'''Commander in Chief''' was a
television drama that focused on the presidential administration and family of
Mackenzie Allen (portrayed by
Geena Davis), the first female
President of the United States, who ascended to the role after the previous chief executive,
Teddy Bridges (played by
Will Lyman), died in office from a sudden ruptured
cerebral aneurysm. The series began broadcasting on
ABC on Tuesday,
September 27,
2005, at 9 p.m.
Eastern Time, although most countries outside North America began screening the series in mid-2006. It garnered the highest ratings for a series debut on a Tuesday night.
The show was #1 on Tuesday nights until FOX's ''
American Idol'' took this honor. The show was also the #1 new show of the season until CBS' ''
Criminal Minds'' surpassed it. Its major competitor in the 9:00 p.m. timeslot was FOX's ''
House'', which airs after ''American Idol''.
The series was created by American director
Rod Lurie, director of thrillers like ''
The Contender'' and ''
Deterrence'', and may have been inspired by ''
The West Wing'', a popular political drama on rival
NBC.
On May 13, 2006, ABC announced that the show had been cancelled, although the remaining three episodes of the season were broadcast after the ratings year had ended. The network is in discussions with Rod Lurie, the creator of the show, about making a television movie based on the television show. On
June 30 2006, Davis told ''
The Stage'' that the telemovie had been confirmed.
[1]. However no movie has been made yet.
Primary characters

Geena Davis as President Mackenzie Allen
★ President
Mackenzie Allen (
Geena Davis) – former member of
Congress from
Connecticut and
Chancellor of the
University of Richmond, an
Independent chosen by
Republican Theodore Roosevelt "Teddy" Bridges as his running mate, and duly elected. The first female Vice President and, upon Bridges' death, the first female president.
★
First Gentleman Rod Calloway (
Kyle Secor) – Allen's husband; formerly her Vice Presidential Chief of Staff.
★ Speaker of the House
Nathan Templeton (
Donald Sutherland) – Republican Congressional leader from
Florida; had been Bridges' choice to succeed him as President. Has significant resentment towards President Allen.
★ White House Chief of Staff
Jim Gardner (
Harry Lennix) – formerly President Bridges' Chief of Staff, asked by President Allen to continue into her administration.
★ Press Secretary
Kelly Ludlow (
Ever Carradine) – brought into Allen's administration from her Vice Presidential residential staff; formerly her Communications Director.
★
Horace Calloway (
Matt Lanter),
Rebecca Calloway (
Caitlin Wachs) and
Amy Calloway (
Jasmine Jessica Anthony) – Allen and Rod's three children; sixteen-year-old twins and a six-year-old child. Rebecca frowns upon her mother's choice to assume the Presidency and holds more conservative political views than her mother.
Main Characters
Main articles: List of Characters from Commander In Chief
The Commander in Chief universe
The universe of 'Commander in Chief' shares a great deal of recent history with our own: in the first episode,
Vice Presidents Al Gore and
Dick Cheney are mentioned, suggesting that the show's universe took place sometime in the near future. As the first episode states that Teddy Bridges served four years as Vice President and the show begins two years into his first Presidential term, some viewers assume that, in the universe of the series, either President
George W. Bush served only one term (2001-2005) or that Teddy Bridges was his Vice President for the second term (2005-2009). This would place Bridges' election to the Presidency in 2008 and the show around the year
2011. It is also possible that the show takes place more than a
decade from now. However, in the episode ''First Dance'', Russia is described as having been a democracy for only 15 years, placing the first season around
2006, assuming a parallel unfolding of history. Another possibility is that the writers have simply disregarded statements made in the first few episodes and now
retconned the series to take place in the present (in an alternate timeline).
The placement of the series within the federal election cycle is also in question. Although early episodes refer to Bridges' death occurring prior to the midterm elections, later episodes e.g. ''The Mom Who Came To Dinner'' refer to two years remaining in the Presidential term. This is inconsistent with ''First Strike'', which places Bridges' death months after the midterm elections. As the series' episodes have paralleled their actual air dates, including events such as the Atlantic hurricane season, Halloween, and Thanksgiving, it would make sense that Bridges' death occurred during his third year in office, which would mean a Presidential election due shortly thereafter.
According to the rules of Presidential succession, if Allen began serving out Bridges' term less than two full years after he was sworn in, she can only run as a candidate in one Presidential election. However, if Bridges' time in office was more than two full years (even by a matter of a week or two) Allen would be allowed to run in two Presidential elections, and thus could potentially be president for almost ten years (See
Twenty-second Amendment to the United States Constitution).
