National Geographic: Inside the White House (1995)

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National Geographic: Inside the White House (1995)

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It is a simple mansion,

built of stone and irony,

a symbol of freedom

invested with the labor of slaves

and great statesman alike.

It is like no other place on earth,

a house alive with the past and present.

I deem this reply a full acceptance

of the unconditional surrender of Japan.

...that a strong and a confident

and a vigilant America

stands ready tonight...

It is an odd place,

where the monumental and

the mundane coexist.

to provide a nuclear strike capability

against the Western Hemisphere...

therefore, I shall resign

the Presidency effective

at noon tomorrow.

It is where the most critical decisions

in our history are made.

And where any American can visit.

And all the things that American

Independence means to you

and to me and to ours.

My fellow Americans,

our constitution works -

here the people rule.

Now you will journey

through time and a day

meeting the people

and hearing the stories

that give this powerful place its soul.

For this is more than just an office

or a monument or a home,

it is an American idea

known as the White House.

This isn't the biggest house.

Many and most, in even smaller countries

are much bigger.

This isn't the finest house,

but this is the best house.

It's the best house

because it has something

far more important than

numbers of people who serve,

far more important than numbers

of rooms

or how big it is,

far more important than numbers

of magnificent pieces of art.

This house has a great heart,

and that heart

comes from those who serve.

At the White House,

there is no such thing as a typical day

For those who serve inside,

today will be one of the most intense.

These people, stagehands to history

are preparing the house for the visit

of Russian President Boris Yeltsin.

Hi, Brenda, this is Gary Walters

at the White House.

How are you today.

Fine.

Is Jerry in?

Each time a foreign leader

visits the White House,

the President has an opportunity

to showcase the power

and heritage of the nation

in a setting

that embodies them in every wall,

floorboard, and stone.

This is the symbol

not only of the Presidency,

but in the eyes of the world,

of the United States of America.

Nothing compares to the simplicity

and the strength

nothing, nothing in the world like it.

...black tie, the dinner is...

will start off

with the private reception...

Very shortly the Yeltsins will arrive.

To insure a flawless visit,

there are briefings on the 1000 details

of protocol and timing.

Then in terms of the movements,

the arrival back here by the car,

going up to the stage...

The high point of the visit

will be the state dinner tonight.

Dramatic, entertaining, and essential,

the state dinner is the ultimate

expression of White House power.

Not a thing. Not a thing.

Okay, we're gonna start

the escorts out to the South Lawn now...

More than 200 reporters will cover

the visit of the Russian leader.

It will begin in a few moments

with a carefully orchestrated event

called the arrival ceremony.

Will you repeat the name again please.

Ladies and Gentlemen

this is an audience check

from the South Lawn of the White House.

Checking one, two, three, four,

five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten

ten, nine, eight, seven, six,

five, four, three, two, one.

I'm Mrs. Gore.

I'm Secretary Christopher.

Inside the White House,

with only minutes to go,

the President and the First Lady

receive their final briefing.

The only thing I don't remember

is what are the cues for down here -

both coming and going?

I hope I don't sneeze...

Ladies and Gentlemen.

The President of the United States

and the First Lady.

The White House is

so universally recognized today

that it's hard to imagine

when it didn't exist.

But almost 13 years

after the United States

had declared independence,

the city of Washington

was still nothing

but untamed woodlands.

In 1789, Congress agreed

to build a new capital city.

Ridiculed in New York and Philadelphia,

the city and the President's house

would never have been built

had it not been for one man.

Washington wanted the city built.

By law it had to be occupied

by November 1, 1800

and many forces

were acting against this new city

in the wilderness.

Washington wanted it, he wanted it

in the middle of the country,

he wanted it on the Potomac River.

And he was determined

in having those buildings,

because in having the buildings,

he would have his capital.

Its foundations were dug by slaves,

the intricate stonework

carved by Scottish masons.

More than half the workforce were

foreign born.

The workers lived at the job site

and each morning received a lb. of meat

and all the cornbread they could eat.

After one especially randy night there,

the commissioners overseeing

the project closed down the only house

of prostitution

to have ever operated

on the White House grounds.

When it was finished, it was immense;

a bigger home would not be built

in this country

until after the Civil w*r.

Today, the power of the symbol

is inescapable,

something every visiting

leader learns upon arriving.

At that moment...

...I become the United States

and he becomes Russia.

And we stand for all of our people.

And if this state visit goes well,

then it's proof that

the Cold w*r is really over.

And we're making a newer

and better world.

