C. J. Cregg

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Claudia Jean Cregg is a fictional character played by Allison Janney on the American television drama The West Wing. From the beginning of the series in 1999 until the sixth season in 2004, she was the White House Press Secretary in the administration of President Josiah Bartlet. After that, she serves as the president's chief of staff until the end of the show in 2006. The character is partially inspired by real-life White House Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers, who worked as a consultant on the show.

Aaron Sorkin, the show's creator, designed C.Script error: No such module "String".J. to be assertive and independent from the show's men; though she is portrayed as a smart, strong, witty, and thoughtful character, she is frequently patronized and objectified by her male coworkers. She is sometimes shown as overly emotional, a trait criticized by reviewers as a misogynistic stereotype. Her onscreen romance with Danny Concannon (Timothy Busfield), a senior White House reporter, was also criticized by commentators as giving the impression she was betraying her coworkers. Initially, she is portrayed as politically inept, but she quickly becomes one of the most savvy characters on the show.

Despite C.Script error: No such module "String".J.'s shortcomings and surroundings, she is considered among the best characters ever written by Aaron Sorkin. The character proved to be Janney's breakthrough role and earned her widespread critical acclaim, as well as multiple offers to enter the real-life American political realm. For her performance, she received four Primetime Emmy Awards, as well as four Screen Actors Guild Awards and four nominations for the Golden Globe Award. She reprised her role at a real-life 2016 White House press briefing, the 2017 Not the White House Correspondents' Dinner, and a 2020 special episode.

Creation

On The West Wing, C.Script error: No such module "String".J. Cregg is played by Allison Janney.Template:Sfn The character is said to have been partially inspired by Dee Dee Myers, who worked as the White House Press Secretary to Bill Clinton and was a consultant to the show.Template:Sfn West Wing creator Aaron Sorkin denied this, commenting that "I'm a fiction writer. I make stuff up".Template:Sfn

Casting

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Allison Janney, portrayer of C.Script error: No such module "String".J. Cregg, in 2014

Aaron Sorkin had previously seen Janney in the 1998 film Primary Colors and was impressed by a scene in which Janney tripped down a flight of stairs.Template:Sfn Janel Moloney tried out for the role, but she was asked to play assistant Donna Moss instead.Template:Sfn Moloney later became a regular on the show.Template:Sfn

The casting of C.Script error: No such module "String".J. Cregg was jeopardized by worries of a lack of racial diversity in the show's original lineup. According to Sorkin, both the show's crew and the network were concerned that every actor who had been selected so far was white.Template:Sfn Janney, a white woman, was the favorite for the role – despite her impression that she had botched the audition.Template:Sfn CCH Pounder,Template:Sfn who is Guyanese,Template:Sfn was also auditioning well.Template:Sfn In the end, Sorkin remarked, "when we closed our eyes at night we wanted Allison. So we cast Allison".Template:Sfn Pounder later guest-starred in the season one episode "Celestial Navigation" as the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development.Template:Sfn

Janney has stated that she is not like C.Script error: No such module "String".J.,Template:Sfn quipping to The Daily Telegraph that "C.Script error: No such module "String".J. is incredibly brilliant – and I am an actor who memorizes lines".Template:Sfn She notes that politics overwhelm her, unlike her savvy and well-adapted character,Template:Sfn and recalled that fans of the show initially expect her to behave like C.Script error: No such module "String".J. before discovering who she really is.Template:Sfn Janney also remarked that she enjoyed acting in episodes that were more focused on the personal lives of the characters, noting, "I'm more of a person who loves to deal with relationships and emotions".Template:Sfn

Appearance

C.Script error: No such module "String".J.'s usual costume on the show was a dark pantsuit, sometimes by Calvin Klein or Armani. To convey a casual feel, a dove grey or beige blouse would be included under the pantsuit, as well as an occasional dark tank top.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Another option was a skirt that fell at or past the knees.Template:Sfn The costume was designed with more masculine effects; costume designer Lyn Paolo commented that Allison Janney's height of Script error: No such module "convert".Template:Sfn allowed for a "longer drape".Template:Sfn C.Script error: No such module "String".J.'s height was the subject of multiple jokes on the show, including being assigned the Secret Service code name "Flamingo" during her time in the White House.Template:Sfn Paolo also remarked on a podcast that the clothing was designed to not distract from the show; in one episode set in a gala, a reporter asks what C.Script error: No such module "String".J. is wearing. She simply replies, "it's a dress".Template:Sfn

