretary of Labor (pre-season 1), White House Chief of Staff (seasons 1-6), Counselor to the President (season 6), Vice Presidential Candidate (season 7), Vice President-elect of the United States (season 7)
Spouse(s) Jenny McGarry (divorced 2000)
Children Mallory O'Brien
Relatives Josephine McGarry (sister), Elizabeth (sister)
Religion Roman Catholicism
Nationality American

Leo Thomas McGarry is a fictional character played by American actor John Spencer on the television serial drama The West Wing. The role earned Spencer the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series in 2002. McGarry's character, the former United States Secretary of Labor, begins the series as the White House Chief of Staff. He is President Josiah Bartlet's best friend and a father figure to the Senior Staff, particularly White House Deputy Chief of Staff Josh Lyman and Deputy Communications Director Sam Seaborn.

Creation and development

In crafting the character of Leo McGarry, series creator Aaron Sorkin said he envisioned John Spencer in the part but had not imagined he would be available.[1] Although he had recently decided he did not want to do another TV drama series due to the long hours, Spencer was so impressed by the pilot script that he took the part.[2] Like the character, Spencer was a recovering alcoholic, and said he found he could relate to McGarry because "Leo's in recovery, too."[3]

In an earlier draft of the pilot script, dated February 6, 1998, McGarry is called "Leo Jacobi" and is described as being aged 55 and "professorial".[4]

Character biography

Early life

Leo McGarry is from Chicago, Illinois born in 1948, though he seems to have some family connection to Boston, Massachusetts. He is of Irish and Scottish ancestry, and has at least two sisters, Elizabeth McGarry and Josephine McGarry, Ph.D., the latter serving as a school district superintendent in Atlanta.[5][6] He divorces from his wife of several decades, Jenny, in late 2000 as his workaholic attitude is shown to take a toll on his personal life, with McGarry admitting that he considers his job in the White House more important than his marriage.[7] He and his ex-wife have one daughter, Mallory O'Brien, who teaches fourth grade. McGarry is a recovering alcoholic and Valium addict. His father was also an alcoholic, who committed suicide.[8]

McGarry is a United States Air Force veteran, having flown a F-105 Thunderchief with the 355th Tactical Fighter Wing out of Takhli Royal Thai Air Force Base in the Vietnam War.[9] During the war, he was shot down and wounded. Prior to working in the White House, McGarry had been the United States Secretary of Labor during a presidency prior to the beginning of the show. He also speaks fluent Spanish. McGarry amassed significant wealth during his life in the private sector as a member of the board of directors of a defense contractor, Mueller-Wright Aeronautics, for ten or twelve years.[10] He also worked for Cultico, a chemical-agribusiness firm that was blamed for a disaster in Haryana, India in the 1980s. On more than one occasion, it is made known that he is the wealthiest member of the staff - even more than the President himself. McGarry scored 1400 on his SAT. It is implied in the episode "And It's Surely to Their Credit" that McGarry is an attorney.[11] It's also implied in the episode "The Portland Trip" that he has some association with the University of Michigan.

White House Chief of Staff

In 1997, Leo travels to New Hampshire in an attempt to persuade his old friend Governor Josiah Bartlet to run for the Democratic presidential nomination. Having persuaded Bartlet, McGarry becomes his campaign manager and general chairman of the "Bartlet For America" campaign, hiring Josh Lyman, Toby Ziegler, C.J. Cregg, and Sam Seaborn as advisors. Eventually, Governor Bartlet, who was considered to be an insurgent candidate by the media, defeats Senator John Hoynes of Texas for the nomination and goes on to win the presidency, appointing McGarry as his Chief of Staff.[8]

As President Bartlet's top advisor, McGarry has an office adjacent to the Oval Office and sits in with the President in the Situation Room. McGarry is very involved in the formation of policy and the day-to-day operations of the White House and its staff. Some of his inspirations include "Big Block of Cheese Day," where groups that would normally not be considered for White House attention get to have meetings with senior staffers, and a plan to make the staffers submit two-page reports on policy issues or get ignored. On more than one occasion, McGarry is said to be the man who "runs the country" and is treated with great respect by people on both sides of the aisle.[12] When President Bartlet is giving instructions to the Cabinet member who is appointed the designated survivor during the State of the Union address, he asks the man if he has a best friend, if that friend is smarter than he is, and if he could trust that friend with his life. The Cabinet member says yes on all counts. Bartlet then says, "That's your Chief of Staff," not aware McGarry has heard him in the next room and broken into a smile, visibly moved.

