Hi, we're sisters, Amy and
Nancy Harrington, the founders of The Passionistas Project. We've created an inclusive sisterhood
where passion driven women come to get support, find their purpose,
and feel empowered to transform their lives and change the world. On every episode, we discuss the
unique ways in which each woman is following her passions, talk
about how she defines success, and explore her path to breaking down the
barriers that women too often face. Today, we're talking with Melissa
Fitzgerald and Mary McCormack. Authors of the new book, What's Next? A backstage pass to the West
Wing, its cast and crew, and its enduring legacy of service. Melissa is an actor, producer,
and social justice advocate. As an actor, she's best known for her
seven year role as Carol on the award winning television series, The West Wing. While in Hollywood, Melissa co
founded Voices in Harmony, a mentoring program that uses theater to work
with historically underserved teens. In 2013, she left Hollywood to champion
justice system reform at All Rise, where she is at the forefront of engaging the
public in the expansion of treatment courts and advancing justice system
responses for individuals and communities. Mary is an actor, producer, and
activist who played Deputy National Security Advisor Kate Harper on The
West Wing, a Tony nominated Broadway actress, and Broadway actress, she's
also known for diversity of roles across film, television, and theater,
including her portrayal of Deputy U. S. Marshal Mary Shannon on the TV series
In Plain Sight, and her Tony nominated turn as Gretchen in Boeing, Boeing. Mary is an outspoken advocate for
a whole host of causes from social justice and women's rights to veterans
issues and criminal justice reform. Now, please welcome Melissa
Fitzgerald and Mary McCormack. Aw, thank you. What a nice group. We always start our interviews by asking,
what are you most passionate about? Oh, I mean, the obvious answer is family. You know, I'm, uh, married and
raising some girls, three of them. So I'm passionate about that. That feels like a project
that I don't want to mess up. And then I'm passionate about my work. I love to, um, to work. And, and I would say to find work, you
know, um, I love all acting, but when you get lucky enough to do something
like the West Wing, it's, it, it sort of elicits the most passion, right? Because if you can do what you love to do
and affect, you know, the world a little bit along the way, that is the ideal. That's the perfect storm
of passion in your work. It doesn't always happen. So I feel very lucky when it does. Yeah, I am definitely
passionate about my family. I do not have children. I'm not married, but I have
brothers and nephews and parents and godchildren and dogs. And I'm also, I'm very
passionate about them. Mary knows that. And, and also about my family of friends. Um, and, and definitely my work. I love getting to do
the work that I do now. in justice system reform for individuals
with substance use mental health disorders so that they receive treatment, recovery
support instead of incarceration. And that's been a passion and my life's
work really for the past 10 years. Um, over 10 years, almost 11 years. I can't believe it. But, um, so that is
definitely my, my passion. So, take us back, um, where do
your, your collective passions for acting and for service come from? Were those things that you have always
cared about even when you were growing up? Yeah, I think for me, I was always
into acting, like I, I could sing when I was very little and
that sort of leads you to plays. And I just realized, I
just loved it right away. I loved the gang. I loved rehearsals. I loved staying up late with adults. Like I just love, I mean, I
didn't do it professionally. I just did it sort of locally
when I was young, but I loved it. And I always, and I thought, you
know, the way young people do, you think you can do anything. I was like, Oh, I'll
just do that, you know. Um, and luckily I get to do
that, which is incredible. I feel so lucky. And service, I think was
part of our life growing up. I mean, I always, um,
witnessed my parents. You know, having service as part
of their life and, uh, it was just something that was sort of
expected and just part of our lives. So yeah, I never, it never
sort of had to be taught. It was sort of taught by example. I mean, I would say the same exact thing. Um, my parents were very, um,
There, they set a very strong example of service and it wasn't
just something that you added on. It was just part of the mix. Part of what you did, part of your day. And, um, you know, my dad has
been, well, he retired, but he was a judge for my whole adult life. And for him, he was so passionate about
it and really passionate about helping people through the justice system. And I'm, I'm sure that impacted
my, my turn that I took. But, um, But I also did
love acting growing up. I was very passionate about that. And like Mary, I was like,
well, how hard could it be? I didn't know anybody who did it. I learned how hard it could be. But I loved it. And it was, it's interesting
because I left that out when you asked me what my passions were. And I, I had the opportunity to do a
play with Martin Sheen this fall at the Kennedy Center where you got to do this
really lovely play called Love Letters. And I'd forgotten, you know, I'd been so. Immersed in the work that I do now, that
I've really let go of that creative for being with us today and we'll see you next week. Take care. Bye. Bye guys. Gorgeous. It was heartbreaking, heartbreaking play. But then Melissa and Martin
have this beautiful friendship and trust in each other. And it was just, I mean, it was, they
did it in front of thousands of people at Melissa's conference and it was stunning. I mean, there wasn't a
dry eye in the house. It was gorgeous. Thank you, Mary. It's true. But I think service for me, also,
like, I mean, Melissa knows this story. I told it at my mom's funeral recently. Yeah. Was, you know, I, like, I
would just grow up and there was someone in our guest room. And I was like, who's that? And she's like, oh, that's Bonnie. And, you know, with some questioning,
I'd find out that it was a woman, you know, there was no room at the shelter. And so she was staying in our
house until a bed opened up. And, but there was just sort of,
you It was just sort of woven in. It wasn't a, it wasn't
sort of talked about. It was just done, you know, which helped. I think it helped sort of
set, set us on that path. There's military service in your family as well. Certainly in mine. I'm sure in Melissa's too,
in most American families. Yeah. So I, I, I do every year, I do the
Memorial Day concert in Washington because it's such a non, it's a lovely event and