And I don't want to mess it up.

I want to do it right,

because it's the United States.

Conceived by President Kennedy in 1961,

the modern ceremony not only

impresses the visiting leader,

it gives him the distinction

of being welcomed here.

Together we have agreed

to safeguard nuclear materials

and to shut down

plutonium production reactors.

Together we can and we will

make a difference

not only for our own people

but also for men, women,

and children all around the world.

The receiving line's going on

right now inside.

The President and Mrs. Clinton

are receiving the official party.

We have a full day, full slate

in front of us.

We have some canopies to put up yet,

flower material to put around,

there's a lot of activities going on,

yeah.

See ya later.

All right, Jim what else you got?

In the White House basement,

the first preparations

for the state dinner are underway.

Here the butlers will find some

of the 1,500 different pieces of china

to set tonight's tables.

It's one of a hundred different tasks

the White House staff will finish

in their push to the dinner,

now ten hours away.

Upstairs, in the entrance hall,

a receiving line welcoming

the Russian delegation is concluding.

Just a few steps away,

the china is wheeled into

the old family dining room.

The White House is barely large enough

to hold a dinner like the one

planned for tonight.

So this elegant room has been converted

into a giant pantry

so butlers like Buddy Carter

can serve tonight's 150 guests.

There are so many people

that are capable of doing this job,

but I'm one of the few selected

that get to do it.

So I take a lot of pride

in what I do and I love it.

Can I speak to Jim please?

Chief Usher Gary Walters

is the house conductor.

He directs everyone

from butlers to plumbers,

all the people who serve the family

and make the house work.

Although he built the house,

George Washington d*ed

before it was finished.

John Adams, intimidated by the expense

of running such a home,

said he'd prefer a row house instead.

But Washington's house held

irresistible allure,

and on the night of November 1, 1800,

Adams became the first President

to sleep in the White House.

Well, he woke up the next morning

and he wrote a letter to his wife.

It seemed to settle in on him.

And it's really, you might say,

the first experience, you know

of a President having in that house

and see by now

it is the President's house.

It seems almost an afterthought,

it was very beautiful,

when he says, you know,

may heaven bestow the best of blessings

on this house and may none

but honest and wise men

inhabit it hereafter.

When the Johnsons

entered the White House,

the nation was still in mourning

for President John Kennedy.

One of the times that was

a throat gasping time

for me

was the morning of a December the 22nd,

when I came down to the first floor

where all of the chandeliers

had been draped in black net,

and to come back and see that gone

and the Christmas tree

brilliantly alight,

I think we had it in the Blue Room.

That was just a...

you just gasp with sort of a relief,

and now we are started,

and life will go on.

For the first families,

from the moment they move in,

life goes on in the public eye.

For their own sanity,

there must be a refuge

and at the White House it is upstairs.

Only above this stair

is privacy absolute.

Never, while the Presidential family

is in residence,

may cameras pass beyond this gate.

Cameras above the first floor

are still rare,

because this is where the families live.

The second and third floors

are one of the few places on earth

where the families

are not accompanied by Secret Service.

At the heart of the second floor

is the Yellow Oval Room

which leads to the Truman Balcony.

These rooms provide a haven,

a place safe from everything

but history.

For me, I would get so caught up

in what I was doing

that you forget where you are...

that this is home.

But then we'd sit down at dinner

at night

and here would be

Abraham Lincoln's plate,

and then it would all just kind

of come back,

here I am in this historic house,

and it was overwhelming sometimes.

While overwhelming, this public housing

does come with some useful amenities.

Living in the White House

is quite a dream for any homemaker.

There's somebody to do everything,

and it's not just the wonderful

butlers and maids,

but if you need a plumber,

all you do is pick up the phone

and the plumber is there right away.

Well, when President Johnson

first came into office,

the Chief Usher call me up and said

the President wants to talk to you

about the shower.

He says, "Come up," so I came up.

The President stepped off

the elevator coming down

going to the Oval Office that morning.

So, he told me he wanted more water,

colder water, and he said,

"If I have to, I'll go over

to the Elms and take my shower."

So the first thing I did,

I got a chauffeur and went to the Elms

to see what he had over there.

And we came back to the White House

and we thought we had it,

you know, perfect for him, you know.

We had it much better

than he had at the Elms.

But, he wasn't satisfied with that.

He wanted 50 degree cold water.

He wanted body sprays around him.

And then he told me that

he wanted a showerhead

about two feet off the floor.

He said, "I want a showerhead

right there."

