Donna Moss

American TV character, created 1999


title: "Donna Moss" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["the-west-wing-characters", "american-female-characters-in-television", "canadian-female-characters-in-television", "fictional-secretaries", "fictional-democrats-(united-states)", "fictional-characters-from-minnesota", "television-characters-introduced-in-1999"] description: "American TV character, created 1999" topic_path: "geography/united-states" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donna_Moss" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary American TV character, created 1999 ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox character"]

FieldValue
nameDonna Moss
seriesThe West Wing
imageDonna Moss.jpg
captionJanel Moloney as Donna Moss
first"Pilot"
last"Tomorrow"
creatorAaron Sorkin
portrayerJanel Moloney
full_nameDonnatella Moss
occupationSenior Assistant to the White House Deputy Chief of Staff (seasons 1-6)
Russell Campaign Senior Aide (season 6)
Santos Campaign Spokeswoman (season 7)
Chief of Staff to the First Lady (end of season 7)
spouseJosh Lyman (boyfriend)
genderFemale
titleChief of Staff to the First Lady
familyUnnamed mother, unnamed father.
religionProtestant, denomination unspecified
nationalityAmerican/Canadian
::

::callout[type=note] a character in The West Wing ::

| name = Donna Moss | series = The West Wing | image = Donna Moss.jpg | caption = Janel Moloney as Donna Moss | first = "Pilot" | last = "Tomorrow" | creator = Aaron Sorkin | portrayer = Janel Moloney | full_name = Donnatella Moss | occupation = Senior Assistant to the White House Deputy Chief of Staff (seasons 1-6) Russell Campaign Senior Aide (season 6) Santos Campaign Spokeswoman (season 7) Chief of Staff to the First Lady (end of season 7) | spouse = Josh Lyman (boyfriend) | gender = Female | title = Chief of Staff to the First Lady | family = Unnamed mother, unnamed father. | religion = Protestant, denomination unspecified | nationality = American/Canadian

Creation and development

Donna was initially scripted as a minor character, having only two lines in the pilot episode. However, as Aaron Sorkin remarked, "Janel turned a recurring character who has a couple of lines every once in a while into what became a weekly set piece: the Josh-Donna Scene." By the third episode, Donna's onscreen chemistry with Josh Lyman had convinced the producers to make the opening scene feature her character engaging in back-and-forth dialogue with Josh about a message from C.J. Janel Moloney quipped in the same interview that "I think I maybe quit my job after that", meaning that she would be staying with the show after that scene. Donna was still credited as a recurring character during the first season due to the uncertainty, but she appears in every episode of that season, and Janel Moloney was credited as a full cast member from the second season onward.

During the first four seasons, Donna's relationship with Josh Lyman remains in stasis, with neither daring to make any real romantic move on the other. Aaron Sorkin admits that he was more inclined to move the relationship forward, but, every time he discussed the possibility, fellow executive producer Thomas Schlamme would shout, "No! Wait another year!" "Besides", adds Sorkin, "Sexual and romantic tension is, to me, much more fun than taking the tension away by having the sex and romance".

Character role

A script of the pilot episode provided by Warner Bros. to an interviewer introduces Donna as "Josh’s assistant... devoted to Josh and hates admitting it." As Josh's assistant, Donna's role in the show consisted primarily of interactions with Josh for the first five seasons, until she quits her job to work for Bob Russell's campaign for President on the show. Donna's relationship with Josh was one of the ways the show could explore both sides of an issue on the show; often featuring Donna asking questions to Josh so that he can provide information to both Donna and the audience. During her time as Josh's assistant, her flirtatious onscreen chemistry with Josh garnered attention, with The Associated Press describing Donna's role in the show as "Josh's pokerfaced foil" and "mother hen." Other characters within the show occasionally speculate on the pair's relationship; When Donna encourages Josh to ask Joey Lucas on a date, Joey guesses that Donna is attempting to cover her own feelings for Josh through misdirection. In the Season 7 episode "The Cold," Josh and Donna kiss passionately as she brings him the good news that Congressman Santos has caught up to Vinick and that they are tied in the national tracking polls. In "Election Day," Josh and Donna consummate their relationship, sleeping together twice, both times at her initiative. In the Season 7 episode "Transition," Donna spends the night at his apartment and gives Josh four weeks to figure out "what they want from each other." Josh attempts to recruit Sam Seaborn to be his deputy. Sam agrees on the condition that Josh takes a vacation. In one of the last scenes of the episode, Josh is joined by Donna on a plane to his vacation site. In the series finale "Tomorrow," Josh and Donna wake up in bed together on the morning of Inauguration Day.

Reaction and influence

Entertainment Weekly described Donna as "undoubtedly one of The West Wing most indelible characters."

The Atlantic ranked Donna as 39th on their list of every character in The West Wing, describing her as "Easily the most controversial of the core cast members not named 'Mandy.

The Washington Post focuses on Donna's romantic tension with Josh Lyman, writing that while Josh and Donna's relationship was perceived as positively romantic in the time it was released, viewing the show after the Me Too movement soured the story. They named it "The Donna Problem"–that society and culture have moved on from what was acceptable a short while ago, and that well-written shows can still be relics of that older time.

References

References

  1. "Dead Irish Writers".
  2. (February 2003). "Interview with Aaron Sorkin". The Writers Guild of America, East, Inc..
  3. Moore, Frazier (February 12, 2001). [http://b4a.healthyinterest.net/news/archives/2001/02/west_wing_lover.html West Wing Lovers Are in Limbo] {{webarchive. link. (May 10, 2006. ''[[Associated Press]]''. Retrieved on December 15, 2007.)
  4. "How 'The West Wing' star Janel Moloney built her character Donna Moss 'from scratch'".
  5. Miller. (March 1, 2000). "The Real White House". [[Brill's Content]].
  6. Rosenberg, Alyssa. "The personal politics of 'The West Wing'". Washington Post.
  7. ''The West Wing'', Episode 2.14: [[The War at Home (The West Wing). The War at Home]]. Original airdate: February 14, 2001.
  8. (2014-09-12). "A Definitive Ranking of Every Character on ''The West Wing''".
  9. Hesse, Monica. (2018-02-27). "Perspective {{!}} Love-struck hero or creepy harasser? Suddenly we're seeing our favorite rom-coms in a new light.". Washington Post.

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

the-west-wing-charactersamerican-female-characters-in-televisioncanadian-female-characters-in-televisionfictional-secretariesfictional-democrats-(united-states)fictional-characters-from-minnesotatelevision-characters-introduced-in-1999