it's nonpartisan and it's just a way to sort of reach out to Gold Star families
and service members and say, thank you. It's a beautiful, beautiful event. And it's on PBS and it
actually lives there. You can watch it anytime you want. Um, and I recommend it. And Mary is a real, um, I know that
it's very meaningful to you and she does it every year and brings her children. My dad was a Marine and very proud of it. And I have lots of service members in
my family, but I, yeah, I think it's a nice opportunity for us all as a country. I mean, it's, you know, it's, you
think cookouts and beer and nice to take a minute to say thank
you to everyone who's served. Absolutely, absolutely. So, speaking of Martin Sheen, let's
talk a little bit about the West Wing. So, how did the West Wing influence
your choices on what to do? Things you wanted to be
involved with service wise. That's an interesting question. Well, Melissa certainly has a great story. Yeah, mine for sure. Um, well, I mean, I, I'd always been
involved as Mary had been in service, and I started a non profit before I ever
got to West Wing and did it throughout, working with historically underserved
teens in Los Angeles on a mentoring theater program, and then took that to
Uganda right after, um, the pandemic. Right after West Wing ended, like
literally a couple weeks after I was on a plane, but the work that I'm doing now
for the past 11 years at this national non profit called All Rise started when
I lost a dear friend to addiction and Martin, uh, said to me, why don't you
come to DC with me to a conference? This fantastic organization that's,
uh, championing treatment courts. Treatment instead of incarceration
for people who have substance use and mental health disorders who've
gotten involved in the justice system. And I said, that sounds great. I talked to my dad about it. Turns out my dad had started one
of these courts in Philadelphia. He was one of the people that started. So it was sort of the
perfect storm in a way. And, uh, I came to the conference with
Martin and at that conference, I met thousands of people who are working in
treatment courts, judges, prosecutors, defense counsel, treatment providers,
law enforcement, all working together. To make sure that when someone is
arrested and enters the justice system who does have a substance
use and mental health disorder, if appropriate, that they get evidence
based treatment, recovery support so that they can return to our communities. Healed, productive, and, and living
lives of, lives of which they're proud. And to a person, and my dad says
this too, that, you know, working in a treatment court's been the
highlight of my career in criminal justice because people get better. Before, if they'd come back
into my courtroom, it was because they'd been rearrested. Now, when they come back into my
courtroom, it's to invite me to a graduation, or a wedding, or to
introduce me to their children, or to tell me they got a new job. So, you know, who doesn't? You know, want to work in something
where there's so much hope and hope in our justice system,
hope in an actual courtroom. Um, so Martin introduced me to
that and my dad and, um, you know, I became a supporter. They had just launched their veterans
division, which is part of, you know, All Rise is the umbrella. Justice for Vets lives under that umbrella
and specific to veterans and Mary. Has been an ambassador since the very
beginning and they had just launched that and I got involved in that. And, um, you know, the story was the
CEO at the time said, uh, you know, we're, we're looking for someone
to head up our veterans division. And I said, gosh, if I were a
veteran, I'd throw my hat in the ring. And a few days later he called
back and he said, were you serious? And I said, yeah. And I was sitting in my
apartment in the Hollywood Hills. And he said, when can you start? And it was October. And I said, well, how about January? And he said, how about Monday? And I said, how about January? And he said, how about Monday? And I started Monday. I know you might not even
know that story, Mary, but I did a long time ago. Do I forgot that? How about, yeah, I got on a plane. I came to DC. I stayed like on couches
and looked for an apartment. And that was, that was it. That was almost 11 years ago. Um, and I, I've, it's been so gratifying
and wonderful and, and one of the great joys of it has been all the support that
the West Wingers have given our work. And it's, and it has certainly
elevated, um, my ability to do my job, to have all the support. And Mary has been, of course,
front and center, as she always is. And so has Martin and Janelle
and Allison and Richard and Dulé. Dulé was just on Celebrity Jeopardy
for us and played for All Rise. So. It's, um, you know, Josh Malin, everybody. It's been a real, um, It's a good family. We really are. It's a, to answer your
question that way, too. It's like we are, you know,
I care about the stuff I care about sort of intrinsically. And then I care about randomly
a dance organization in New Jersey that do lectures. Because if Dulé cares about
it, we all care about it. It's sort of like, uh, we describe it
as one of us sends up the bat signal and everyone's on this text chain. We have a West Wing text chain and you
know, I, I don't think a couple days go by before someone needs a video or a post
or, or show up at an event or whatever. So yeah, we sort of all, we
sort of all It's helped our friendship a lot, too, I think. I think it's helped maintain it. You know, we're all close anyway, but, um,
it's like, acts as like a glue, you know, because everyone's lives get so busy. You have jobs and kids and travel and, you
know, a whole bunch of stuff to juggle. And I think that's, you know, it's
hard to sort of work in friendships like that, but I think the service
has helped us stay even closer. Yeah, for sure. It has. Yeah. And I found that in the
rest of my life, too. You know, I found so many of the
things that have kept my friendships together have been around volunteering
or doing activities together. Yeah. Because they're more fun. Yeah. And they're your people. If they, you know, if that's
what matters to you, then Yeah. Yeah, that's right. They care just because. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And they'll show up. And that's the other thing
that this group does. This group shows up and not just in
small ways, but in big ways, you know, Mary came down for our conference. Everybody else has come
to our conference too. Martin, Mary, everybody. And um, and that's not an easy light lift. It's a heavy lift. Easy when you get to see you do that play. So, I think that's part of
what makes the book so amazing. Um, as pop culture enthusiasts and, and
a lot of what Nancy and I do and have done over the years is, is in depth
