Some of the exterior shots of the West Wing office were filmed on location at the South Portico of the Headquarters of the National Society of Daughters of the American Revolution on 1776 D Street NW in Washington D.C.
A Josiah Bartlett of New Hampshire was a member of the Second Continental Congress in 1776 and signed the Declaration of Independence. Martin Sheen's character is supposed to be his descendant.
When he asked C.J. (Allison Janney) out on a date, Danny said, "I enjoy movies, I enjoy music, I'm not wild about ice-skating, but what the hell, I'll do it." Allison Janney trained throughout her childhood to be an Olympic figure skater.
During the first season, an episode centers around the census during the second year of the President's term. This means that in the "West Wing" universe, presidential elections took place in 1998.
Martin Sheen was originally only scheduled to appear in four episodes per season. It was only after the pilot was filmed that it was decided to make him a regular cast member.
Martin Sheen also played the president (albeit in another character's premonition) in the 1983 movie The Dead Zone (1983). However, whereas his character in "The West Wing" is a good man and benevolent leader, in "The Dead Zone" he was a twisted, evil tyrant intent on nuclear Armageddon.
At the 2000 Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Awards (the Emmys), the show won a record nine Emmy awards--the most for any season of a television series--and it was also only in its first season.
Bradley Whitford was originally offered the part of Sam Seaborn after auditioning for Josh. He called Aaron Sorkin and got the part of Josh.
The show has a strong connection to the "Revenge of the Nerds" series of movies. Bradley Whitford, who plays Josh Lyman, played Roger in Revenge of the Nerds II: Nerds in Paradise (1987). Timothy Busfield, who played Danny Concannon in several episodes, was Arnold Poindexter in the first two "Revenge..." movies. Ted McGinley, who has played anchorman Mark Gottfried in several episodes, played Stan Gable in the first, third, and fourth "Revenge..." movies. James Hong, who played the Chinese ambassador in an episode, played Snotty in the second movie. John Goodman, who played President Glenallen Walken, was the football coach in Revenge of the Nerds (1984).
Eugene Levy was at one time considered to play Toby Ziegler.
The drive-up "West Wing" entrance most often filmed for the show is actually a set used to cover a large door to one of the two sound stages used by the production company. It's located at the Warner Brothers Studios in Burbank, California, and can be seen from the street by looking in off Forest Lawn Drive (although often obscured by the many trailers used by the show's actors).
The Oval Office set originally designed by Michael J. Taylor, was constructed for Dave (1993) and then subsequently used for The American President (1995), which was also written by Aaron Sorkin and included Martin Sheen, Joshua Malina and Anna Deavere Smith in its cast. It was also used during the filming of Contact (1997), when the carpet, made by the original company, had to be replaced for $28,000.
The set is supposedly so realistic that Warner Brothers studio tour groups are not permitted inside the sound stages where the show is filmed due to White House security concerns. (Some exterior sets, including the South Portico, may be viewed on the tour.)
Won the Best Drama Series Emmy in each of its first four seasons.
The set was the largest constructed for both a pilot and a television series to date. It was so large that during the first season it had to be housed on two stages, each with an identical yellow corridor for continuity. During the hiatus between the first and second seasons, the set was moved to a larger stage and put together, where it has remained ever since.
On the set of the series one day, Allison Janney was entertaining the cast and crew by lip-synching to an obscure spoken jazz piece called "The Jackal", by Ronnie Jordan. Aaron Sorkin liked it so much that he wrote it into the next episode of the show ("Six Meetings Before Lunch") as a ritual of C.J.'s.
This was the first American drama series to react to the 11 September 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States. Aaron Sorkin wrote a special episode ("Isaac and Ishmael") that was filmed and broadcast within only a couple of weeks. The episode, which featured the lead characters discussing a terrorist threat upon the US and being locked down inside the White House due to the name of a man on a Terrorist Watch List matching that of an (innocent) White House worker, was not considered part of "West Wing" continuity.
At the beginning of the show's sixth season, Israel's ambassador flew from Washington DC to Los Angeles to visit the set of the show. He met with most of the crew and explained to them the details of Israel's relations with the US. This helped the crew while filming, as the sixth season of the show is dedicated to Middle Eastern relations.
Aaron Sorkin resigned from his job as writer and executive producer after the fourth season following a protracted dispute with NBC executive Jeff Zucker.
Leo's "Big Block of Cheese" story is true. Andrew Jackson received an enormous block of cheese from the people of New York and, when he hadn't touched it in two years, gave it to the people of D.C. to celebrate Washington's birthday. They finished it in two hours.
The name Josh Lyman is from a Doonesbury strip in the 1990s. He also worked in the White House. The "West Wing" Lyman actually has the strip in his office.
In a 2006 LA Times article, real-life former White House press secretary Dee Dee Myers (a consultant on the show), revealed that the relationship between press secretary C.J. Cregg and reporter Danny Concannon was based upon her own relationship with and eventual marriage to former New York Times White House correspondent Todd Purdum, although unlike C.J. and Danny, Meyers and Purdum never dated until after Myers left the White House. The same article also revealed that Josh and Donna's relationship was also based upon real White House staffers, albeit ones who never dated.
Two characters on "The West Wing" share the same distinctive names as two people involved with the Nixon presidency. Ronald L. Ziegler was Nixon's press secretary, while the Director of Communications in "The West Wing" is called Toby Zeigler. Alexander Butterfield was a deputy assistant to Nixon, while the Secret Service agent assigned to President Bartett is named Ron Butterfield.
