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When I first saw the previews for Mad Men on cable's AMC, I was sure it wasn't going to be my cup of tea. Too many smug white men chain smoking, drinking and enjoying their power. Women with Marilyn Monroe figures were on the fringes, minorities were invisible. In short, I didn't think there was much to engage me. But I decided to watch the first episode, followed by "The Making of Mad Men," with creator, writer, and executive producer Matthew Weiner discussing his vision. I became totally hooked.
Here was the type of show that invariably got yanked from network television for being edgy and cerebral. As I watched the series unfold, I realized that the show could be a window for today's young women, illustrating the conditions that shaped previous generations of feminists, from whom they often feel estranged.
It also forced me to look at and acknowledge how male behavior was constricted by formulated societal roles. Where The Man in the Grey Flannel Suit was a look at the mid-'50s simultaneous to the unfolding of the Eisenhower era, Mad Men is an examination in hindsight. Before anyone dreamed of a women's movement, black power or gay liberation, the show's characters experienced the first stirrings of awareness.
We watch with omniscience and are able to recognize the black elevator operator who is imperceptible to the employees he transports daily, the closeted homosexual who protects his true identity and the unmarried Jewish female executive looking to reframe her father's Manhattan department store without the pushcart stigma.
Each episode begins with a free falling man, accompanied by music with ominous overtones. The stage is set for a time of duplictiousness, when people were not sure of who they were, but knew who it was not safe to be. Weiner uses the Madison Avenue advertising agency, Sterling Cooper, as his setting. Their job is to sell the American public a version of what life should be. The team of executives uses its expertise to put forth a model where truth and deception are intrinsically intertwined.
Weiner treads the line between presenting male and female characters as stereotypes to be judged and evolving personalities with deep, rich complexity. He explores each individual's interior landscape, a place they are not yet willing or able to go to. At the center of the drama is Don Draper (Jon Hamm), the quintessentially tall, dark and handsome man. A strong, silent type who can't express his emotions to his wife, the roots of his psychological conflict are revealed midseason. In one of the last episodes, we see how while serving in the Korean War, he exchanges his name and dog tags with another soldier who has been killed. He takes on the dead man's name, obliterating his birth history of origin. Draper invents a fabricated identity for himself in the same way he will later develop ad campaigns for clients. His personal story becomes a metaphor for the theme of the show. How we design ourselves to present to the world, within the context of our particular culture. The '50s were the ultimate period of contrived appearances and deceptive artifice. That way of life had to lead to the explosion of the 1960s, because so many people could no longer afford to implode.
In looking at the four primary female characters, we see a spectrum of types emblematic of the time frame. They are all white, reflecting the slice of pie Weiner has cut. One, Rachel, is Jewish, which puts her squarely in the "outsider" zone. When she comes to the agency looking for counsel on how to reposition her business, it is decided that a Jewish staff member should be present at the meeting. They finally locate an employee ... someone who works in the mailroom. Rachel is independent, honest and able to function as an equal in a man's world, creating a counterpoint to Don's wife, Betty. When queried by email about her character, actress Maggie Seff described her as "a woman ahead of her time." It is significant that, although she and Don are so obviously different, they connect on a deeply instinctual level.
Betty (January Jones) is the classic Grace Kelly prototype. At the start of the series we see her suffering from numbness in her hands, a somatic condition that is the manifestation of her anxiety and emotional conflict. She begins seeing a classic Freudian therapist, who reports to her husband on her progress (a nod to the disregard of patient/doctor privilege). Betty knows that something is wrong, but she can't put her finger on what it is.
See more stories tagged with: workplace, sixties, feminism, sexism, matthew weiner, amc, mad men
Marcia G. Yerman is based in New York City. Her writings -- profiles, interviews, essays and articles -- focus on women's issues and the arts. She recently worked at the Women's Media Center as a consultant on women and culture.
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