research, um, for the Television Academy. So we thought we knew a lot about
the West Wing and we've watched every episode more than once and love the show. But this book is such an amazing view
of what happened behind the scenes in a way that we had not experienced before,
but also just this beautiful family of people like you were just talking about. So for anybody that's a West Wing fan
that thinks they, I have read a lot or know everything about the West Wing. This book is really special, um, and
you're, the way you communicate with each other in the book is really beautiful. So what was the inspiration
of writing the book together? Well, first of all, I couldn't be I couldn't think of anyone
I would rather write this with than Mary, so that one is started off there. But, um, I was approached
because I live in D. C. to buy, um, a friend, now a friend
of Mary's too, Kevin Walling. And he had friends who were book
agents and they said, would you do a behind the scenes of The West Wing? And I thought, you know, that's
not really my book to write. That's someone else's book to write. And that's Aaron's book or
somebody else's book to write. And, um, and then I went and I was
thinking about it and I thought, you know, maybe, If it is about the friendships
and why we're together 20 years later and that service is the critical component
and I was at, um, Mary and I were both at Alice and Jenny's birthday party
over a piece of cake and we were talking about it and Mary's like, yes, service. Let's do it. Do it. And, um, and, uh, you know, was it COVID or just pre COVID? No, it was just before COVID. It was November before COVID. It was 2019. And it was November because it
was Allison's birthday and we were having a piece of cake. And I remember, um, Michael, Mary's
husband was standing behind you and he was like, Guys, it's a lot of work. I don't think you were
sure, but now we're fine. It feels like we'd had a drink
or two and a piece of cake because it all sounded good. And then during COVID, we pitched it,
which was so much fun because we were like, we'd never pitched a book before
and we did a big, you know, document. We were proud of it. And we, and we loved like
coming up with all the angles. And we thought we could do this. And it was all fun and
nothing else was happening. And then we sold it,
which was super exciting. And then the work began and we
were like, What have we done? Oh my God, what have we done? The selling part was so exciting. We were like, cheers to us. We're killing it. And we had to write it and we're
like, turns out writing's really hard. Like, hats off to all the writers I've worked with. I mean, I'm literally like in awe
of all of you because holy cow. And we did hundreds of interviews,
which was, there were so many good things about doing that during COVID
because we got to see our friends and talk about the show and talk
about our friendships and service. And, and that was great. Then we went back over and culled
through all those interviews and had to try and come up with a book. And it was interesting because, you
know, as we both said, we wanted to start off by having it be this sort of
friendship, service, you know, Some behind the scenes, but as we did more and more
interviews, more things came out that we thought, gosh, we've got to put that in. Like, you know, there are a bunch of
key episode chapters where we do deep dives into episodes and where people
are talking about a scene that they shot and they were just so interesting. We thought we can't not put that. Time that Richard was talking about,
trying not to laugh and how he had to run around the corner. That's just so interesting. Yeah. We had a thing that I think that made one
of the things that makes this book special besides the service aspect,
which we're really proud of is the we had so much access, you know,
that were the inside were insiders. So like we were there, so they talked to
us in a different way and, and we have a different take on all of it because
it's not sort of, it's not reporting. It's. It was actually our experience. And I think that makes a really
special book for, for us. We call hardcore fans our wingnuts. So that's, hopefully, it's
something that's done our job. Yeah. It comes through. Oh good. Yeah. It comes through and feel, you can
feel that people are comfortable talking to you and that there's love. And so much love. Yeah. And I don't think fan books are
usually written from that perspective. So I think it's, um, that's
a real, that's a real nice. It gives it a nice, I think, I hope. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, definitely. Because we're fans of the show. I love that you kept the episodes in. 'cause that was Oh good. We went back and watched those
specific episodes again and it was like, I wish we could have done more. There's so many more and so many more stories. We hard, we, we cut so much
out it, it's not a short book. I mean, we ended, we. We set out to write something about half
as long as the one we wrote and, um, and there's still so much more and we were
joking that we want to write a part two. I don't know if we really do. I'm just saying this, but, um,
since I know, I know because I'm at work, but otherwise we did, uh, you know, it's called
What's Next and our second book could be called What's Left. It's so much left. And now What's Next. Yeah. And where did that title come from? I don't know. So, uh, go ahead, Melissa, you do it. No, you go ahead if you want. Well, there was, so in the pilot, it's one of, it's
Martin, it's the president's tagline. He says it a lot throughout,
throughout the series. And the way that came about, which
is, this is actually so cool, I think, um, in the end of the pilot, Tommy
Schlamme was like, there's something about it, the ending that wasn't quite
true to the energy of the White House. Like the energy of the White House
when he visited and he talked to us extensively about this was
that there was this constant flow. of work. As soon as something was done, someone
was handing you a piece of paper, and then you were signing it and handing it to
someone else, that it was never finished. Um, and so he said to Aaron, I would
love, instead of sort of ending it like a play, I would love to sort of pull
back on it and get the sense that it's continuing, that the work continues. And so could you let, could we just,
with your permission, let's do that. And of course, He jokes and says
Aaron had to write a line for it because he's the right, you know,
he's a writer and loves words. So he came up with the
president saying, what's next? And that, and it was a love, it's
lovely because it sort of says like it does, it never ends, right? Service never ends. There's always something else to do. You know, we hand the baton to the