As on the political drama ''
The West Wing'', the world of ''Commander in Chief'' includes both real countries (such as
Nigeria,
North Korea and
Iraq), as well as fictitious ones (such as the South American country of
San Pasquale). However, there are apparent errors in the portrayal of Nigeria's judicial system and governance. First, there are no Sharia law in Lagos where the rescued woman was held, hence there will be no jurisdiction for her detainment in Kirikiri prison. Also, Nigeria does not have a parliamentary system of government, so the Nigerian Ambassador should be reporting to the Nigerian President and not a Prime Minister as portrayed in the first episode.
There are subtle hints that the show may be taking place in a post-9/11 world, but in Commander In Chief's universe 9/11 may have taken place during Bridges' Presidency. The Department of Homeland Security, created in the wake of 9/11 in the real world, has been mentioned. In the episode ''No Nukes is Good Nukes'', Templeton mentioned that President Bridges launched a raid on the Khyber Pass, an area of Afghanistan, so an invasion of Afghanistan may have taken place in the Commander in Chief universe. And in the episode ''First...Do No Harm'', President Allen faced a crisis when a terrorist group resembling Al-Qaeda attempts to launch an attack in the United States.
Timeline
Though specific dates are not given, many events are assigned relative to the present (i.e. at the time of production) with considerable detail due to the show's use of
flashbacks. The following is a list of notable events and their relative time.
;
1965
:Nathan Templeton is a
Democratic candidate for office. It is unclear whether Templeton is publicly a
segregationalist, however he is taped privately during this time making very extreme segregationist statements.
;Approximately 22 years before the first season
:Teddy Bridges is elected Governor of his home state, he is re-elected at every election until his election to the Vice Presidency 16 years later.
;10 years before "First... Do No Harm"
:Mackenzie Allen, a
Republican, is approached by a group of moderate Republicans in her district to run as an
Independent for Congress as a
far right Republican is expected to easily win the
primary.
;8 years before "First Disaster"
:First-term Congresswoman Mackenzie Allen defies the will of Speaker Nathan Templeton when she is left with the deciding vote for a piece of legislation. Templeton reminds her of her Republican heritage and the wide Republican support for the bill, however she refuses to support it as she views it as
wasteful spending.
;Approximately 6 years before the first season
:Teddy Bridges is elected Vice President of the United States on a Republican ticket.
;2 and a half years before "Pilot"
:Vice President Teddy Bridges approaches Mackenzie Allen, a former two-term
Independent Congresswoman, to be his
running mate.
;8 months before "First Strike"
:While campaigning during the
midterm elections, President Teddy Bridges asks Nathan Templeton to agree to become his Vice President, Bridges suggested he could create a vacancy in the office by appointing Vice President Mackenzie Allen to the
Supreme Court of the United States. Templeton declines, saying the Vice Presidency would be a demotion from his current office as Speaker.
Controversy
The
Cato Institute and
Reason Magazine, charged that the series glorified the "
Imperial Presidency" and that it favored using government force to impose the personal values of some Americans on other Americans who disagreed with them, and also impose the values of those Americans on the rest of the world.
General criticisms are that the series is so centered on Allen's gender that this becomes the focus of the show instead of the character's capability. However, a counter-argument is that the series is trying to depict realistically what the general public's reaction to the first female President would be, and such an occurrence would probably also focus public scrutiny on a female President's gender rather than her policies.
However, in interviews on the show's website, various cast members said that as time went on there was supposed to be less focus on her gender and more focus on the fact that she was an independent, especially when she would have run for election.
The April 27 episode generated further controversy and negative press in its fictional depiction of the bordering suburb of
Hyattsville, Maryland as having the highest murder rate in the
United States. It also indirectly depicted the town as being an
urban ghetto dominated by poor minorities. The city and
Prince George's County were very upset at
ABC and somewhat surprised as well at this depiction; in reality the city is ethnically mixed, middle-upper middle income and mostly suburban in density and character. On May 1, 2006
ABC formally apologized to both the city and county.
Like the similar show
''The West Wing'', the show was often criticized for its perceived
left-wing bias on subjects such as
campaign finance restrictions, the
death penalty,
environmentalism, the
Equal Rights Amendment, and its overall portrayal of Republican politicians as
malevolent figures.
