Post by Admin on Jul 20, 2003 0:19:04 GMT
From TVGuide.com:
On his first day at work, assistant White House counsel Joe Quincy (Matthew Perry) receives three pieces of information that lead to an unsettling discovery---and then to a scandal---when he pieces them together. Meanwhile, Vice President Hoynes (Tim Matheson) resigns.
From NBC:
A seemingly benign press leak begins a day and night long journey that ends with the discovery of a scandal that affects the uppermost levels of the administration, though what the staff doesn't yet know is that this is merely the match that lights the fuse and that things are about to get considerably worse. Matthew Perry guest-stars as a newly hired White House attorney who has the bad luck of discovering the problem.
From Warner Bros.:
A seemingly benign press leak begins a journey that lasts for a day and a night and ends with the discovery of a scandal affecting the uppermost levels of the administration. What the staff doesn't yet know is this is merely the beginning of a chain reaction--and things are about to get considerably worse. Matthew Perry appears as Joe Quincy, a newly hired White House attorney who has the bad luck of finding the problem.
But there's good news for those concerned that "Wing" President Jed Bartlet has been going it alone for too long. "I'm going to go back in March and do an episode," [Tim] Matheson said.
I know this West Wing experience has been great. The degree of difficulty was high. It was a really great challenge, and a very good, tired feeling driving home, which we all kind of like. - Matthew Perry
Sorkin apparently tried to give the network what it wanted. He wrote parts for guest stars like Matthew Perry and concocted a riveting May sweeps story arc that saw Vice President Hoynes, played by Tim Matheson, resign over a sex scandal.
On his first day at work, assistant White House counsel Joe Quincy (Matthew Perry) receives three pieces of information that lead to an unsettling discovery---and then to a scandal---when he pieces them together. Meanwhile, Vice President Hoynes (Tim Matheson) resigns.
From NBC:
A seemingly benign press leak begins a day and night long journey that ends with the discovery of a scandal that affects the uppermost levels of the administration, though what the staff doesn't yet know is that this is merely the match that lights the fuse and that things are about to get considerably worse. Matthew Perry guest-stars as a newly hired White House attorney who has the bad luck of discovering the problem.
From Warner Bros.:
A seemingly benign press leak begins a journey that lasts for a day and a night and ends with the discovery of a scandal affecting the uppermost levels of the administration. What the staff doesn't yet know is this is merely the beginning of a chain reaction--and things are about to get considerably worse. Matthew Perry appears as Joe Quincy, a newly hired White House attorney who has the bad luck of finding the problem.
But there's good news for those concerned that "Wing" President Jed Bartlet has been going it alone for too long. "I'm going to go back in March and do an episode," [Tim] Matheson said.
"Busy Matheson has to phone it in"
by Jill Vejnoska
January 7, 2003
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
by Jill Vejnoska
January 7, 2003
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
I know this West Wing experience has been great. The degree of difficulty was high. It was a really great challenge, and a very good, tired feeling driving home, which we all kind of like. - Matthew Perry
"Perry Mulls West Wing Return"
by Michael Ausiello
April 23, 2003
TV Guide Online
by Michael Ausiello
April 23, 2003
TV Guide Online
Sorkin apparently tried to give the network what it wanted. He wrote parts for guest stars like Matthew Perry and concocted a riveting May sweeps story arc that saw Vice President Hoynes, played by Tim Matheson, resign over a sex scandal.
"Broken Wing"
by Mary Murphy and Mark Schwed
May 31, 2003
TV Guide (American edition)
by Mary Murphy and Mark Schwed
May 31, 2003
TV Guide (American edition)