next person and we receive a baton from someone else and we keep going. So in Aaron's brilliance, he took
two words, And had this beautiful sort of, you know, uh, blessing for
the work continuing, for the series, but also for the work continuing. And, um, and yeah, I just love it. It's a great tagline for the president
and it's a great tagline for all of us to sort of remember that, you know, you
finish one project and there's more to do. And so it seemed, um, appropriate
for the book because of our angle. Yeah. And we always, you know, Mary and I always
say, like, what's next is our reader. And our reader is what's next. Um, and every, every one
of us is what's next. Each one of us is what's next and
what we plan to do with the time we have left while we are here. That's what's next. Um, and you know, as we get a little
bit older, as certainly as I do, I feel like that That's less and less. So we've got to figure out what's next. Keep going. Yeah, absolutely. I also think part of the brilliance
of Aaron Sorkin and John Wells is the fact that they created
something that is so timeless. Um, we have a friend who's an
activist and she was, she basically has West Wing on a loop because
it's the thing that keeps her up. She's a wingnut and it
keeps her optimistic. Um, yeah. And in relevance wise, I mean,
we literally were watching the final episode of season one an
hour before the assassination. Oh God. Yeah. So everything. And there's just so many things
throughout the series that are. It's depressing because you realize
like, oh, we're, we haven't made any, like an essay, you know, an episode
about the environment, an episode about gun control, an episode, and
all these issues that we have not only not fixed, we haven't, we sort
of gone the opposite direction, right? It's, it's incredible. Why do you think the wingnuts
find such hope in the show? I think it's a tonic. It's like nice to know. I think it's true. I think there are tons of people in
Washington who are there for the right reason, who are there to do the most
good for the for the most people, you know, and I think we lose sight of that
because the loudmouths are loud and you know, the toxicity is louder than, you
know, people just Plugging away, doing what's next, um, and I think it's a tonic. I think it's nice to remember that. It's nice to believe that, um, that
aspirational aspect of the show is really comforting and, and important
to remember to not lose hope. Yeah, I remember when I went to college
because I, I grew up with a lot of people who worked for the government, including
my dad and, um, as an ADA, Assistant District Attorney and a judge, but I
remember someone made a joke about lawyers and government workers and I legitimately
didn't get it because they were the best. Smartest, most committed people I knew. And they could have been making
so much more money doing anything else than what they chose to do. And I think there is something
really, really inspiring about that. And I think the West Wing was hopeful. It was aspirational. It appealed to our best. And, you know, I live in Washington,
DC now, and I meet a lot of these young people who are top of their
class, who could be making a ton of money elsewhere and working. It's far less hard. And they're really giving their
youth to making our country better. And, um, and I, I feel like
watching the West Wing makes me feel that government can, should be a
force for good in people's lives. And when people need government, it needs
to be there for them to lift them up. Absolutely. How do you think the show would differ if
it were made in today's political climate? I mean, it's hard to imagine, right? Because we've lost all
middle ground, it seems like. It's so divisive. There's no gray area anymore. Yeah. Um, so maybe that's I think there are people who want that still, people
who work in government who want that. I think there are those people. And I feel like, In, uh, I think it would
have to be in Aaron's, you know, capable hands to create something from that. Um, I think it would be challenging, but
I think it was challenging then, too. We felt that those times were
divisive, too, and yet the West Wing grew out of that. Yeah, but there used to be it is different. There used to be a two party system where
it was about checks and balances, right? It was about, it was about two sides
feeling really passionately and compromising and coming up with some,
some, some point in the middle of the line that You know, that everyone agreed
on and now it doesn't seem to be that, like, no one's voting for what's best. They're voting just to hurt the other
side as opposed to, you know, anyway, we could go on and on down that rabbit hole. Yeah, absolutely. It is a rabbit hole. Um, so let's talk about
your lovely castmates again. Um, what's, can you each
think of maybe one thing? that you learned about either someone
in the cast or about the way the show was made that you didn't know
before that really surprised you when you were writing the book? I did learn quite a few things about
Richard Schiff that not necessarily that I didn't know, but I got a deeper dive
into his, um, his, his background as an activist, starting when he was young and
also And, you know, his, uh, connection to the Spalding, his personal connection. Um, I certainly learned
more about a lot of things. I learned more about Allison
Janney's connection, you know, her family connection from
like her great, great father. You know, uh, and grandmother
being involved in Planned Parenthood from the early days. I did know that her mother
was very involved in Planned Parenthood because I knew her mom. Um, great woman. And, um, but I didn't know the
sort of the family history there. Um, Brad, I mean, I knew the, I knew the
family history there and his connection. Did you know Brad's whole story of, uh,
auditioning and that whole thing? I didn't know it that in depth. I don't think I knew it that
in depth, but I did know it. I did know it. Um, but not that in depth. Can you tell a little bit of that,
to tease it, tease the book? Go ahead, Melissa, you do that one. Well, he, he, uh He was told
by his agent after auditioning, it's not going to happen. It's just absolutely, like, there's
a long story and I don't want to give it away because it's so good
in the book and we tell it so well. And I, uh, encourage everybody to
get the book to read this story. But I think what's really funny
is like the agent saying, and it was on a note too, somewhere
saying like, Not gonna happen. He's not gonna get cast in this. Like give it up. And he did not give it up. And it was either , did you say? Not his manager Enough. Not funny enough. Yeah. Not sexy enough. Funny. Yeah. So and, uh, here we are all those
years later, sexy, funny. And playing the role .