I said, "Well, you hold your finger there

Mr. President.

Let me mark that spot."

In your home, probably you have

about eight to ten pounds

of running pressure on your showerhead

when it's running.

His was 110 pounds of pressure

while it was running.

It was like a mini-car wash.

The Chief Usher was Rex Scouten.

He said,

"I have to try that shower out."

And it just kind of pinned him

right up against the wall.

The employees are like a family

because everybody see, you know -

it's like you've got

different departments

and everything like that.

But it's not operated that way.

If you see something

that needs to be done,

regardless of which department it is,

you do it.

That's why we say it's like a family.

I remember one time teasing a member

of the staff, one of the butlers,

and they are really like family

and treated our children like family,

and I said,

"If you don't behave,

I'm going to get you fired."

And he burst out laughing and said,

"Presidents

come and go, butlers stay."

In 1945, a young electrician

named John Muffler came to work here.

For the last 50 years,

in addition to electrical jobs,

he has handled the little annoyances

of life for ten first families,

like replacing watch batteries

and fixing eye- glasses.

You want to do the Ground Floor, right?

No one in the history of the House

has served here longer.

Am I going too fast for you?

The man with the longest tenure here,

fittingly, also is in charge of time.

Every Friday, Mr. Muffler

winds the clocks

in every part of the White House.

How many clocks are there in the place?

Several.

...Mr. President?

Yes, it's a beautiful clock.

And it still keeps good time.

Do all these clocks run,

Mr. President...

Yes, they all run.

We have a special man

who winds clocks every Friday.

I'd always managed to be there

when he'd come in somehow,

and one morning he said to me,

"Son, do you know why

when I come into this office,

these pictures are all crooked

and all bent out of shape?"

I said, "No, Sir, Mr. President,

unless the cleaners,

when they're dusting,

they move the pictures around."

He said, "No, no, no,

that's not the reason."

He said, "Would you like to know?"

I said, "Yes Sir, Mr. President,

I would."

And he said, "The rotation

of the earth causes that."

And I said,

"Yes Sir, Mr. President."

But he went over every morning

and straightened 'em...

Oh, I love Mr. Muffler.

I can't do anything like program VCRs

or set digital clocks

and so I'm always needing his help

to come to my rescue,

but he's a perfect example

of the kind of...

...dedicated service that people

have given to the White House

and to Presidents and their families

for over 200 plus years.

United Nations w*r Council.

President Roosevelt

and Prime Minister Churchill

at the White House...

Because of what happens here,

even in the wee hours of the night,

someone is always on call.

Alonzo Fields,

White House butler for 21 years,

developed a unique relationship

with Prime Minister Winston Churchill.

Around 1:30, I decided that

the Prime Minister satisfied

and I was thinking of going...

really going to bed.

And the bell buzzed.

I went in, the Prime Minister

is walking up and down...

...with this scotch in his hand,

talking, quoting,

and saying different things and he says,

"We're trying to find out

from the Russians

what we can do for them.

But what can we do?

It's like an iron shade."

And then he stopped

and stomped his foot,

"Oh, make that an iron curtain."

And then he saw me

and my eyes saw the bottle was empty.

"My poker face didn't fool you."

He says, "Yes, my man,

I need some more to drink."

He says, "I have a w*r to fight.

And I need fortitude."

So I proceeded and got

a bottle of scotch and opened it

and poured the Prime Minister

a drink and then I said to him,

"Mr. Prime Minister,

will that be all for the night?"

And he says, "I don't know.

I can depend on you."

And I said, "Well, Mr. Prime Minister,

what is it?"

And he says, "Well, if ever

I'm accused of being a teetotaler,

I want you to come to my defense."

I says, "Mr. Prime Minister,

I'll defend you to the last drop."

It's hard to imagine today,

but back in the Madison Administration

during the w*r of 1812, the British Army

captured the city of Washington

and b*rned the White House.

The Madisons were trying to keep

a cheery face on it all

and they had a dinner party.

And some of the most amusing

in context

letters of the Madison paper

are regrets to

that particular dinner party

that night in August.

Lo and behold,

you could hear the g*nf*re.

Mrs. Madison finally fled herself,

left the house alone with Paul Jennings

a sl*ve.

Jennings was to bank the fire,

ironically, to keep it

from burning down.

But the British came in

at eleven at night.

They saw the dinner.

The officers sat down

and had the dinner.

The furniture was piled up

in the rooms with lamp oil on it,

the windows broken out.

