The Tremor: An Unsigned Signature
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Charlie hands Bartlet papers for signature, and Bartlet asks for aspirin, revealing he has a headache.
Bartlet dismisses Charlie's concern about his headache, insisting he's fine and will sign the papers in the car.
Bartlet gets into the limousine and attempts to sign the papers, but his hand trembles, forcing him to stop.
Bartlet closes the folder without signing and instructs the motorcade to go, visibly struggling to control his trembling hand.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Concerned and alert; balancing duty to preserve the President's privacy with instinct to ensure his wellbeing.
Presents the folder of papers to the President, offers to fetch aspirin and call the doctor, stands by deferentially as Bartlet declines and says he'll sign in the car, observes Bartlet's tremor discreetly as he enters the limousine.
- • Ensure the President's health is monitored and get medical help if needed.
- • Complete administrative tasks (get documents signed) while following Bartlet's instructions.
- • Protect the President from embarrassment or public exposure of vulnerability.
- • The President's physical condition should be handled discreetly to avoid political damage.
- • Small medical issues can escalate and should be observed.
- • Following the President's lead demonstrates loyalty and preserves stability.
Feigned calm masking anxiety and a practical worry about concealment—projecting competence while privately startled by physical lapse.
Performs a public-facing exit: answers a reporter, kisses Abbey, accepts Charlie's folder, jokes about aspirin, insists he'll sign in the car. Inside the limo he reveals a visible hand tremor, closes the folder unsigned, steadies his hand and orders the motorcade to go.
- • Preserve public confidence and avoid signaling weakness to the press.
- • Complete necessary paperwork while minimizing exposure of any medical problem.
- • Protect Abbey and staff from unnecessary alarm or scrutiny.
- • Maintain command of the moment and the schedule (get moving).
- • Revealing a physical problem would harm the campaign and public trust.
- • He can control the narrative by staying composed and postponing disclosure.
- • His aides (Charlie) will handle logistics and discretion.
- • A small symptom is manageable and not worth immediate medical escalation in public.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Bartlet asks Charlie to 'score me a couple of aspirin'—the aspirin functions as a shorthand for an otherwise unnamed physical complaint. It is invoked but never procured, serving narratively as a small, domestic attempt to treat a symptom while avoiding medicalization or spectacle.
Mentioned by Bartlet as Abbey 'taking the next plane,' the plane operates as a logistical object that explains Abbey's quick exit and compresses the farewell, increasing the urgency of the moment and limiting time for private remediation.
The limousine's enclosed folder and interior become the site of revelation: Bartlet opens the folder to sign, his hand trembles, he snaps it closed without signing. The object (the limo as a contained space) facilitates a private exposure of physical frailty away from cameras.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The motorcade functions as the transitional conduit that moves Bartlet away from public scrutiny toward seclusion. It is the mechanism by which the unsigned paperwork and the revealed tremor are carried into ongoing narrative consequence.
The presidential limousine (interior) is the sealed, intimate setting where the President's tremor is revealed. Its tinted windows and leather cabin turn it into a confessional and a place for undisclosed vulnerabilities, separating public performance from private reality.
The church's broad front steps operate as the public stage where press scrutiny, ritual farewell, and political theater converge. Reporters shout questions, the kiss is exchanged and the handoff of paperwork occurs here, creating a public pressure-cooker that forces composure.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Bartlet's private struggle with his trembling hand in the motorcade echoes Abbey's later concern about his health during the victory speech, both highlighting his underlying physical challenges."
"Bartlet's private struggle with his trembling hand in the motorcade echoes Abbey's later concern about his health during the victory speech, both highlighting his underlying physical challenges."
Key Dialogue
"CHARLIE: These are for your signature. BARTLET: Yeah. Listen, you think you could score me a couple of aspirin? CHARLIE: Yes, sir. You got a headache? BARTLET: I'm fine. CHARLIE: Should I ask the doctor...? BARTLET: No, it's just a headache. Just me and you today, okay. I'm fine."
"BARTLET: I'll sign these in the car."
"BARTLET: Okay, this can wait. Let's go."