Yeah. But he sort of forced the issue. There's a, you know,
there is a, oh, he totally forced the issue. And he knew that that was the
part he wanted, and then he was up for a different part. Um, they told him he was going to do
a different part, and he knew that that was not the right part for him. Um, that he was definitely
a Josh, not a Sam. We learned a lot about, yeah, I think one really fun
discovery mode for us was when we went into the cast, all the casting. Like, we were lucky enough to get to some. Oh, yeah. John Levy, who's the casting director
of the, I mean, he's directed so many great things that everyone knows,
but he did do the West Wing years and years ago, and he gave us access to
his binders, which are like, I think three or four huge binders of lists. I mean, gold. Feedback and deals and just all the potential,
like casting, brainstorming lists. And so there was a whole list of which
we put in the book of, uh, different presidents that they were thinking about. Um, and that's fun. We found, unfortunately for me,
cause I'm an idiot, we found, um, an early brainstorming thing
for the role of, uh, Mandy. And it said, Mary McCormack,
not interested in television. But you know what? It all worked out. It all worked out. However, so that was fun. That was a deep dive into
some real West Wing trivia. We were lucky. Yeah. And like, that someone was cast
for one day as the president. And we're not going to
say who, because again. Oh, we say it in the book. Yeah, I know. That's what I'm saying. I just wanted to make sure. I wanted to make sure. One of the things I love about the book is
That you also talked to people behind the scenes, as well as the cast. And it seems like that was
really important on set as well, that you were all a big family. Talk a little bit about that. 100%. I mean, we feel like, you know, there
was an, an army of people who created the show and we wanted to make sure that as
many of them as we could, there's so many that we couldn't interview just because
the book is already, you know, almost 600 pages, but the ones that we could,
we felt that was really important to include them because this was a family. We are a family. And, um, you can't write a book about the
West Wing family and not include them. And, you know, the
cousins or the siblings. Yeah. And that family thing, I mean, you know,
Melissa, it was one of the reasons we decided to write the book too is that,
or the way we decided to write it too, to incorporate the crew as well because
Martin sort of, and John and everyone, John Wells and Aaron, everyone set
that tone right from the beginning. The cast is no more
important than the crew. The principal actors are no more
important than the background actors. Um, and that sort of was
the way the show was run. It's, to John Wells credit, it is the
way he runs all his shows and, um, and is proud of it and should be, you
know, because it's, everyone loves to work on his shows because of it. It's just a really respectful place
16 hours somewhere, it's nice to sort of, you know, be treated that way. And it sounds like Martin
Sheen really sets that tone. 100%. Melissa has a great story in the
book, which I think we can share. Sure. Go ahead, Melissa. Take it away. Yeah. Well, um, And you might want to
start with your little phrase that you always say, Mary, about as number one goes. So there's an expression in
television and it is as number one goes, so goes the show. Number one, referring to number
one on the call sheet, number one, the principal actor. And it is true that almost always,
if the number one is sort of a jerk, the show is a little bit broken
throughout because the other actors, the younger actors learn from that. They sort of go, Oh, well, if they're
going to, Oh, we can all do that. Okay. We all do that. Whereas if number one is. sets the tone as sort of, you know,
professionalism and kindness, the other actors generally follow, and the group. And Martin certainly did that for us. And, and I know, you
know, John Spencer too. And they, and they talked about it. They took their role as sort of the elder
statesman on this show very seriously. And, um, you know, one of my first
days of, well, I think it was my very first day of after the pilot, um, when
the show got picked up, I remember You know, there was a scene with a lot
of background out, um, artists in the scene and Martin and I think I had,
you know, one line or half a line and I was standing there and Martin comes
and we're ready to go and the producers are there and the director and Martin
starts introducing himself to each and every background artist that was there. Handshake, look in the eye, Martin
Sheen, pleasure to meet you. You know, happy to have you with us. What's your name? Where are you from? And really, you know, and I remember,
of course, watching that, watching the producers, looking back and
forth, and I thought, what's he doing? Ah, he's teaching all of us how this
is going to go down from here on out. The people are going to be more important
than anything else, that we are going to treat each other with dignity. We are going to treat each
other with kindness and that people are the most important. And you know, certainly there's nobody
more professional than Martin and who's more on time and more on top of everything
himself and set that tone as well. But he also set a tone for kindness. And um, you I think that matters, and
I know Dulé, when he was young, when he started, and he told us in one of
his interviews when he went on to be number one on Psych, he said, I went to
that show Psych, and he said, it's my turn now to do what Martin did for us. I love, I love how you talk about
Dulé tap dancing behind, backstage. He's amazing. He is amazing. Phenomenal. Yeah, that was, Yeah. Yeah. I mean, how many opportunities like
that do you have in life to go to work and have one of the greatest
