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Political Animals (miniseries)

US comedy drama miniseries From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Political Animals (miniseries)
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Political Animals is an American comedy drama miniseries created by Greg Berlanti. The series aired in the United States on USA Network from July 15 through August 19, 2012.[1][2][3] Sigourney Weaver portrays Elaine Barrish, a divorced former First Lady and Governor of Illinois, as well as the current Secretary of State. Weaver and the show's production team acknowledge that the lead character has some similarities to Hillary Clinton. They say that the premise of the show is "very much about all families who have been in the White House, the price they've paid for being there and the fact that those same families will often try or continue to try to get back into the White House again."[4]

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While it was speculated that the miniseries would lead into a full season, on November 2, 2012, USA Network announced their decision to stick with their initial plan of producing it as a miniseries.[5]

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Overview

Elaine Barrish's husband Bud Hammond was a popular President of the United States during the 1990s despite his extramarital affairs. After leaving the White House, Elaine Barrish was elected Governor of Illinois and ran for the Democratic nomination for President, but lost to Paul Garcetti. The night Barrish conceded the nomination, she asked her husband for a divorce. Two years later, as Garcetti's Secretary of State, Barrish deals with State Department issues while trying to keep her family together.[6]

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Cast and characters

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Development and production

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Sigourney Weaver was cast in the role of Elaine Barrish on March 6, 2012

On January 30, 2012, USA Network announced the development of a six-hour series to focus on a former First Family.[6] They simultaneously announced that the pilot would be written and directed by Greg Berlanti, who would executive produce the series with Laurence Mark.[6] Sarah Caplan was later announced to be executive producing as well.[1] Ann Roth served as Weaver's costume designer for the first episode.[1]

James Wolk was the first actor to be cast; it was announced on February 10, 2012, that he would be portraying Douglas Hammond, the son of Elaine Barrish.[9] Three days later, it was revealed that Brittany Ishibashi would be playing Doug's fiancée, Anne Ogami.[11] On March 6, 2012, Sigourney Weaver was cast in the lead role of Elaine Barrish.[7] On March 9, 2012, it was announced that Carla Gugino had joined the cast as Susan Berg, a reporter who becomes one of Elaine's closest allies.[8] Sebastian Stan joined the series on March 15, 2012, as T. J. Hammond, the other son of Elaine Barrish, and Doug's brother.[10] One week later, it was announced that Ciarán Hinds would play the former president and Elaine's ex-husband, Bud Hammond.[13] By April 14, 2012, Ellen Burstyn had joined the series as Margaret Barrish, Elaine's mother and a former Vegas showgirl.[12] On May 2, 2012, it was announced that Adrian Pasdar would appear in a recurring role in all six episodes as the current president, Paul Garcetti.[1][2] The casting of Dylan Baker in the recurring role of Vice President Fred Collier was announced on May 7, 2012.[14]

Linda Powell, the daughter of former United States Secretary of State Colin Powell, appeared in the first episode as the national security advisor to the president.[16] Roger Bart, Dan Futterman, and Vanessa Redgrave also made appearances in the series.[17] David Monahan appeared in the fourth episode, while Blair Brown appeared in the fifth as Barbara Berg, the mother of Susan.[18]

By May 2, 2012, principal photography had begun in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[1]

The theme music is "Future Starts Slow" by The Kills.

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Episodes

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International broadcasts

The show aired on the Bravo specialty channel in Canada, with episodes playing on the same day as in the United States.[25]

Reception

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Critical reception

Political Animals received "generally favorable" reviews based on an aggregate score of 65/100 from 33 critics on Metacritic.[26] Rob Brunner of Entertainment Weekly called the series a "well-acted, entertainingly soapy drama" that "offers a fun and credible look at the complicated intersection of love, gender, and politics."[27] The Los Angeles Times' Robert Lloyd called the series "a high-class, relatively naturalistic, behind-closed-doors soap opera that plays in fairly obvious yet also fairly affecting ways with the space between public face and private pain and is made highly watchable by an excellent cast that finds the human among the hokum."[28] Alan Sepinwall of HitFix stated: "with a cast this good, and with so many potentially juicy conflicts already in play, I'm going to take a more optimistic point of view than Elaine Barrish might."[29]

However, there were some detractors. Linda Stasi of the New York Post simply stated: "The actors are great, but the show isn't."[30] The Hollywood Reporter's Tim Goodman commented: "what Animals is trying to do is take The West Wing and turn it into Dallas. And if you don't like Dallas, that can be a real let down [sic]."[31] Verne Gay of Newsday was the harshest critic, calling the series "stupendously silly," adding "it's a clanking, clattering collection of collagenous clinkers—of dialogue so inept, of acting performances so preposterous, of plot points so clichéd that the only question worth posing is why someone of Weaver's stature would be caught anywhere near a turkey like this."[32]

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Accolades

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References

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