The
Traditional Values Coalition,
FrontPage Magazine and conservative commentators have gone on record complaining that the show was really a thinly-veiled attempt to lay groundwork for a possible 2008 Presidential run by prominent Democrat
Hillary Clinton. This charge has been denied by Lurie, Davis, and ABC.
Ratings
The series went on hiatus after its January 24, 2006 episode; in its place, ABC promoted a new ''
Arrested Development'' type show titled ''
Sons & Daughters''.
[2] ''Commander in Chief'' was scheduled to return on April 18 with either four or seven remaining new episodes (reflecting rumors that the number of episodes for the season had been cut by three). However, on March 29, ABC announced that it would instead return on April 13 and move from its Tuesday 9 p.m. slot to a 10 p.m. slot on Thursdays, directly competing with
CBS hit ''
Without a Trace'' and longtime
NBC standby ''
ER''. Some media experts believed the show had already been unofficially cancelled and was moved to that time slot to burn off the remaining episodes--since it is one of the toughest primetime slots for ABC to compete in. However, other experts thought that ABC was hoping the show could be saved by gaining viewers from the surprise reality hit
American Inventor aired right before ''Commander in Chief''.
[3] However, the reality show saw its ratings plummet to nearly half of what it once was, and proved to be a weak lead in to ''Commander in Chief''.
The show's return April 13 was met by low ratings in its new 10 p.m. time slot, perhaps lessening its chances for a second season. Preliminary ratings available April 14 indicated that only 8.2 million viewers (2.4 rating/7 share in the 18-49 demographic) tuned in for the show's return. CBS's ''Without a Trace'' dominated the hour with 18.6 million viewers. Further competition also came from NBC's ''ER''. The show aired a repeat the night ''Commander in Chief'' returned, yet it still narrowly beat ''Commander in Chief'' in the 18-49 demographic (2.6/7 versus 2.4/7), though it had about two million viewers less overall.
ABC pulled the series from its lineup on May 2, 2006, essentially guaranteeing its cancellation prior to the autumn season.
The series was officially cancelled on May 16, 2006, "although a two-hour movie is in the process of being made, with Geena Davis confirming her performance in this TV-movie."
[4]
Episodes
Main articles: List of Commander in Chief episodes
TV Movie and Second Season
Shortly after the cancellation of the regular series, rumours began to arise that a TV movie would be produced in late 2006. Soon after, there were a number of reports confirming the TV movie, one of which was made by Geena Davis to ''The Stage''. The TV movie was set to enter production, but columnist
Matt Roush reported "on excellent authority" in ''
TV Guide'' that it is no longer in the works.
[5]
Filming Location
★ Raleigh Studios - 5300 Melrose Ave., Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA
★ Manhattan Beach Studios, Los Angeles, California, USA
★ City Hall - 200 N. Spring St., Downtown, Los Angeles, California, USA
★ New Millennium Studios - One New Millennium Dr., Petersburg, Virginia, USA
★ University of Richmond - 28 Westhampton Way, Richmond, Virginia, USA
★ Washington, District of Columbia, USA
Trivia
★ The characters of the
President and
Vice President were named after the two actors who played those roles in
Rod Lurie's previous political thriller, ''
The Contender''. Teddy Bridges, named for
Jeff Bridges who played President
Jackson Evans, and Mackenzie Allen, named for
Joan Allen who played
Laine Hanson, his Vice Presidential
nominee.
★ This was
Donald Sutherland's first regular role on a television series.
★ The first seven episode titles from the first season after the pilot all begin with the word "first" (e.g. ''First Choice'', ''First Disaster''). The eighth episode was the "first" not to do so.
★ Starting with the episode ''Rubie Dubidoux and the Brown Bound Express'',
Steven Bochco replaced
Rod Lurie as head executive producer and showrunner. Bochco's changes included a staff of new writers and a new title design similar in style to that of
NBC's
The West Wing.
★ Part of the Greater Richmond Children's Choir (GRCC) of
Richmond, Virginia was the French Choir in the
pilot episode, making an ironic connection between real life and fiction since Mackenzie Allen was Chancellor of the
University of Richmond when Bridges tapped her as his running mate as seen as a flashback in the pilot.
★ In the episode ''Happy Birthday, Madam President'', Allen receives a 19th century bow and arrow from the Chinese premier, inspiring her chief of staff to remark, "I'm betting this President can handle a bow and arrow." This is an in-joke reference to Geena Davis' archery skills.