In season six, during a Middle East peace negotiation at Camp David, McGarry finds it impossible to support Bartlet's position about sending thousands of American soldiers to the West Bank and Gaza as part of an Israeli-Palestinian agreement, and Bartlet and McGarry come to an agreement that McGarry will resign at the first available opportunity. Minutes after the conversation, McGarry suffers a near-fatal heart attack and collapses while walking alone on the grounds. He is resuscitated, survives, and later returns to work after Bartlet's last State of the Union address in a new role as Senior Counselor to the President. McGarry is succeeded as White House Chief of Staff by his personal recommendation, C. J. Cregg, who previously served as the White House Press Secretary.

Senior Counselor to the President

As Senior Counselor, Leo encourages staffers to present new ideas and resurrect old policy initiatives that have been abandoned out of political necessity, insisting that they could "accomplish more in one day in the White House than in a lifetime" once they leave. He maintains a board in his office that shows how many days remain for the Administration and the initiatives which have been proposed. Among these initiatives are a serious attempt at health care reform, new foreign policy approaches in Latin America, and trying to convince Congress to enact an earned income tax credit (called by Charlie Young and Annabeth Schott a 'poor tax' to make it easier to defend). Leo also leads an attempt to open negotiations between the US and Cuba to lift the blockade and reestablish diplomatic relations, an issue which faces significant opposition from Republicans, Democrats, and the intelligence community. The initiative is eventually endorsed by President Bartlet in a televised adress to the nation, vindicating Leo's efforts and allowing him to accomplish what he had failed to do as Labor Secretary at a summit in 1995.

In the aftermath of Josh's departure to run Matt Santos's presidential campaign, Leo is instrumental in the hiring of Republican lobbyist Cliff Calley as the new Deputy White House Chief of Staff in charge of strategic planning and legislative affairs. Although C.J. is at first reluctant to hire a Republican to fill Josh's position, Leo convinces her that Cliff is a good man who had once saved he and the Bartlet administration from being humiliated but also due to the similarities he sees between Cliff and Josh Lyman.

2007 vice presidential campaign

Bartlet asks Leo to run the Democratic National Convention when it seems likely to deadlock. The Democratic Party's eventual presidential nominee, Congressman Matt Santos, selects McGarry as his vice-presidential nominee, a move that both Josh and Bartlet strongly endorse. This is particularly ironic, because McGarry had earlier insisted that Santos drop out of the race for the sake of party unity to allow a less impressive candidate (Vice President Robert Russell) to take on the nod. But McGarry allows Santos to make a closing speech that was so impressive that it helped put him over the top and become the party's presidential nominee. McGarry is not overly impressive on the campaign trail, because he is not familiar with playing the role of a candidate versus an advisor. However Leo rebounds and becomes integral to the campaign, unofficially taking on the role of statesman.

McGarry's last screen appearance occurs in the episode "The Cold". Following a private meeting between McGarry and Bartlet in the Oval Office to discuss troop deployment in Kazakhstan, a scene which exhibits the unique closeness of their relationship, Josh Lyman asks him: "Everything okay?". McGarry answers with the character's last words on screen, a less than convincing, "Yeah."

On Election Night, it is said that McGarry has gone up to his hotel room in Houston to take a nap before the results come in. He is later found unconscious by Annabeth Schott who alerts McGarry's Secret Service detail. He is rushed to the hospital, where he is pronounced dead. McGarry's death comes ninety minutes before the polls close in California and other Western states, thus giving some voters this information prior to casting their vote. A hard-line Republican strategist wants to bring up McGarry's death to benefit the Republican presidential nominee, Senator Arnold Vinick, but the visibly disgusted senator tells her that he has been friends with McGarry for decades and will do no such thing, win or lose. Despite McGarry's death, the Santos-McGarry ticket narrowly wins the election over the Vinick-Sullivan ticket by a 30,000-vote margin in Nevada and McGarry posthumously becomes the Vice President-elect after Santos' victory.

McGarry's funeral is held at the interdenominational Washington National Cathedral, though the funeral was actually filmed at The Cathedral of Mary Our Queen in Baltimore, Maryland. President Bartlet, President-elect Matt Santos, Josh Lyman, Charlie Young, former DNC head Barry Goodwin, and McGarry's unnamed son-in-law serve as pallbearers. He is buried at Arlington National Cemetery.

Relationship with staff

McGarry's role with the White House senior staff is alternately authoritarian, playful, and that of a father figure.[13] He is characterized by the story he tells Josh Lyman in the second season episode, "Noël":[14] <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />

This guy's walkin' down a street when he falls in a hole. The walls are so steep he can't get out. A doctor passes by and the guy shouts up, "Hey you! Can you help me out?" The doctor writes a prescription, throws it down in the hole, and moves on. Then a priest comes along and the guy shouts up, "Father, I'm down in this hole; can you help me out?" The priest writes out a prayer, throws it down in the hole and moves on. Then a friend walks by. "Hey, Joe, it's me. Can ya help me out?" And the friend jumps in the hole. Our guy says, "Are ya stupid? Now we're both down here." The friend says, "Yeah, but I've been down here before and I know the way out."

