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It’s time for the Wilsons (Robert Vaughn and Kim Hunter), far less friendly, but more thrifty.
Mercer, Maggie and Lillian are present at the funeral, making Mercer the only old-timer left in the White House. Times are chaning, but Maggie is stuck back in the Taft administration. Lillian doesn’t have to mend the linen anymore, instead having to make them brand new.Maggie collapses on those darn backstairs and for once asks to go home to rest. Both parents are utterly undone, but after a while, they manage to get back their lives (Mrs. Coolidge has all of those creepy dolls to help).However, it’s Silent Cal Coolidge who has the best line of the entire miniseries.
There is a great deal of fun to be had at the expense of the Presidents and First Ladies, but the comedy is never downright bitter. It is the inspiring personal story of two extraordinary women who had a unique and privileged perspective of the people and events that shaped the first half of the 20th century. Mrs. Jaffray tries to get Maggie back to scrubbing the stairs, but Maggie says she’s been spared that by Presidential order. Harding is a fun-loving people person who plays poker with his cronies in the White House, easily the least stiff of the Presidents so far (and he’s making Taft Chief Justice, which Taft had wanted to be years earlier).
The main characters are given delightful easygoing personalities, without any trace of soapiness in the plot once Emmett Sr. leaves the family after the first scene. On top of everything else, there are rumors that the President has black blood in him.Then it’s 1950 and Korea creeps into the regular vocabulary.
The doctor orders rest, but Maggie is stubborn.A charitable do-gooder, the first Mrs. Wilson actually pays Maggie a visit to see how they live, promising to “fight for the Negroes with the very last ounce of my energy.” You say a thing like that in a miniseries and you are a goner. It’s a moment that chokes one up. The Secret Service wants to stop Harry from a speech, but he refuses.You are so right! Both of the kids know about the house on K Street, infamous during the Harding administration as THE place for illegal activity. Behind the scenes at the White House during … At 26, Lillian has a date, the first one we’ve known about yet!On the homefront, Emmett has been moved to Arizona for a better climate, thanks to the President. An old army buddy of Emmett’s shows up as part of the Bonus Army (much to the consternation of Frazier, their boarder/coworker).Suddenly it’s Pearl Harbor Day and we’re in World War II. Lillian doesn’t have to mend the linen anymore, instead having to make them brand new.Maggie collapses on those darn backstairs and for once asks to go home to rest. She has only her Maggie to keep her company, though Maggie is exhausted by it.Lillian is summoned by Mamie (Barbara Barrie), a stickler for small details, such as calling drapes drapery. As hard and laborious as it is, Maggie is very impressed by the White House, the furniture, the walls, everything. Unlike the Tafts, they don’t seem to notice Maggie at all. But Wilson loses his League of Nations battle. Luckily, the operation is successful, and all of the servants are so relieved, giving Maggie the good news as she brushes delicate Mrs. Taft’s hair. Weeks later, Florence Harding is refusing to leave, and Coolidge is not pushing to move in. I’m not sure that any miniseries has ever boasted so many fancy guest stars, but it’s the main characters that really keep up the sweet and confident pace. Things are so bad the refrigerator is taken by the repo man. Weeks later, Florence Harding is refusing to leave, and Coolidge is not pushing to move in. She fears for Lillian’s job and the husband doesn’t even have one.
It’s time for the Wilsons (Robert Vaughn and Kim Hunter), far less friendly, but more thrifty.
Mercer, Maggie and Lillian are present at the funeral, making Mercer the only old-timer left in the White House. Times are chaning, but Maggie is stuck back in the Taft administration. Lillian doesn’t have to mend the linen anymore, instead having to make them brand new.Maggie collapses on those darn backstairs and for once asks to go home to rest. Both parents are utterly undone, but after a while, they manage to get back their lives (Mrs. Coolidge has all of those creepy dolls to help).However, it’s Silent Cal Coolidge who has the best line of the entire miniseries.
There is a great deal of fun to be had at the expense of the Presidents and First Ladies, but the comedy is never downright bitter. It is the inspiring personal story of two extraordinary women who had a unique and privileged perspective of the people and events that shaped the first half of the 20th century. Mrs. Jaffray tries to get Maggie back to scrubbing the stairs, but Maggie says she’s been spared that by Presidential order. Harding is a fun-loving people person who plays poker with his cronies in the White House, easily the least stiff of the Presidents so far (and he’s making Taft Chief Justice, which Taft had wanted to be years earlier).
The main characters are given delightful easygoing personalities, without any trace of soapiness in the plot once Emmett Sr. leaves the family after the first scene. On top of everything else, there are rumors that the President has black blood in him.Then it’s 1950 and Korea creeps into the regular vocabulary.
The doctor orders rest, but Maggie is stubborn.A charitable do-gooder, the first Mrs. Wilson actually pays Maggie a visit to see how they live, promising to “fight for the Negroes with the very last ounce of my energy.” You say a thing like that in a miniseries and you are a goner. It’s a moment that chokes one up. The Secret Service wants to stop Harry from a speech, but he refuses.You are so right! Both of the kids know about the house on K Street, infamous during the Harding administration as THE place for illegal activity. Behind the scenes at the White House during … At 26, Lillian has a date, the first one we’ve known about yet!On the homefront, Emmett has been moved to Arizona for a better climate, thanks to the President. An old army buddy of Emmett’s shows up as part of the Bonus Army (much to the consternation of Frazier, their boarder/coworker).Suddenly it’s Pearl Harbor Day and we’re in World War II. Lillian doesn’t have to mend the linen anymore, instead having to make them brand new.Maggie collapses on those darn backstairs and for once asks to go home to rest. She has only her Maggie to keep her company, though Maggie is exhausted by it.Lillian is summoned by Mamie (Barbara Barrie), a stickler for small details, such as calling drapes drapery. As hard and laborious as it is, Maggie is very impressed by the White House, the furniture, the walls, everything. Unlike the Tafts, they don’t seem to notice Maggie at all. But Wilson loses his League of Nations battle. Luckily, the operation is successful, and all of the servants are so relieved, giving Maggie the good news as she brushes delicate Mrs. Taft’s hair. Weeks later, Florence Harding is refusing to leave, and Coolidge is not pushing to move in. I’m not sure that any miniseries has ever boasted so many fancy guest stars, but it’s the main characters that really keep up the sweet and confident pace. Things are so bad the refrigerator is taken by the repo man. Weeks later, Florence Harding is refusing to leave, and Coolidge is not pushing to move in. She fears for Lillian’s job and the husband doesn’t even have one.