LOS ANGELES, Dec 14 (Reuters) 鈥 There is a crazy family living at the White House, but it鈥檚 not the Obamas. It鈥檚 the Gilchrists, whose never-ending follies pulse and push upcoming TV comedy romp 鈥1600 Penn.鈥
Starring Bill Pullman as U.S. President Dale Gilchrist and Jenna Elfman as his first lady, the show鈥檚 co-creator Josh Gad said on Friday that there is plenty of precedent for family madness at the Oval Office.
鈥淵ou can look as far back as Mary Todd Lincoln ... and you can see dysfunction in the halls of the White House,鈥 Gad told reporters on a conference call, referring to the wife of Civil War President Abraham Lincoln.
Gad, who shot to prominence in the Tony-winning musical 鈥淭he Book of Mormon,鈥 also plays the error-prone, good-intentioned son Skip, who with his three younger siblings backstop the earnestness of his father and step-mother.
鈥淲e really wanted to dissect what it meant to be a family in the most extraordinary of circumstances - and what鈥檚 more extraordinary than being the first family?鈥 Gad said.
The show, which takes its title from the 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue street address of the White House, debuts on Jan. 10 on NBC.
It sees Skip crashing a Latin American trade meeting at the White House and helping convince the region鈥檚 leaders to abandon the arm-twisting Brazilian president and cut a deal instead with his father - summoning their courage with booze.
It is all part of Skip鈥檚 plan to redeem himself after causing a public relations embarrassment by burning down a fraternity house at his college.
鈥淚t鈥檚 like a drop of a political thing that will spark a family problem,鈥 Elfman said, whose character struggles to win the trust of her step-children and fights the media鈥檚 trophy-wife label.
鈥1600 Penn,鈥 is co-created by Jon Lovett, a former speechwriter for President Barack Obama.
The White House has been successful grounds for TV in the past, inspiring shows like Aaron Sorkin鈥檚 drama series 鈥淭he West Wing鈥 from 1999-2006, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus鈥檚 Emmy-winning turn as a frustrated vice president in the satirical 鈥淰eep.鈥
But Gad said 鈥1600 Penn鈥 has no interest in party politics and that President Gilchrist鈥檚 party affiliation is deliberately vague.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 emphasize that enough,鈥 Gad said. 鈥淲e never set out to make a political show.鈥
Nevertheless, Pullman, who played the president in the 1996 blockbuster film 鈥淚ndependence Day,鈥 said the 2012 U.S. presidential race gave him plenty of fodder to study.
鈥淚t was a surreal time to be making this because of the campaign going on,鈥 Pullman said. 鈥淓very day that we were shooting (the race) was in the news.鈥 (Reporting by Eric Kelsey, editing by Jill Serjeant and Lisa Shumaker)
Reuters, 12/14/12 17:38