This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/25/arts/television/don-draper-and-associates-wrap-up-season-6.html

The article has changed 4 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
As the World Turns for Mad Men and Mad Women As the World Turns for Mad Men and Mad Women
(about 1 hour later)
It was a far, far better thing that he did than he could have done.It was a far, far better thing that he did than he could have done.
In Sunday night’s finale of Season 6 of “Mad Men,” the alcoholic, debauched Don Draper (Jon Hamm) sacrificed himself so that a better man could take his place.In Sunday night’s finale of Season 6 of “Mad Men,” the alcoholic, debauched Don Draper (Jon Hamm) sacrificed himself so that a better man could take his place.
That was a Sydney Carton-like act of selflessness turned upside down. Don allowed his opposite number and better self, Ted (Kevin Rahm), to take the Sunkist job in Los Angeles. The Carton in this take on “A Tale of Two Cities” doesn’t make it possible for the other man to get the girl, but to give up that girl: the move means that Ted will put a continent between himself and his mistress, Peggy (Elisabeth Moss), to avoid destroying his wife and children. Don, who grabbed at the opportunity to start over in California, knows he has already destroyed his own family, and gives Ted the second chance in his stead.That was a Sydney Carton-like act of selflessness turned upside down. Don allowed his opposite number and better self, Ted (Kevin Rahm), to take the Sunkist job in Los Angeles. The Carton in this take on “A Tale of Two Cities” doesn’t make it possible for the other man to get the girl, but to give up that girl: the move means that Ted will put a continent between himself and his mistress, Peggy (Elisabeth Moss), to avoid destroying his wife and children. Don, who grabbed at the opportunity to start over in California, knows he has already destroyed his own family, and gives Ted the second chance in his stead.
It was a bitter, late-’60s twist on Dickens’s famous story of look-alikes switching places at the guillotine, and by now it is somewhat to be expected that the allusion is laid out elliptically. It was a previous episode, the one in which Don gets high in Los Angeles and hallucinates his own death, that was labeled “A Tale of Two Cities.”It was a bitter, late-’60s twist on Dickens’s famous story of look-alikes switching places at the guillotine, and by now it is somewhat to be expected that the allusion is laid out elliptically. It was a previous episode, the one in which Don gets high in Los Angeles and hallucinates his own death, that was labeled “A Tale of Two Cities.”
This season, which is the penultimate one in a series that spans the 1960s, from the Kennedy administration to Nixon, was at war with itself. This season, which is the penultimate one in a series that spans the 1960s, from the end of the Eisenhower administration to Nixon, was at war with itself.
The show is a literary-minded work (Don in the season premiere was reading Dante’s “Inferno” on a Hawaiian beach; another episode was titled “The Quality of Mercy,” a reference to “The Merchant of Venice”). Yet Season 6 couldn’t resist the less exalted approach of soap opera. The most apt echo wasn’t Dickens or Shakespeare but “To Have and to Hold,” the show’s fictional daytime melodrama in which Megan (Jessica Paré) played the role of twins.The show is a literary-minded work (Don in the season premiere was reading Dante’s “Inferno” on a Hawaiian beach; another episode was titled “The Quality of Mercy,” a reference to “The Merchant of Venice”). Yet Season 6 couldn’t resist the less exalted approach of soap opera. The most apt echo wasn’t Dickens or Shakespeare but “To Have and to Hold,” the show’s fictional daytime melodrama in which Megan (Jessica Paré) played the role of twins.
The distinguishing mark of a soap opera isn’t that outlandish things happen, it’s that they keep happening: evil twins reappear; dead husbands come back to life; people keep coming down with amnesia. Even the best shows lose some creative energy over time. On Season 6 of “Mad Men,” life-altering moments kept repeating themselves.The distinguishing mark of a soap opera isn’t that outlandish things happen, it’s that they keep happening: evil twins reappear; dead husbands come back to life; people keep coming down with amnesia. Even the best shows lose some creative energy over time. On Season 6 of “Mad Men,” life-altering moments kept repeating themselves.
Don’s young daughter, Sally (Kiernan Shipka), walked in on her step-grandmother having sex with Roger (John Slattery) in Season 5; in Season 6 she walked in on her father having sex with his neighbor’s wife, Sylvia (Linda Cardellini).Don’s young daughter, Sally (Kiernan Shipka), walked in on her step-grandmother having sex with Roger (John Slattery) in Season 5; in Season 6 she walked in on her father having sex with his neighbor’s wife, Sylvia (Linda Cardellini).
In Season 6 Roger’s elderly mother died, and he gave his daughter her grandmother’s jar of baptismal water from the Jordan River. Later, the elderly mother of Pete (Vincent Kartheiser) died: she was lost at sea — having fallen or having been pushed over the side of a cruise ship.In Season 6 Roger’s elderly mother died, and he gave his daughter her grandmother’s jar of baptismal water from the Jordan River. Later, the elderly mother of Pete (Vincent Kartheiser) died: she was lost at sea — having fallen or having been pushed over the side of a cruise ship.
