Object
President Bartlet's Bedroom Door (Residence Threshold)
A solid, inward‑swinging bedroom door at the threshold of the President's private suite: paneled wood with a discreet brass knob and latch, sound‑softening seals, and faint scuff marks from staff traffic. At night it closes behind departing aides; Leo switches the lights off and pulls it shut to convert the room from public counsel to intimate privacy, physically sealing the conversation that just occurred.
0 appearances
Purpose
To provide controllable privacy and regulated egress between the President's bedroom and adjacent private corridors; used to conclude private meetings and separate official staff business from the President's personal space.
Significance
The door functions as a ritual boundary in the scene: its closing and the lights going out mark the end of collective counsel, restore intimacy, and afford the President a protected space to reframe events and counsel staff. It underscores themes of confidentiality, moral authority, and the shift from public policy debate to personal reassurance.
Appearances in the Narrative
When this object appears and how it's used
No events recorded for this object