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As Mad Men season concludes, costume styles show the way forward

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Christina Hendricks as Joan Harris and Jon Hamm as Don Draper in a scene from Mad Men. (Photo courtesy of Jordin Althaus/AMC.)

Mad Men has long been lauded for the way its transported the audience back to the 1960s. At the start, it showed that its characters weren't ready for the changes that were in store. In the season that just ended, author Tom Fitzgerald says the costumes don't just reflect states of mind, but individual plot elements.


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Hand it to AMC's Mad Men: on its own, it has reshaped the way we think about the 1960s.

Much of that is the work of costume designer Janie Bryant, whose outfits and shifts in style signal the tensions in 1960s America.

Writer Tom Fitzgerald deconstructs the characters' clothes in obsessive detail each week for tomandlorenzo.com and Slate. Fitzgerald said in the early seasons, Bryant dressed the characters as if they were still living in the 1950s to reflect how unprepared they were for the current decade.

"That's why Betty worked a very Grace Kelly look and Joan used to work a very Marilyn Monroe look, because these were iconic 1950s women," Fitzgerald said.

This season, Fitzgerald noticed the clothes reflecting arcs in the plotline. The rose motifs on the dresses worn by office manager Joan got smaller and smaller as her marriage soured. As Peggy the copywriter rises in power in the office, she’s often seen in a golden yellow.

"Whenever she wears that in the office, it usually signals something good is happening in her career," Fitzgerald said.

As the show approaches 1968, the counterculture is poised to arrive on the scene in force, but Fitzgerald thinks the show will avoid excesses, instead reflecting the reality that some people are more able to change than others.

"Don is going to end the '60s in a skinny tie and a skinny lapel jacket," Fitzgerald said. "He's not going to grow sideburns or start wearing Nehru jackets."

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maddfan 12 June, 2012 12:38:47
The costumes leave out the nylons and sex that got the show started. The one thing they took back to the 60's is political correctness... BUMMER
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