Before the Debate, Putting on a Game Face NEW YORK -- Sen. Bob Graham is taking an awfully long time in the men's room.
Howard Dean is waiting outside. Sen. John Edwards was in before Graham, looking intently in the mirror and breathing deeply (according to a source in the men's room).
Here comes Sen. John Kerry, bounding around a corner. Dean eyes him thoughtfully. Things can get a little Darwinian, especially when a political debate is about to begin and there's a shortage of toilets in the backstage greenroom area.
"There's a line here," Dean informs Kerry, his archrival in the race to succeed George Bush in the White House and Bob Graham in the john. Both men laugh.
Kerry, who recently underwent prostate surgery, is in no position to wait. The hallway is congested. The debate will last two hours. He asks an NBC staffer to check out the women's room. All clear, she says.
Kerry walks in. An aide stands guard outside the door.
Debate greenroom areas incubate a distinctive, if rarely seen, genre of political anthropology. These are tightly restricted places where debate participants (like stage actors or talk-show guests) wait to go on stage. It is a sanctuary in which to perform last-minute preparation rituals. Ronald Reagan drank a glass of red wine in his greenroom. Bill Clinton sometimes bounced a basketball and almost always ate bananas. Al Gore got snippy if too many people started hanging around. Sen. Joe Lieberman does push-ups.
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