Don is an impostor living under an assumed identity. It turns out that the unctuous people-pleaser Bob (James Wolk) is also an impostor living under an assumed identity.Don is an impostor living under an assumed identity. It turns out that the unctuous people-pleaser Bob (James Wolk) is also an impostor living under an assumed identity.
All that gothic melodrama squeezed some of the fun out of “Mad Men.”All that gothic melodrama squeezed some of the fun out of “Mad Men.”
One of the more disappointing aspects of the season has been that so much of it was joyless. The ’60s did turn bleaker, as that period’s early optimism faded into violence and rebellion, but advertising was still in its heyday at the end of the decade.One of the more disappointing aspects of the season has been that so much of it was joyless. The ’60s did turn bleaker, as that period’s early optimism faded into violence and rebellion, but advertising was still in its heyday at the end of the decade.
Don may be hurtling his way to death or self-destruction, but that doesn’t mean that others in his world have to march in lock step with his decline.Don may be hurtling his way to death or self-destruction, but that doesn’t mean that others in his world have to march in lock step with his decline.
It made poetic sense that Don’s most eloquent client pitch this season wasn’t on behalf of his own creativity, but to save an existing account with St. Joseph’s aspirin, which he did at the expense of Ted and Peggy.It made poetic sense that Don’s most eloquent client pitch this season wasn’t on behalf of his own creativity, but to save an existing account with St. Joseph’s aspirin, which he did at the expense of Ted and Peggy.
But Peggy, modeled on pioneer ad executives like Mary Wells Lawrence and Shirley Polykoff, the storied creator of the Clairol commercial line “Does she ... or doesn’t she?” is rising in the ad world without a convincing show of talent. Viewers have watched Peggy’s love life turn sour, again and again, without the corresponding sweet smell of success. This season viewers didn’t see Peggy do much brilliant work. She was mainly shown mistreating younger staff members.But Peggy, modeled on pioneer ad executives like Mary Wells Lawrence and Shirley Polykoff, the storied creator of the Clairol commercial line “Does she ... or doesn’t she?” is rising in the ad world without a convincing show of talent. Viewers have watched Peggy’s love life turn sour, again and again, without the corresponding sweet smell of success. This season viewers didn’t see Peggy do much brilliant work. She was mainly shown mistreating younger staff members.
The improving status of women was always the bright spot on a show that revels in decline, depression and dark satire. Joan (Christina Hendricks) began as a secretary and is now, at considerable personal cost, a partner; one of the better scenes of the season depicted Joan’s effort to secure the Avon account. But Joan’s story line kept getting pushed aside by the dolors of Pete, Roger and others.The improving status of women was always the bright spot on a show that revels in decline, depression and dark satire. Joan (Christina Hendricks) began as a secretary and is now, at considerable personal cost, a partner; one of the better scenes of the season depicted Joan’s effort to secure the Avon account. But Joan’s story line kept getting pushed aside by the dolors of Pete, Roger and others.
Betty (January Jones) changed her hair color, then dyed it back to blond (she looked like her own evil twin), but her personality splits were also too often eclipsed by other, less compelling women, like Sylvia.Betty (January Jones) changed her hair color, then dyed it back to blond (she looked like her own evil twin), but her personality splits were also too often eclipsed by other, less compelling women, like Sylvia.
“Mad Men” was first and foremost a naughty, knowing look at the bygone world of advertising, but lately viewers can rediscover its élan not in the show itself, but in real ads on television that feature its stars. Joan is her most alluring self not in the office, but on spots for Johnny Walker Red; Don is his most confident, compelling self not in bedrooms or boardrooms, but in voice-overs for American Airlines and Mercedes-Benz commercials.“Mad Men” was first and foremost a naughty, knowing look at the bygone world of advertising, but lately viewers can rediscover its élan not in the show itself, but in real ads on television that feature its stars. Joan is her most alluring self not in the office, but on spots for Johnny Walker Red; Don is his most confident, compelling self not in bedrooms or boardrooms, but in voice-overs for American Airlines and Mercedes-Benz commercials.
The show’s creators may be as dispirited as their main characters: 2012 was the first year since the show’s premiere that it was shut out of all the major Emmy Awards. That made all those “For Your Consideration, Emmy 2013” spots, aimed at academy voters, seem all the more desperate.The show’s creators may be as dispirited as their main characters: 2012 was the first year since the show’s premiere that it was shut out of all the major Emmy Awards. That made all those “For Your Consideration, Emmy 2013” spots, aimed at academy voters, seem all the more desperate.
The season finale wisely stripped Don of all his commitments: Megan stormed out of the apartment; his partners have forced him to go on leave. Next season, Don can keep tumbling further into oblivion, or rise anew.The season finale wisely stripped Don of all his commitments: Megan stormed out of the apartment; his partners have forced him to go on leave. Next season, Don can keep tumbling further into oblivion, or rise anew.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: June 24, 2013

An earlier version of this column misstated the span of time covered by “Mad Men.” The first season of the show is set during the final year of the Eisenhower administration, not during the Kennedy administration.