And about 1 a.m.,

the British stood with flaming javelins

in a circle around the house

and Lieutenant Pratt fired his p*stol.

The javelins were thrown

in the house and it exploded.

Mrs. William Thornton a British citizen,

was there and said,

"It glowed like a great plum cake."

The White House is reduced to ashes

except for the stone walls

that General Washington

had cherished so.

Upstairs on the Truman Balcony

we have one block that's unpainted.

But whenever we have people up there,

I take them outside and I look at it,

and I say,

"You remember this house b*rned in 1814."

I look at it all the time,

every time we have any kind

of international incident.

When Captain O'Grady was rescued

out of Bosnia,

I went out on the Truman Balcony

and I looked at the burn marks.

But I'm very aware every day

I go to work about how this house

carries the whole story of America

and how we're still creating that story

and what our obligations are.

Throughout the day during a state visit

meetings between the official delegations

are held and the press moves

from room to room

for photo opportunities.

...care to respond to

the health care situation...

Those living here are surrounded

by constant reminders...

...that they are not living

a private life.

"I feel as though I have just turned

into a piece of public property,"

Jacqueline Kennedy said

after only two months in White House.

Grandpa lives in the big White House

in Washington.

And Grandma lives there too.

And there she is

with two of the grandchildren...

as the entire family

goes to the East Room

to pose for the News of the Day camera.

The South Lawn has always been

the quintessential American backyard...

...something between a playground

and a formal garden.

President Wilson kept

a flock of sheep here

and he also welcomed

the first autogiro.

Each morning during

the Hoover Administration

the Cabinet played an exercise game

with an eight-pound medicine ball.

When Ike installed

the first putting green,

the stage was set for confrontation

with the local constituents.

Squirrels have created a nutty problem

at the White House

with President Eisenhower complaining

that the four-legged vandals are

tearing up his private putting green.

The President, a very earnest golfer,

brought on a mighty political storm

with his decision

to banish the squirrels,

even though nobody has found out

whether the animals

are Republicans or Democrats.

Well, the South Lawn is well inhabited

by squirrels.

And up at Camp David,

I noticed that the oak trees

shed acorns to a great extent.

And the squirrels didn't do much

about them.

So when the day came to go back down

to the White House,

I'd fill my pockets with acorns.

And there,

up and down and in the Rose Garden,

there would be these squirrels

and I'd throw the acorns out to them

and you'd see them, wham, they'd

just go and grab for those acorns

One occasion, at Camp David,

I didn't get any acorns,

and when I came back,

well, I went into the Oval Office

and we were having a meeting there.

I looked and in every one

of those windows,

the squirrels were standing

on their hind legs

and looking through their front legs

inside.

And they're looking at me.

And they literally...

I could see were saying,

"Where are the acorns?"

At about 3 p.m.,

the pianist for tonight's entertainment

practices in the East Room.

One floor below,

in the White House kitchen,

chef Walter Scheib is gearing up

for dinner now only five hours away.

In addition to the normal pressure

to please, turn-of-the-century chefs

...had to routinely serve seven-course

family meals

and twenty-course state dinners.

The pleasures of these meals

were not lost on President Taft,

who tipped the scales

at more than 300 pounds.

Though a success in the kitchen,

the chef's handy work

was causing problems elsewhere.

White House bathtubs proved

too narrow for Taft;

to his consternation

the President was frequently

left stuck in the tub.

White House ushers were sent scurrying

to find a proper vessel.

When it finally arrived,

it was 41 inches wide,

could hold nearly 65 gallons of water,

and all the men who installed it.

Tonight's guests will be served

one of the legendary

White House desserts,

the creation of pastry

chef Roland Mesnier.

That goes back.

This is when I am even more nervous

than normal.

You have to remember, you know,

when you serve a state dinner,

who are your guests?

The dining room is filled with

extremely important people,

people who have been everywhere,

that have tasted all sorts of food,

and our job is to make sure that

the guests will leave the White House

feeling that the President

and Mrs. Clinton did an excellent job

receiving the guests,

not the pastry chef, no,

or anybody else, but that

the President and the First Lady.

That has to be very well understood.

I think if you can do that,

then I think you do your job very well.

Mesnier's almond baskets

will be the dinner's grand finale.

It's the type of culinary touch

that has always attracted

the attention of gourmets,

including Julia Child.

While history has recorded the names

of almost every White House chef,

the names and lives of the kitchen

assistants and the servants

who toiled on the staff

have gone largely unrecorded.