In the episode "Isaac and Ishmael", which was produced in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, C.Script error: No such module "String".J. wore a piece of jewelry called the "Lagos Heart of Freedom", which depicted a silver heart studded with precious gems to depict the flag of the United States. The jewelry was sent to Lyn Paolo for free by the designer's public relations firm; the Universal Press Syndicate referred to it as "fall's No. I fashion statement".Template:Sfn

C.Script error: No such module "String".J. is frequently portrayed as clumsy or even dyspraxic. In her very first scene on the show, she falls off a treadmill while attempting to answer her pager. Over the course of the show, C.Script error: No such module "String".J. falls into her own swimming pool, hurls a basketball through a window, falls over from recoil at a target range, and clumsily fails to cast a fishing line, while her father (who has Alzheimer's disease) encounters no such difficulties.Template:Sfn

Character role and development

In the first six seasons of The West Wing, C.Script error: No such module "String".J. works as the White House Press Secretary under President Josiah Bartlet. In the sixth-season episode "Liftoff", she was promoted to succeed Leo McGarry as White House Chief of Staff, following Leo's resignation after a major heart attack.Template:Sfn She remains chief of staff until the final episode, leaving the White House after the inauguration of President Matt Santos.Template:Sfn She had joined Bartlet's first presidential campaign after being fired from her job at an entertainment industry public relations firm in Beverly Hills.Template:Sfn

Initially, C.Script error: No such module "String".J.'s character was poorly developed; Aaron Sorkin admitted in a companion book that C.Script error: No such module "String".J. was "the most underwritten role of the pilot".Template:Sfn Sorkin commented that after several episodes, it became clear to the crew that Allison Janney and her character were going to be a key part of the show.Template:Sfn Janney appears in all 154 episodes of The West Wing.Template:Sfn She reprised her role in a 2020 reunion special with nearly all of the original cast, termed "A West Wing Special to Benefit When We All Vote".Template:Sfn

Personality

According to Aaron Sorkin, C.Script error: No such module "String".J. was designed to stand out from other female characters of the era; he writes in the pilot of the West Wing Script Book that C.Script error: No such module "String".J.'s role is not about "when is Mr. Right going to come along and save me from this?"Template:Sfn C.Script error: No such module "String".J.'s character was shown to be an adept, empathetic, confident, witty, and independent one with considerable depth,[1] and the only female character portrayed as intellectually on par with the male senior staff.Template:Sfn Patrick Webster, in his book Windows into The West Wing, attributed this partially to the acting ability of Allison Janney.Template:Sfn C.Script error: No such module "String".J. also suffers from anxiety and self-doubt,Template:Sfn as well as what Elle referred to as the "standard office-gal trope" of "bitchiness and hysteria".Template:Sfn A flashback from "In The Shadow of Two Gunmen Part 2", the second episode of the second season, shows that C.Script error: No such module "String".J. is the only character to doubt whether she is qualified for the role in the Bartlet campaign she is being offered, despite her not being the only character to have a thin political résumé.Template:Sfn