Spencer described his character's relationship with Lyman as a mentoring one, with McGarry seeing Lyman as a younger version of himself: "a workaholic, a person devoted to government service." He considered the world of The West Wing a boys' club at times, and felt McGarry could be harder on C. J. Cregg than he was on the male senior staffers.[2]

Though he is not seen again onscreen, apart from the opening credits, after his death, McGarry's presence is felt in the series finale when his daughter presents a gift to President Bartlet that she found in his possessions. In the show's final scene, Bartlet opens the gift to find the napkin with the words "Bartlet For America", which McGarry had written to introduce to Bartlet the idea of running for President. Also, when Josh Lyman goes to see C.J. Cregg just before the Santos inauguration during the final episode, Lyman asks if she ever stopped thinking the office of the White House Chief of Staff as McGarry's office. Cregg replies "No." She then hands Lyman (the incoming White House Chief of Staff) a note with "WWLD?" on it, meaning "What would Leo do?"

Influence of John Spencer's death

McGarry appears in two of the five episodes which had been filmed, but not yet aired, at the time of Spencer's death on December 16, 2005. The show's producers decided to let those episodes air in his memory. The character's death was written in response to the death of the actor, and McGarry is discovered dead offscreen in his hotel room. According to executive producer Lawrence O'Donnell, Jr., the writers originally intended for Vinick to win the election. However, the death of Spencer forced him and his colleagues to consider the emotional strain that would result from having Santos lose both his running mate and the election. It was eventually decided that the last episodes would be rescripted by John Wells.[15] Other statements from Wells, however, have contradicted O'Donnell's claims about a previously planned Vinick victory. The script showing Santos winning was written long before the death of John Spencer. In 2008 O'Donnell stated that "We actually planned at the outset for Jimmy Smits to win, that was our plan of how this was all going to work, but the Vinick character came on so strong in the show, and was so effective, it became a real contest and it became a real contest in the West Wing writers' room."[16][full citation needed]

Reception

Leon Panetta, a former White House Chief of Staff under Bill Clinton, Director of the Central Intelligence Agency and Secretary of Defense under Barack Obama, was impressed by the character, telling actor John Spencer that "Any administration that would have Leo McGarry as a White House Chief of Staff would be very, very fortunate."[17] John Podesta, another former White House Chief of Staff, also praised Spencer's performance, saying, "John plays this role in a calm, thoughtful, kindhearted, and loyal manner"[18] although he has commented that Leo is not mean enough.[19]

See also

References

  1. Sorkin, Aaron (2002). The West Wing Script Book. New York: Newmarket Press. ISBN 1-55704-499-6
  2. 2.0 2.1 Spencer, John (June 27, 2002). John Spencer chatted about life as Leo McGarry. Channel 4. Retrieved on December 12, 2007.
  3. Cutler, Jacqueline. Hail to the chief (of staff): Leo McGarry, aka John Spencer. ClickTV. Retrieved on December 12, 2007.
  4. Sorkin, Aaron (February 6, 1998). West Wing Pilot Draft. Retrieved on December 19, 2007.
  5. The West Wing, Episode 1.10: In Excelsis Deo. Original airdate: November 24, 1999.
  6. The West Wing, Episode 2.08: Shibboleth. Original airdate: November 22, 2000.
  7. The West Wing, Episode 1.04: Five Votes Down. Original airdate: October 13, 1999.
  8. 8.0 8.1 The West Wing, Episode 3.09: Bartlet for America. Original airdate: December 12, 2001.
  9. The West Wing, Episode 3.05: War Crimes. Original airdate: November 7, 2001.
  10. The West Wing, Episode 5.14: An Khe. Original airdate: February 18, 2004.
  11. The West Wing, Episode 2.05: And It's Surely to Their Credit. Original airdate: November 1, 2000.
  12. The West Wing, Episode 1.09: The Short List. Original airdate: November 24, 1999.
  13. Among the many direct and indirect references of the fatherly nature of McGarry's relationship with his staff, in the 7th season episode "Requiem", President Bartlet tells Josh Lyman that McGarry loved Lyman "like a son."
  14. The West Wing, Episode 2.10: Noël. Original Airdate: December 20, 2000.
  15. Steinberg, Jacques (April 10, 2006). "' 'West Wing' Writers' Novel Way of Picking the President.'" The New York Times. Retrieved April 10, 2006.
  16. BBC "President Hollywood" for BBC4, Jonathan Freedland
  17. Spencer, John (September 16, 2000). Online NewsHour: John Spencer. PBS. Retrieved on December 12, 2007.
  18. Podesta, John (July 10, 2000). Winged Victory. People. Retrieved on December 12, 2007.
  19. Lehmann, Chris (March 1, 2001). The Feel-Good Presidency. The Atlantic Monthly. Retrieved on December 12, 2007.