In 1909, Mrs. Taft considered

f*ring all of the white ushers

because they couldn't be treated

like servants in the same way as blacks.

She was persuaded not to.

Despite the discrimination,

black Americans who worked here then

created a vibrant world.

Their White House positions placed them

in the upper strata

of Washington's black society.

James Coats, Adolph Bird,

and Arlen Dixon,

I remember the first three butlers

I met during the Tafts Administration.

Lillian Rogers Parks,

a White House seamstress for 30 years,

was introduced to that society

by her mother, Maggie Rogers,

a maid to Mrs. Taft.

They had their homes

and they entertained

and then we had clubs.

That was very classy.

And that gave them the idea

to get together

and have a little a club

at the White House

called the Chandeliers.

Named for the cut glass fixtures

in the East Room, the Chandelier Club,

like many social clubs

in the early 1900s,

held a ball each year.

Though it was not staged there,

the White House imprimatur

made the Chandelier Ball exclusive.

The Marine Band played and

White House dignitaries always attended.

But outside the ball,

black workers were still treated

as second-class citizens.

In 1902, President Teddy Roosevelt

invited the noted educator,

Booker T. Washington,

to the White House for dinner.

Press reaction in the South

and the North was severe.

Roosevelt was chastened.

No black American received

another social invitation

to the White House for 28 years.

In the entrance hall,

the honor guard practices

for their ceremonial march

later this evening.

They are performing a kind of ritual

that helps define what has become

a national shrine.

For the occupants of the late 1800s,

the White House was too small

and not nearly grand enough

for the nation's aspirations.

There were frequent and elaborate plans

to expand or even abandon it.

I don't think the White House

would have survived the late 1860s,

had it not been where Lincoln had lived.

You think of Lincoln in his nightshirt

going down the hall at night

with the wind blowing

and his dreams that

his secretary sold him out,

and his wife's problems,

the child's death.

And it all happened in the White House.

And it's from the White House

he left in his carriage to go to

Ford's Theater

and it was to the White House

he was brought back dead.

It's not too excessive to say that

Lincoln sanctified the White House.

Now those...

this is what we call pull sugar,

which is simply water,

glucose and lemon juice...

With only hours to go

before the evening begins,

pastry chef Roland Mesnier is finishing

tonight's culinary grand finale.

Until you feel that you are...

that the ribbons is wide enough

because as you pull it thin,

it will get narrow on you.

That's...

just like a baby,

very, very careful,

you have to kind of have to tickle it

and massage it and be nice to it.

See, look at these.

Precision and timing is the key

to beautiful ribbons.

It makes you very nervous because of

the kind of material we're using.

Some as you can see shatters

just like this.

And, you know, one touch,

and that's it.

One wrong move,

in the corner of the dough.

So I think every state dinner

I age about two or three years.

Mesnier's creations represent

the sophistication

of the White House staff.

But it wasn't always this way.

At the end of the 19th century,

the President's house reflected

the manners of a frontier nation,

not the style of

an emerging imperial power.

It was a home comparable to many other

residences from its beginnings,

and then enormous demands came upon it

and we've had a rather imperial

community come to Washington.

General Grant, goodness,

he went out and got an old orderly

in the m*llitary that was

a friend of his to come be the chef.

And they had a state dinner and here,

apple pie came out

and big slabs of roast beef

with gravy dripping off of the plates

and Mrs. Grant was mortified.

These ambassadors didn't know

what to do with it -

get on the floor and chew it

or what.

By 1902, a brilliant young man

named George Cortelyou

had changed all of that.

At Roosevelt's request, he created

an almost regal White House style

that redefined the house

for the new century.

As part of the new look,

Teddy Roosevelt officially changed

the name of the mansion:

the new letterhead read simply:

"White House, Washington."

As part of Teddy Roosevelt's

re-invention of the White House,

he added a new wing.

It is in this Wing,

not in the house itself,

that the most famous room

in America stands: The Oval Office.

Frankly... and definitely

there is danger ahead.

Danger against which we must prepare.

We are now prepared to destroy,

more rapidly and completely,

every productive enterprise

the Japanese have in any city.

We shall destroy their docks,

their factories, and their communication.

It shall be the policy of this nation

to regard any nuclear m*ssile

launched from Cuba... against

any nation in the Western Hemisphere

as an att*ck by the Soviet Union

on the United States.

Because of the history

that has been made here,

the White House is the most

potent symbol of power in the world.

Inside the symbol with only an hour

before the first guests arrive,

the White House staff is in a whirl

of final preparation.