tap dancers alive to start tap dancing? Dancing with Yo Yo Ma. Okay. Yeah. Right. All righty. Typical day at the office. Yeah. James Taylor's playing later in the week. What? What? When we did the, um, reunion, uh, Hearts
Fields Landing, the reunion for When We All Vote a few years ago, um, four years
to be exact, um, when Dulé started tap dancing just on the actual stage, I just
was like, oh gosh, I really miss this. Really, really miss this. Yeah. So we talked about, um, All Rise
and Justice for Vets, but we haven't talked about Voices in Harmony yet. So tell us a little bit about that. So, Voices in Harmony was, which
it lives in a certain way, but not as an organization right now. But we worked with at risk teens, like,
you know, historically underserved teens in Los Angeles, um, and who weren't
getting arts education in their schools. And we started a
mentoring theater program. So, we use theater as a way to mentor. And so we had professional actors,
writers, and directors all volunteer, and we would over the course of a six
month program on Saturday afternoons, we would work and do workshops
together, and at the end of that period of time, we each Teenager had
a mentor who is a professional actor. They would work with a professional
writer to write a short play based on a societal issue of our choosing together. And then a director would direct
it like a 10 minute or less play. And then we would fully produce
these evenings of theater. Um, at pretty major theaters
like the Cannon Theater, the, you know, big theaters in Los Angeles. And, um, we had so much support
from the West Wing family, but also from Warner Brothers. And, and I had been doing it
for many years before that. And it was very grassroots. And then we developed a classroom
based program that we then, uh, gave to Los Angeles Unified
School District many years ago. And, um, and then we
took a version of that. I brought a theater program to
northern Uganda and worked with former abducted child soldiers and
sex slaves there, um, and other teens who had been displaced by the war. And I brought a group of actors
and, uh, director and writer and we worked together, um,
creating these, these programs. Three short plays on the
issues they wanted to tackle. And they had been brutalized by
Joseph Kony and the rebel war there. And the topics that they wanted to tackle
were peace building and reconciliation and HIV AIDS, like attack the myths
because so many people were dying of AIDS because of misinformation. And, um, And that was a really
transformative experience. I think I mentioned happened
right after West Wing ended. And I spent quite a few years working
on, on that, using that to, um, create a program where, you know, activism
around the issue and, um, um, At one point, which may be pertinent to this
particular podcast, uh, GE made a surprise announcement at the International
Rescue Committee, one of our partners, at their annual honoree dinner that
they would donate a million dollars to educate girls in northern Uganda. Unbelievable work. Um, and Mary, we also wanted to
give you an opportunity to talk a bit about Moms Demand Action. Mom's Demand is, I've been involved
with for a long time, because how do you not, it just doesn't seem to be, I
mean, they are doing incredible work. Thank the Lord. And it's weird because, you know, when
you look at sensible gun laws in Americans and how they feel about them, I forget
what the percent, it's like 80%, 90%. I mean, it's, Americans are for them. So it really is about, you know, uh,
Dirty Money and NRA and a whole bunch of other stuff that like is incredible
that that still is happening and that our kids and all of us are still at risk. That we can't, you know, go to a movie
theater, go to the mall without, my kids literally, we all say goodbye differently
now, like when we leave the house. Which is so messed up. Like they should just be
able to say goodbye, Bye Mom! They should be able to yell it, but don't. You know, because they're afraid. So it's so sick. It's just so sick. So, Mom's Demands a Lab for me,
and um, Melissa and I, when we were looking at the book, because there's
so many things we care about, we were sort of trying to figure it out. To carefully choose so that we
felt like we were representing, you know, a bunch of, we didn't wanna
miss anything, you know, so, um, the Trevor Project, and we did, but, and we did, oh my God. We did. Of course we did. There's, it was impossible. And also we wanted to honor
the passion projects of, of our cast, you know, so we were, um. We started there and then also I wanted
to talk about the Trevor Project because they're also doing incredible work
for LGBTQ community and youth at risk in crisis and there's such a mental
health crisis in our country anyway for youth right now, but if you add
on top of that the homophobia and the It's a horrific, um, policy that is
happening, um, and in danger of happening. It just can feel hopeless
for, uh, LGBTQ youth. So, um, I think, I don't know when
my cousin, my cousin Carl Nassif, who was the first NFL player to come
out and did so publicly on Instagram, which was so moving and important. Um, I think it was during our
writing, Melissa, or I, it was, yeah, it was during our writing. Yeah, we just thought instantly we have
to include that because I'm proud of Carl, but also I thought how many lives did he
just save because he is an NFL player, you know, because he is, um, he said, and
he said that great sentence when he came out, he said, I shouldn't have to do this. Hope for one day when this
is private or one day this is unnecessary, as it should be. Who should have to talk about sexuality
to anyone, ever, much less a mom. But, but, but how brave of him to do that,
knowing how many lives he might save. And he's very active raising
money for the Trevor Project also. A hundred percent. Yeah. And I just wanted to give a shout