C.Script error: No such module "String".J. is often shown to be a more emotionally vulnerable character, and sometimes stereotyped as subject to her own feelings.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Since The West Wing frequently mixes the personal lives and professional careers of its characters, this tendency has the effect of letting her feelings influence her views on policy.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In the third-season episode "The Women of Qumar", C.Script error: No such module "String".J. learns that the United States is renewing its lease on a military base there. She has a deep-seated emotional reaction to this news throughout the episode, culminating in a scene in her office with the National Security Advisor, Nancy McNally. C.Script error: No such module "String".J. reveals her reasoning for her opposition, telling her that "they beat women, Nancy. They hate women. The only reason they keep Qumari women alive is to make more Qumari men".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn McNally is not swayed by this reasoning, arguing that the base is strategically pragmatic, and after C.Script error: No such module "String".J. unsuccessfully counters with a long-winded analogy to apartheid, she simply pleaded, "they're beating the women, Nancy!"Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn After McNally walks away, C.Script error: No such module "String".J. regains control of her emotions and neutrally delivers the news to the press in her briefing. Webster opined that although this scene allowed for a powerful emotional statement on the issue for the viewer, it also revealed a gender bias in the writing of C.Script error: No such module "String".J.'s character.Template:Sfn Author Shawn Parry-Giles commented that scenes like these play into the stereotype in which women are portrayed as too subjective and emotional for rational, political decision-making.Template:Sfn

White House press secretary

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One of the great mysteries of Hollywood – nay, of life – is that Aaron Sorkin is a fairly condescending and certainly problematic writer of women. And yet so goes C.J. She's not immune to Sorkin's missteps. Her entire backstory as a Hollywood publicist who doesn't seem to know much about Hollywood or publicity never made one lick of sense. And in the early seasons, she was the White House staffer most prone to making mistakes on the job. But her capability and combination of strength and simple compassion represented the fantasy of the Bartlet White House better than anyone. And have you seen her pull off "The Jackal"?

– Joe Reid, The Atlantic (2014)Template:Sfn

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As White House press secretary, C.Script error: No such module "String".J. is the most influential and visible woman on The West Wing. However, this role still positions her as a supporting character – her job is to spin the actions and policies of the president, but she does not have a hand in shaping that policy the way the male characters do.Template:Sfn

Initially, C.Script error: No such module "String".J. is portrayed as politically inept. She was shown to be clueless with respect to basic government functions, needing to be informed of the purpose of the U.S. census by Sam Seaborn in one first-season episode. She also admits elsewhere to having little understanding of White House economic policies.Template:Sfn Her romance with White House reporter Danny Concannon also entangles with her job, causing her colleagues to distrust her; in the first-season episode "Lord John Marbury", the senior staff chooses to lie to her about troop movement in an Indo-Pakistani conflict, because they thought that she was too friendly with the press, particularly Danny, and would not be able to lie from the podium.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn In the press briefing room, she is asked by a reporter about the troop movement, which she laughingly denies; her having to retract the statement later damages her credibility with the press.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Also, in the first-season episode "Mandatory Minimums", C.Script error: No such module "String".J. receives the staff's blame when Danny publishes a memo from a staffer, criticizing the president's performance.Template:Sfn C.Script error: No such module "String".J. tells Danny in another episode that a relationship would damage her reputation; Shawn Parry-Giles opined that C.Script error: No such module "String".J. could not be involved with Danny while in the White House because the staff would see her only as the "woman-as-traitor" trope.Template:Sfn

C.Script error: No such module "String".J. develops into a politically astute character, sometimes more so than her male counterparts.Template:Sfn Drawing on the previous incident in "Lord John Marbury", C.Script error: No such module "String".J. lies to the press in the first-season finale "What Kind of Day Has It Been", confidently delivering the misinformation directly to Danny.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In "The Leadership Breakfast", C.Script error: No such module "String".J. correctly assesses that Toby Ziegler is ordering her to make a political mistake, which results in a congressman directly criticizing the president during a joint presidential and congressional press conference. Josh Lyman later comments to her that "you had a lot of opportunities to say 'I told you so' and score some points with Leo. You're a class act".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In another episode, she thwarts a general who plans to give a television interview that would embarrass the president by questioning his military authority. Though the general calls her "kitten" when they meet, C.Script error: No such module "String".J. remains calm and points out that in her background research, she noticed that he has fraudulently obtained a medal for an act of service he never performed; the general attempts to return the conversation to Bartlet, but C.Script error: No such module "String".J. ends the conversation, cutting him off with "is there anything else, sir?"Template:Sfn