No, no, no.

They greet these people here...

Each of the head people:

The tables have been set up very well.

I've personally checked them...

I hope there's nobody here.

It's those mundane chores

that have to be done.

That's part of what the evening's about

...is part of setting a mood

as well as entertaining guests.

We're trying to set a mood which is

a nice pleasant evening for everybody.

Since any of these plates

could be the President's,

each has to be perfect.

Though each guest eats the same meal,

everyone doesn't get to

dine with the President.

All of tonight's 151 guests will not

fit in the State Dining Room

so some of them will have to eat here

in the Ground Floor Map Room.

To the Russians

who have been relegated here,

someone may have to explain

the American concept of "the kids table"

You gotta know what you're doin'.

Not just anyone can serve the President

and his guests.

Besides careful training,

each of these waiters has undergone

an FBI background check.

The State Dining Room,

like the rest of the house, is ready,

but Gary Walters isn't

taking any chances.

If the Chief Usher had made a similar

inspection of the House 45 years ago,

he would have found

a few things out of place.

In 1948, the White House

was completely gutted.

The floors that Jackson, Lincoln,

and two Roosevelts had walked across

were gone.

After five years of demolition

and construction,

the White House was res rebuilt.

The inside of the house was put back

exactly as before.

Though it was now constructed

of steel and concrete,

Jefferson and Lincoln would have

easily recognized their old home.

And the idea is preserved.

That's really what it is.

The idea of the house and the symbol

is bigger than any material part of it.

And that has remained intact

and is really more powerful

than ever today.

By the time the President and First Lady

reach the first floor,

everything is ready.

All the preparations have

led to this moment;

now all they need are guests.

At night, it's a very different thing

than what happens at the beginning

of the state visit.

We will have worked all day long.

And the visit will either

have been a success

or a moderate success

or maybe not so successful,

but what you want to do at night

is to simply seal the best

possible relationship you can

between the leaders of the countries.

So at night you really just want them

to enjoy themselves,

you want them to have a good time

at the dinner,

to say what they want to say

at the toast

and just be glad that they can be there.

In the family's private quarters

on the seldom seen Second Floor

of the White House,

one of the most critical moments

of the visit unfolds.

Here, the President and First Lady

have a chance to relax with their guest

in the warm atmosphere of a home.

The press waits at the foot

of the Grand Stair where in a moment

one of the most formal ceremonies

of the state visit will occur:

the Presidential entrance march.

Ladies and Gentlemen, President of

the United States and Mrs. Clinton,

accompanied by the President of

the Russian Federation and Mrs. Yeltsin.

The receiving line is charged

with excitement

because famous as the guests may be,

they are about to meet the two

most powerful men in the world.

The rising anticipation of the evening

is peaking by the time

the official toasts are made.

President Yeltsin's should be finishing

any minute now.

He's going a couple a minutes

over his five minutes.

He's up to about eight minutes now

of speaking.

And finally, dinner begins.

While dinner continues upstairs,

downstairs,

the staff is battling back

an avalanche of dishes.

Working hard. Working hard.

Cocktails is serving.

After the cocktails

that's when it starts flowing in.

Start coming down and after that,

it's nonstop.

Do you kind of forget where you are?

No, no. You know you're in the kitchen

washing and drying dishes.

At the top of the winding stair

that connects the two worlds,

days of work are about to payoff

for pastry chef Roland Mesnier.

If you are hungry enough,

you can eat the whole thing, yes.

On evenings like these,

dinner is followed by a performance

in the East Room.

During the civil rights movement,

singer Sarah Vaughan performed here.

At the end of the evening,

a staff member found her sobbing

in her dressing room.

When asked what was wrong,

she said, "Nothing is the matter.

It's just that 20 years ago

when I came to Washington,

I couldn't even get a hotel room,

and tonight I sang for the President

of the United States in the White House-

and then he asked me to dance with him.

It is more than I can stand!"

Tonight, Diva Kathleen Battle

lends her voice to the house.

I think one of the attractions

of the White House,

one of the things that makes it

so precious in our country,

is the fact that a family really

is living there every day.

That it's a center not only

of political power and prestige

on a global basis,

but has that human touch of individuals

enjoying life within those...

I guess you might say,

hallowed halls.

Tomorrow it will start all over again

and every day for as long

as there is a republic.

Families will come and go,

just as butlers and maids do,

dignitaries and old gentlemen

who wind clocks.

These are the people

who furnish this house and give it life

and as they do,

an American idea endures.
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