A political drama which looks into the life of the Secretary of State as she tries to balance work with family.A political drama which looks into the life of the Secretary of State as she tries to balance work with family.A political drama which looks into the life of the Secretary of State as she tries to balance work with family.
- Awards
- 2 wins & 7 nominations
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaTéa Leoni and Tim Daly are graduates of the same high school, the Putney School in Vermont: Tim in 1974 and Téa in 1984.
- Crazy creditsSPOILER: With Elizabeth McCord's assumption of the Presidency in the final season, the word Secretary" in the opening credits rotates to become "President".
Featured review
This is a great new show that highlights Tea's and Tim's acting chops. I'm glad to see casting chose the talented versus gorgeous actor route and graced them with intelligent crisp dialogue. I'm a guy and it's nice to see a middle aged woman get a leading role.
The geopolitics and inner politics are a bit reminiscent of "West Wing" although the ensemble doesn't have the synergy of WW's first two seasons, and the cast doesn't play off each other quite as well.
Unfortunately, most of the reviews I've read thus far reveal that the public sees this show as an unpaid ad vehicle to Secty Clinton - I disagree - so tragically, it may not last long.
I agree with a previous reviewer who asserted that the eldest daughter is obnoxious. She's probably written true to life: she'd likely be spoiled and entitled having grown up upper middle class in today's society with her privileges. And she'd probably be saddled with sophomoritis since she's a 20 year old articulate woman who's a freshman dropout.
I also have to marvel at the negotiating/conflict resolution skill of the writers as voiced by the parents. Several times I've had to stop the program and sit at the TV in amazement at how deftly these parents dealt with a child's misbehaving or explanations of tragedies. And Tea's character displays the same art in her political maneuvering. Wow! I wish I could diffuse arguments that artfully. Or had been graced with parents who had an iota of their skill.
Bottom line: this show deserves to be renewed.
The geopolitics and inner politics are a bit reminiscent of "West Wing" although the ensemble doesn't have the synergy of WW's first two seasons, and the cast doesn't play off each other quite as well.
Unfortunately, most of the reviews I've read thus far reveal that the public sees this show as an unpaid ad vehicle to Secty Clinton - I disagree - so tragically, it may not last long.
I agree with a previous reviewer who asserted that the eldest daughter is obnoxious. She's probably written true to life: she'd likely be spoiled and entitled having grown up upper middle class in today's society with her privileges. And she'd probably be saddled with sophomoritis since she's a 20 year old articulate woman who's a freshman dropout.
I also have to marvel at the negotiating/conflict resolution skill of the writers as voiced by the parents. Several times I've had to stop the program and sit at the TV in amazement at how deftly these parents dealt with a child's misbehaving or explanations of tragedies. And Tea's character displays the same art in her political maneuvering. Wow! I wish I could diffuse arguments that artfully. Or had been graced with parents who had an iota of their skill.
Bottom line: this show deserves to be renewed.
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- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Madam President
- Filming locations
- Broadway Stages, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA(Iinterior locations)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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