★ On August 15, the first episode of the series was aired on
Germany's
Sat.1 TV network. It was, however given an incorrect title: "Welcome Mrs. President" (instead of Madam).
★ Former Clinton Administration National Security Advisor
Sandy Berger was signed on as an advisor to the show.
★ This was not the first American network television series to be about a woman as President of the United States. It was preceded in 1985 by the comedy ''
Hail to the Chief''.
★ At President Allen's swearing-in, the judge stated her name Mackenzie Spencer Allen. She replied, "I, Mackenzie S. Allen." This is exactly what happened at President Harry S. Truman's inauguration. He insisted that his middle name was S.
★ After Kelly's first day as press secretary, Rod finds her outside holding a cigarette. She claims that she doesn't smoke, but is preparing for the inevitable. Humorously, she can be seen in later episodes holding a box of cigarettes and lighter, such as when Rod tells her he's been offered the baseball job.
★ The basis of the story is very similar to the novel by
Jeffrey Archer Shall We Tell the President?
Awards & Nominations
Awards Won
'
Golden Globe Awards:'
★ Best Performance by an Actress in a Television Drama Series-
Geena Davis (2006)
Awards Nominated
'
Golden Globe Awards:'
★ Best TV Series-Drama
★ Best Performance by a Supporting Actor in a Television Drama Series-
Donald Sutherland (2006)
'
Screen Actors Guild:'
★ Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Drama Series
Geena Davis (2006)
'
Satellite Awards:'
★ Outstanding Actress in a Series, Drama
Geena Davis (2006)
'
Emmy Awards:'
★ Outstanding Lead Actress in A Drama Series
Geena Davis (2006)
DVD
DVD Releases
On April 28th Buena Vista Home Video formally announced the release of Commander In Chief: The Complete First Season.
[6] However, following the show's cancellation, it was decided that it should be split into two volumes.
[7] In Italy the 5 DVD boxset was released on
December 1,
2006 and it contains all original episodes dubbed in Italian plus voice tracks in English and Spanish and also special features such Pilot episode with comments by Rod Lurie and deleted scenes.
[8]
| DVD Name | Ep # | Region 1 | Region 2 | Description |
|---|
| The Inaugural Edition, Part 1 | 10 | June 27, 2006 | N/A | Episodes 1 - 10 |
| The Inaugural Edition, Part 2 | 8 | September 5, 2006 | N/A | Episodes 11 - 18, Interview with Geena Davis, Unaired Scenes, Bloopers, Exclusive Creator Commentaries. |
| The Complete First Season | 18 | N/A | January 29, 2007 | Interview with Geena Davis, Unaired Scenes, Bloopers, Exclusive Creator Commentaries. |
International Broadcasts
★ Australia -
Seven Network Australia
★ Bulgaria -
Fox life as "Главнокомандващ"
★ Canada -
CTV (English) and
Historia (French)
★ Denmark -
TV 2
★ Finland -
Nelonen
★ France -
M6
★ Germany -
Sat.1 as "Welcome, Mrs. President"
★ Hong Kong -
Asia Television
★ India -
Star World
★ Indonesia -
Metro TV
★ Republic of Ireland -
RTÉ One
★ Israel -
Yes TV as "Gvirti Hanasie" (Madamme President)
★ Italy -
Rai Uno and
Fox Life as "Una donna alla Casa Bianca" (A woman at the White House)
★ Kenya -
NTV
★ Latin America - Sony Entertainment Television
★ Malaysia -
8TV
★ Middle East - Showtime Arabia
★ New Zealand -
TV2
★ Norway -
TVNORGE
★ Philippines -
STAR World
★ Poland -
TVP1 as "Pani prezydent" (Madam President)
★ Portugal -
SIC as "Senhora Predidente" (Mrs. President)
★ Singapore -
MediaCorp
★ South Korea -
KBS2
★ Spain -
People&Arts/
La Sexta as "Señora Presidenta" (Mrs. President)
★ Sweden -
TV4
★ Taiwan -
Public Television Service
★ Turkey -
DiziMax
★ UK -
ABC1(Apr 2006)
More4(Oct 10)
External links
★
★
★
ABC's Commander in Chief website
★
Commander in Chief Online
★
Commander in Chief Online Petition for Shows Return
★
German Fan Page with Community
★
TV.com download page (iTunes)
★
TV Series Finale - Davis announces movie will be made