Janel Moloney was never supposed to be a regular. Co-star Bradley Whitford pointed out the obvious chemistry between the characters of Josh and Donna, and Aaron Sorkin agreed. Nevertheless, Moloney was credited as a guest star for the entire first season. The first time her name appears in the opening credits is in Episode 2.1 "In The Shadow of Two Gunmen, Part I"
Janel Moloney originally auditioned for the part of CJ Cregg.
The character of Mandy (played by Moira Kelly) was abandoned after the first season. Aaron Sorkin and Kelly both agreed that the character had run its course. However, Sorkin never explained on the show what happened to Mandy - the character just disappeared. This gave birth to the term "Mandyville", a refrence to where characters go when they disappear from a series.
When 'Rob Lowe (I)' announced he would be leaving the show in the fourth season, among the names considered to replace him were Dermot Mulroney, Judd Nelson, Macaulay Culkin and Jon Cryer. The job eventually went to Joshua Malina, a longtime friend of Aaron Sorkin who has been in everything Sorkin has written since he appeared as a member of the ensemble in Sorkin's play "A Few Good Men."
Although she was mentioned several times since the first episode, Bartlet's eldest daughter Elizabeth was never seen on the show until the season premiere of the fifth season.
Semi-regular character reporter Danny Concannon is a Pulitzer-prize winner. Jed Bartlet is a Nobel Laureate in Economics.
Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton wrote an open letter addressed to Josh Lyman when he suggested closing a military base in upstate New York on the show. In the same letter she praised Toby Ziegler for saving Social Security in an earlier episode.
The campaign episode from the 6th season in New Hampshire and Iowa were in fact shot in Canada around the Toronto area.
The theme music for "Capitol Beat", the news show hosted by Ted McGinley, is actually the theme music for the UK's Independent Television News (ITN)'s News At Ten/Night Time News bulletin, a genuine and award-winning news program. The theme is a short passage taken from a piece by Johnny Pearson called "The Awakening", itself part of a longer composition called "20th Century Portrait".
Martin Sheen's somewhat unusual way of putting his jacket on is caused by an injury to his arm sustained at his birth.
The unusual name of the recurring character played by Danica McKellar, Elsie Snuffin, was inspired by the real name of an actress on Aaron Sorkin's first television show, "Sports Night" (1998). Kayla Blake's real name is Elsie Sniffen.
The blackboard in Josh Lyman's office used to keep track of votes often features the names of real-life U.S. Senators.
Kylie Tyndall and Keaton Tyndall were set to appear in scenes of an episode filmed at Los Angeles Public Library. While filming the scene the sprinklers went off due to the heat caused by the production lights. The scenes were ultimately scrapped from the episode.
The California assembly was adjourned by a San Francisco democrat for the purposes of mourning the death of Dolores Landingham, President Bartlett's secretary in the first two series, when she died in a car accident. The actress Kathryn Joosten lived on.
Annabeth Schott's resume says that she was a valedictorian at Barwood High School, got a BA from Business Administration University and a political science degree from Georgetown University. Her resume also says she served as the secretary to a senator, executive assistant to the assistant Secretary of State and assistant to the president of cultural affairs at Maryland University.
According to an interview that he gave to The New York Times, executive producer Lawrence O'Donnell and his fellow writers had planned for Vinick to win the election until John Spencer's sudden death in December 2005. After that, they decided that Santos losing both his running mate and the election would be too difficult for the audience to watch, and they changed the election's outcome.
Traditionally, during a Republican administration, a portrait of Theodore Roosevelt is hung in the Roosevelt Room in the West Wing of the White House and, during a Democratic administration, a portrait of Franklin Delano Roosevelt is hung there (the former Roosevelt being a Republican and the latter a Democrat). In the Roosevelt Room of the Bartlet White House, portraits of both Roosevelts are hung.
Aaron Sorkin told Entertainment Weekly that the first actor he and the producers wanted to play President Bartlet was Sidney Poitier. That idea was abandoned when Poitier's fee was, in 'Thomas Schlamme' 's words, "very high", and John Wells was able to ascertain that Poitier was not interested when his manager asked Wells to stop calling.
At the end of its run in May 2006 and celebrated at its final Emmy appearance in August 2006, "The West Wing" (1999) ended up with a grand total of 26 Emmys, the most in history for a drama series, tied with "Hill Street Blues" (1981).
Although Lily Tomlin did not join the cast (playing Deborah Fiderer) until the episode "Posse Comitatus" in 2002, her character was mentioned all the way back in the third episode of season one ("A Proportional Response") as Debbie DiLaguardia, the White House personnel employee who first sent Charlie's resume to Josh's attention.
The character of Josh Lyman, played by Bradley Whitford, often makes jokes about his assistant Donna being from Wisconsin. Bradley Whitford is actually from Wisconsin.
During a crucial scene, Jorja Fox's character Gina Tuscano was supposed to push two actors into a limo and the limo drives off. Fox's foot was accidentally run over by the limo during filming. She received no broken bones, but arrived to her CSI: Crime Scene Investigation audition in crutches.
In the opening credits, there is a still shot of Martin Sheen's character, President Bartlett leaning on a desk with his head bowed. We see him from the back. This was a direct tribute to the famous photograph of President John F. Kennedy taken during the Cuban Missile Crisis. The only difference is, JFK was holding a cigar in his hand.