Romance

As well as her on-again-off-again romance with Danny, C.Script error: No such module "String".J. has another love interest throughout the third season – a secret service agent named Simon Donovan (Mark Harmon), assigned to protect her after she receives death threats. C.Script error: No such module "String".J. is initially resistant to Donovan's assignment, struggling to preserve her autonomy.Template:Sfn Over time, she falls in love with Donovan and submits to his protection; Shawn Parry-Giles argued that this transformation shows that she is treated like a "prized and revered object of protection" with no need or capability for autonomy.Template:Sfn Donovan refuses to return her affection while he is assigned to her, but the threat to C.Script error: No such module "String".J. abates, meaning that he was no longer tasked with her protection. Just as the two are about to begin a relationship, Donovan is shot and killed while stopping a robbery at a local store.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

In the final season premiere, "The Ticket", a scene showing the characters "three years later" forecast C.Script error: No such module "String".J. as married to Danny with one child.Template:Sfn This is realized in the series finale, "Tomorrow"; in the episode, C.Script error: No such module "String".J. leaves the White House, choosing to pursue a relationship with Danny instead.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

Sexism from other characters

Like many female characters on The West Wing, C.Script error: No such module "String".J. is frequently condescended to, and even objectified by, the show's men.Template:Sfn In a scene from the first-season episode "The Crackpots and These Women", the president and Leo look around a room full of women working in the White House, complimenting each one in a gendered manner. C.Script error: No such module "String".J. in particular is compared to "a fifties movie star, so capable, so loving and energetic".Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Essayist Laura K. Garrett writes that the president's comment makes C.Script error: No such module "String".J. seem like "a lovable pet, not a professional woman".Template:Sfn

In another first-season episode, "Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics", the president's senior staff predicts the results of an upcoming poll. Most staffers predicted that the president's poll numbers would drop, or hold steady at best, but C.Script error: No such module "String".J. predicted a large bump. Leo, who relayed the staffers' guesses to the president, left out C.Script error: No such module "String".J.'s predictions; she suspected this was because she was a woman. In the end, C.Script error: No such module "String".J. was shown to have made the correct prediction.Template:Sfn

In the second-season episode "Bartlet's Third State of the Union", C.Script error: No such module "String".J. appears on a television show to discuss the president's State of the Union address, where she is introduced by the host as the "very lovely, the very talented – Claudia Jean Cregg". The host then tells the entire room during a commercial break that C.Script error: No such module "String".J. is not wearing pants.Template:Sfn In "Ways and Means", C.Script error: No such module "String".J. is sexualized by Bruno Gianelli, manager of the president's re-election campaign, who remarks "man, you have got a killer body, you know that?"Template:Sfn

Reception

Reviewers have praised C.Script error: No such module "String".J.'s portrayal, both during and after the show's run. Frazier Moore with the Associated Press described her in 2000 as "a scrapper with an enormous heart, many fallibilities, and a gift for snappy repartee".Template:Sfn The BBC remarked that C.Script error: No such module "String".J. "might make the list for best chief of staff of all time, save for the fact that she's fictional".Template:Sfn In 2014, The Atlantic ranked C.Script error: No such module "String".J. highest on their list of the 144 best characters on The West Wing, writer Joe Reid commenting that "her capability and combination of strength and simple compassion represented the fantasy of the Bartlet White House better than anyone".Template:Sfn In their list of the best characters from all television serials created by Sorkin, Vulture ranked C.Script error: No such module "String".J. second, commenting that "if all the Sorkin women were as classy, self-assured, and legitimately funny (the turkey pardon!) as C.Script error: No such module "String".J., we'd never have had the Sorkin woman argument in the first place".Template:Sfn

Reviewers also lauded Janney's performance; The Cincinnati Enquirer wrote in 2001 that Janney "combines comedy, drama, and political savvy" in C.Script error: No such module "String".J., approving of her ability to alternate between wit and seriousness throughout each episode.Template:Sfn C.Script error: No such module "String".J. Cregg proved to be Allison Janney's breakthrough role.Template:Sfn Janney's performance was also lauded by her fellow cast members. In an interview with Empire magazine, Martin Sheen (who played President Bartlet) recounted an instance in which the cast, in a confidential, anonymous poll, unanimously agreed that Janney was "the very best among us".Template:Sfn Janney's four Emmy awards from The West Wing outpaced every other cast member.Template:Sfn She also received four Screen Actors Guild awards for her performance on The West Wing,Template:Sfn and many other awards and nominations.Template:Sfn Janney reported receiving letters of appreciation for her portrayal of C.Script error: No such module "String".J. from women viewers.Template:Sfn