out to, when I had said, you know, Voices in Harmony, our partners
were International Rescue Committee and International Medical Corps. And International Medical
Corps turns out is Janelle's, one of her, her, um, partners. Service organizations that she
cares about, but they're doing incredible work all over the world
in hot zones and really having. Watched what they do firsthand. Um, I was so impressed. One of the things we hear from people a
lot, women in our community and people all over, um, is there's so much to tackle. There's so many things
people want to fight for. How Do you have advice for
someone who wants to get involved, doesn't know where to start? How do you get involved with one of
your organizations or something else? Well, in our organization, you
can read our book because we have websites in the book and definitions
like the sort of mission statements of the different organizations. And that was really important to us. And Thank you to our publisher,
Dutton, for allowing us to do that because it added a lot of pages. Please go to our book. That's a great place to start. Google's another great place to start. And I mean, I, you know, I, I think
a lot of people who probably listen to your podcast and people who are
wingnuts, they are already doing things in their communities and internationally,
but I'll just speak for myself. I don't pretend to have major
advice for anybody, but for myself, it just starts from. What moves me personally at that
moment, and it's different things at different times, and find a way,
if I am useful, is there something that I can contribute to this cause? And if not, is there somebody that I know
that maybe can contribute to this cause? Yeah, yeah, it can be overwhelming. I know what you mean. The world can seem, you know,
when you start to think about, you take it all in, it can feel
like, well, then why do anything? You know, and that's,
uh, that is debilitating. So, I don't know. Just start. Start somewhere. Yeah, just little things. I think that's the thing. We've been so lucky. Um, and continue to be so lucky, actors
are lucky, sport athletes are lucky, famous people are lucky because they
can, um, they get asked to do things and can affect big change with very little
effort and that's fun and fortunate, um, but God, we need everyone just
doing tiny things too, you know, just school board things like we need, we
need, you know, just soup kitchen. I know. Yeah. Those are huge things. We need all the things, little things too. And so, yeah, if it's one, if it's just
helping a neighbor, it doesn't have to be sweeping things, you know, Lord knows. And there are websites, there are, you know, lots
of places to look and, and schools. I mean, even if you go to,
Starbucks, I know, has a board. Sometimes they have volunteer
opportunities on the boards. But, um, I remember when I was doing some
work on advocacy around ending the war in northern Uganda, I was at a university
and someone said, well, you know, we have a lot of problems here at home. Why aren't you working on
our problems here at home? You should be doing that. And I found that to be very interesting. And I said, well, like, give me an
example of what you think is a problem that you think I should be working on. And she said, well, veterans
need help in our country. And I said, you are a
hundred percent right. And are you doing anything? And she said, me? No. And I said, well, that seems
like that's your passion. Like you're passionate about it. I bet you could contribute a lot to that. This is what I happen to be
passionate about right now. And I'm working on this right now. Turns out I ended up working on behalf
of veterans later, but I'm like, right now, this is what I'm working on. You have a tremendous amount
to contribute yourself. I say that's your passion. Go for it. And she did. Um, so it's just, it is interesting
sometimes how we think that there are people who are supposed to be doing
something and, but, but it's all of us. It's each and every one of us
has something to contribute. One time I was feeling overwhelmed
and I asked my dad about it. And I was like, oh, and I was
listing all the things in my life that weren't working. And I was like, and this, and this,
and this, and I have to do this. And I was like, sort of in a tizzy. And, and I said, my windshield's dirty and
I can't even see it out of the windshield. And he went, just clean the
windshield, just clean the windshield. Sometimes when I feel overwhelmed, I think
I'm just going to clean the windshield so I can see the other problems. Like just do one thing. And then things become. Easier, you know, a little. Yeah, what's that book, Bird by Bird? I don't know it. Yeah. Oh, I'm going to give it to you. Janelle gave it to me years ago. It's really good. And I think it's also what you were saying
earlier that you, um, you help each other and support their passions and their work. And I think that's a place
for people to start as well. Like, if you don't know, like,
what, what are your friends? It's more fun anyway, it's community, if you combine community
and service it's way more fun. So much more fun. Yeah, so I think you're right, that's
a great place to start, be like hey let's do, let's go do a shift at
a thing together because you know. Yeah. It's funny that you just brought that up. It reminded me when I was living with
my friend, Anne, at the time when we started Voices in Harmony, we'd have all
our meetings in our living room at night. And she would sometimes make brownies
and come down and volunteer cookies. She makes very good
chocolate chip cookies. And I would be like,
oh, thank you so much. Thanks for letting us have another
meeting here, you know, tonight. And she goes, Don't thank me. Are you kidding? You just gave me an opportunity
to be of service and I didn't have to leave my house. She's like, you're giving opportunities. So I want to stress again to people listening
