History is littered with examples of the havoc wreaked by politiciansâ will to power. No wonder, then, that voters cling to the fantasy of the self-effacing candidateâthe kind who demonstrates his worthiness of the office by not wanting it at all. The jaunty and absorbing new miniseries âDeath by Lightningâ posits that America had the closest thing to such a leader in James Garfield (played by Michael Shannon), an obscure Ohio congressman who nominates someone else for the Presidency at the 1880 Republican National Convention with such stirring oratory that he himself ends up on the ticket. By then, the G.O.P. had predominated since the end of the Civil War, fifteen years prior, and had descended into machine politics. Garfield, an idealistic moralist, happens to catch his colleagues at a time that even the movers and shakers have tired of the corruption. âWeâre the party of Lincoln,â one of them says. âWe ought to live up to it for once.â
âDeath by Lightning,â a four-part limited series now streaming on Netflix, styles itself as âa true story about two men the world forgotâ: Garfield, who would become the twentieth President of the United States, and Charles Guiteau (Matthew Macfadyen), his eventual assassin. The showâs creator and writer, Mike Makowsky, sets the action firmly in the post-Reconstruction era: the Civil War casts a long shadow, and Garfieldâs chief obstacle in the election is not his Democratic opponent but a cynical operator within his own party whose influence stems from the spoils system. Yet Makowskyâs irony- and anachronism-laced retelling makes the story modern. Characters curse freely (âfuck itâ), and Guiteauâs first sceneâa parole hearing in which heâs called âa liar and a fraudââalludes to his stint at the âfree-love colonyâ in Oneida, New York. Guiteauâs disgusted brother-in-law later calls it what it is: âa sex cult.â
Both Garfield and Guiteau hunger for glory, though Garfield is better at hiding it. At the Convention, he makes a show of dissuading his supporters; afterward, he campaigns from the porch of his farmhouse. Guiteau, by contrast, announces his desire for fame. Were he born a century later, he mightâve tried to get on TV or launched a YouTube channel. Instead, consigned to the eighteen-hundreds, he pitches anyone whoâll listen on his grand plans to start a newspaper. Scrabbling for purchase in society, he accosts senators he knows by sightâsuch as the New York power broker Roscoe Conkling (Shea Whigham), who pulled the strings for Garfieldâs predecessor, Ulysses S. Grant, and the Maine lawmaker James Blaine (Bradley Whitford), who loathes all that Conkling represents. But Blaine is a pragmatic operator in his own right, so itâs he who chooses Garfieldâs running mate: Conklingâs charming but dim-witted enforcer, Chester A. Arthur (Nick Offerman).
Perhaps fittingly for a show about a bunch of forgotten names, âDeath by Lightningâ is a delightful showcase for undersung character actors. Makowsky has a sure hand in dramatizing the legislatorsâ schemes and counterschemes to wrest control of the Party, and thus determine the future of the country. The most satisfying period dramas evoke a bygone era even as they speak to the current moment, and âDeath by Lightningâ is no exception, recalling another epoch when hollowed-out political parties could be co-opted, for good or for ill, by canny outsiders. A government of the people, by the people, for the people is a noble enterprise, but, as Garfield himself declares, âNo great wisdom hasnât been without a touch of madness.â
Since history itselfâor Wikipedia, for viewers who like to Google while they watchâis a spoiler for the seriesâ denouement, the suspense lies in whether Garfield is the starry-eyed naïf that Conkling and Arthur believe him to be, or whether he has the potential to effect real change. In the early days of his Administration, his would-be appointments are stalled by political rivals, and his days are packed with unproductive meetings with members of the public. Guiteau eventually worms his way into an audience, ostensibly seeking an ambassadorship for his dubious contributions to the campaign but, in reality, requesting a path to greatness. The President made it there, from similarly humble beginnings; why canât he? The long-awaited encounter is anticlimactic: Garfield demurs, declaring that it is only God who is great. The humility that got him into the Oval Office threatens to oust him from it.