List of major awards and nominations received by Allison Janney for her portrayal of C.Script error: No such module "String".J. Cregg
Organization Year Category Result Ref
Golden Globe Awards Script error: No such module "sort". Best Supporting Actress – Series, Miniseries or Television Film Nominated Template:Sfn
Script error: No such module "sort". Nominated Template:Sfn
Script error: No such module "sort". Best Actress – Television Series Drama Nominated Template:Sfn
Script error: No such module "sort". Nominated Template:Sfn
Primetime Emmy Awards Script error: No such module "sort". Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series Won Template:Sfn
Script error: No such module "sort". Won Template:Sfn
Script error: No such module "sort". Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series Won Template:Sfn
Script error: No such module "sort". Nominated Template:Sfn
Script error: No such module "sort". Won Template:Sfn
Script error: No such module "sort". Nominated Template:Sfn
Screen Actors Guild Awards Script error: No such module "sort". Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series Won Template:Sfn
Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble Cast in a Drama Series Won
Script error: No such module "sort". Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series Won Template:Sfn
Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble Cast in a Drama Series Won
Script error: No such module "sort". Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series Nominated Template:Sfn
Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble Cast in a Drama Series Nominated
Script error: No such module "sort". Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble Cast in a Drama Series Nominated Template:Sfn

Legacy

Allison Janney speaks from the podium of the real-life White House press briefing room
Allison Janney's appearance at the White House Press Briefing on April 29, 2016

After the show ended in 2006, Allison Janney was offered political punditry roles in several news organizations,Template:Sfn as well as several requests to campaign for Democratic candidates. Janney declined, telling The Guardian that "you really don't want to hire me. I'm not good in that area".Template:Sfn In 2018, Janney remarked on The Graham Norton Show that people often assumed that she was similar to C.Script error: No such module "String".J., but that the two were not alike in reality. Janney commented that "it made me very shy of meeting people because I wasn't her. I would love to be like her, she was thrilling".Template:Sfn

On April 29, 2016, Janney made an appearance at a White House Press Briefing in place of actual Press Secretary Josh Earnest to raise awareness of opioid use disorder. Janney made humorous references to her time on The West Wing, including a joke about "Josh [Earnest] getting a root canal", a reference to an episode in which Josh Lyman conducts a press briefing while C.Script error: No such module "String".J. recovers from an emergency root canal.Template:Sfn

In 2017, Janney reprised her role as C.Script error: No such module "String".J. for the pre-taped introduction of Not the White House Correspondents' Dinner. Appearing to brief the press, C.Script error: No such module "String".J. answers several bad-faith questions from reporters before going on a monologue, arguing that this kind of questioning detracts from real journalism and that these kinds of reporters should not be listened to.Template:Sfn

In 2021, C.Script error: No such module "String".J. Cregg became a "trending topic" on Twitter after the first press conference of Joe Biden's press secretary, Jen Psaki.Template:Sfn Psaki was compared favorably to C.Script error: No such module "String".J. online for her dry wit, as well as her straightforward answers, Allison Janney commenting that she was "flattered" by the comparison.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Mary McNamara of the Los Angeles Times criticized the comparison, commenting that although she loved C.Script error: No such module "String".J.'s character, the comparisons were indicative of the outgoing press secretary's constant battles with the press being over; not Psaki's objective merit.Template:Sfn In 2022, Teen Vogue highlighted the comparison between C.Script error: No such module "String".J. and Psaki as a negative; the article criticized Psaki's style as glib and attention seeking, attitudes expected instead from television characters like C.Script error: No such module "String".J.Template:Sfn

References

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Works cited

Articles and tweets

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Awards

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Books

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