that this book is not just for West Wing fans because it is so much more than
just a backstage look at the West Wing. So what do you both hope that people take
away from the book when they read it? I don't know. I mean, I hope people, I hope the fans do,
I hope we get a stamp of approval from our fans because the wingnuts mean business
and we, I think we deliver on that like because we had such crazy access, but
I think you're right and I hope other people respond to it too for sort of
its general discussion of connectedness. I hope that we have a good discussion
about that because, and then a sort of, um, a sort of push to remember how
service should be and is so fulfilling, uh, what can be such a fulfilling part
of all our lives, you know, um, and it doesn't have to be big, huge things. It can be, go to the website
for mom's demand and see how easy it is to do something. It's so easy to do little
things, tiny things. I mean, send an email. It matters to them and they will tell
you, they will tell you big things you can do and and a huge scale of,
of, uh, tinier things you can do. Um, and you can make a real difference. So I hope we, I hope we, uh,
inspire some of that, you know. And I hope that, same as Mary, I hope
that people enjoy the ride of reading the book and get to visit, revisit
some of, you know, something they loved for the people who loved it. And, um, yeah. Be introduced to something for the
people who, who don't know it as well. And then, you know, I, I imagine that a
lot of the people reading the book are already doing things in their communities. Um, and I hope that maybe they'll
be introduced to some more organizations and learn a yeah. Bit about some of the, they haven't. And it's fun too if you love Allison
Janney to hear about why she's passionate about the things she's
passionate about and how she's involved and how you might get involved too. And so that's a, it's sort
of fun to have that insight. Everybody, please go out and get the book. It's amazing. You will not be sorry. Great Christmas gift, holiday gift. It is. That's a good holiday gift. That is a back to school gift. It's back to school. Patrick's day, whatever day it is, National Ice Cream Day was. You know, last week you should
have bought a book for that. Because you can pre order it. Right, so people can
pre order it right now. Is that right? Yeah, that's true. And we're doing a couple live events too. It's going to be really fun. And a bunch of signed books. There's opportunities to get signed books. And yeah, we're, we're signing books. Where can they go to get? I mean, they can follow us on social media
for sure because we are posting away. So we're posting so if you
follow us, um, Mary your handle. Oh, I'm @MaryCMcCormack. And I'm at @MaffyFitz, um, Instagram also. Excellent. Well, we have one last two part question. Uh oh. That's a doozy. Um, alright. What's your dream for yourself? And what's your dream for women? Or, Mary, maybe your daughters? My dream for myself, I would
like a little more sleep. Um, no, I don't know. Um, my dream for myself is, yeah,
to continue to find fulfilling work that I'm passionate about. I mean, I think, you know, and to
keep my family safe and, you know, I would love more time with my family. My kids are leaving the,
you know, leaving the nest. For women and my daughters and all
of our daughters, our collective daughters, is to um, is to, is to
not, like my cousin Carl said, that it shouldn't be a discussion really. Like I don't, hopefully one day
we won't say she's a strong woman who's accomplished A, B, and C. We'll say there's a strong
person who's accomplished that whole pile of stuff, you know. I mean that would be an ideal thing. Like I, sometimes I work with young
actresses and they, you know, They are already, I can feel it changing, you
know, their, their ownership in the world, their voice in the world is different than
even my, I start every email still at 55 and I'm a person who cares about this. I still rewrite, I try to rewrite all my
emails and take out the eight apologies, you know, uh, for things I haven't done. And I hope for my daughters that they
don't have that rattling around in them by the time that, you know, they get
to the writing, demanding email stage. More voice, more voice and less emphasis
on gender or body parts or any of it. It's, it should be unimportant
and hopefully it's not right now. Lord knows, let's all rally
around our presidential hopeful. Um, and because we have
a lot of work to do. We have a lot of work to do. Lord knows we have a lot of work to do. Especially when you look at some of the
things the other side is saying and doing. Um, uh, but one day I hope
that it is irrelevant. All the physical is irrelevant. That is. I agree with that, 100 percent Mary. Um, I guess my dream for myself,
that's a really good question. Um, this is similar to Mary's in that,
you know, I get to show up for my family and take the best care of them
I can, um, and be a great friend to my friends, um, be a great aunt and
godmother, um, and that, you know, when I leave the world that it's a slightly
better place because I was here. I Um, that would be my big dream. Um, and then for the world, I think that
we have everything we need to solve all the world's problems if we all participate
and care enough to actually do it, and I, I believe we can. And that would be my dream to
see that, see that realized. And that's, I guess,
for daughters and sons. Thanks for watching The Passionistas
Project and our interview with Melissa Fitzgerald and Mary McCormack. Follow them on Instagram at
@MaryCMcCormack and @MaffyFitz to find out how to get your own copy of What's Next? A Backstage Pass to the West Wing,
or pre order your copy on Amazon. Since we're not only business
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