The
Mad Men-inspired products in popular
consumer culture have multiplied since the show’s 2007 debut. The boxed series
themselves are works of collectible memorabilia, and fans can read books
discussing everything from the food to the ad culture of 1960s New York. Mattel even designed a line of
limited-edition Barbies modeled after Don, Betty, Roger, and
Joan. (Of course, the Barbie set doesn’t
include the iconic Sterling Cooper cocktail glasses, but you can buy a set here.)
But Mad
Men’s influence in the
fashion and design world is arguably its greatest impact on popular culture
today. Fans can buy Mad Men-inspired makeup, nail polish, and even Brooks Brothers suits. Janie Bryant, the costume designer for the
show, collaborated with Banana Republic to create two Mad Men collections. Bryant also wrote The Fashion
File: Advice, Tips, and Inspiration from the Costume Designer of Mad Men,
which offers women fashion and beauty advice now that “finally, it’s hip to
dress well again.” Bryant even wants to
help men “look a little more Don Draper-dashing.” As January Jones explains in the introduction
to Bryant’s book,
“I think one of the hugest
compliments to Janie’s work on Mad
Men is how it has
inspired modern fashion. Michael Kors
was one of the first to come out with a Mad
Men-inspired
collection. We’re suddenly seeing a
waistline again and the silhouettes of the ‘50s and early ‘60s. I’m happily surprised to see women dressing
like women again; a feminine tribute through tailoring.” (xi)
Like Jones, the post-World War II
fashion world was also eager for a return to traditionally feminine dress. As Meenasarani Linde Murugan notes in her
article “Maidenform: Temporalities of Fashion,” wartime rationing meant that the “lingerie,
corsets, waist cinchers, and girdles” that made a hyper-feminine silhouette
possible became “excessive,” and so women’s clothing “stressed simplicity and
utility in the silhouette” that was often coded “more ‘masculine’” in style
(169). Furthermore, as Mabel Rosenheck
describes in “Swing Skirts and Swinging Singles: Mad Men, Fashion, and Cultural Memory,”
During the Second World War, women
went to work alongside men and, at least in heavy industry, adopted male
fashions: pants, overalls, and caps (Steele, 80-82). After 1945, with soldiers returning from
overseas, women were supposed to return to the home, give their jobs back to
men, resume their unpaid duties as wives and mothers, and refashion themselves
in New Look femininity.” (166-167)
This “New Look,” popularized by
Christian Dior in 1947, included an “exaggerated hourglass shape and full
skirt” that, like Victorian fashions, required “a petticoat, crinoline, and
corset,” as Caroline Hamilton discusses in “Seeing the World Second Hand: Mad Men and the Vintage Consumer.” So, the New Look marked a return to exaggerated,
normative gender roles, as shaping undergarments became once again “practical”
and necessary to construct the “natural” female form.
In
the early 1960s, the rise of the working woman contributed to the demise of the
New Look. Rosenheck describes how the
“tight waist and multiple, full stiff petticoats supporting circle skirts” gave
way to more practical “tailored, figure-hugging sheaths” which allowed
secretaries to move more freely around offices.
While Joan and the Sterling Cooper secretaries have escaped the
petticoat as working women, they have not abandoned shaping undergarments. In
her book, Bryant describes how
“The actors saunter into the
fitting room wearing contemporary clothes and makeup. It’s my job to transport these actors back to
another era and help them become their characters. How to turn a fitting room into a time
machine? My secret weapon for the women
is a cache of undergarments, from closed-bottom girdles with garters to lacy
bullet brassieres. These foundations
affect how the characters walk, sit, and sigh, and the transformation begins
with that first breath.” (xiv)
Christina Hendricks admits that she has “two
scars from the rubber where [she attaches her] garters,” and that she “would
complain more, but [the garments] make [her] look good.” For example, the girdle “changed her posture
and forced her to walk with more confidence in her stride, making her feel good
about how she looks” despite the physical “toll on the body.” Interestingly, despite today’s focus on
comfortable, practical fashion, mid-century styles so dependent on body-shaping
undergarments are nevertheless idealized by fashion designers and consumers
alike.
While
most of the women in Mad
Men wear the 1960s
sheath dress, Betty and the other suburban housewives are generally dressed in
the New Look. For example, in Episode
2.3, “The Benefactor,” Jennifer Crane wears a late-50s, full-skirted shirtdress
while knitting baby clothes and waiting for her husband to come home. Although Betty’s riding costume includes
pants, boots, and a tweed jacket at the stable, her outfit is still hyper-feminized
in comparison to Sara Beth Carson’s. While both women wear red lipstick and
pearl earrings--in the clip-on style of the 1960s--Sara Beth’s loose slacks and
masculine necktie contrast with Betty’s fitted jodhpurs and bow tie. And, after riding, Betty immediately goes
home to “get cleaned up,” or to return to her New Look femininity.
At
Lutece with Don and clients, Betty returns wears a girlish bright pink halter
dress with a full skirt, which contrasts with Bobbie Barrett’s deep green,
fitted frock. Don has instructed Betty
to “be shiny and bright” to please Jimmy, and she succeeds. However, Betty’s relationship to Don can
never be anything more than subordinate.
While Bobbie occupies a modern status as both wife and manager to her
husband, Betty describes herself as “a housewife” with two children. Bobbie’s sheath dress allows her to move
fluidly through the public sphere, while Betty’s full skirt and petticoats keep
her relegated to the domestic sphere as a visual symbol of postwar
femininity.
I think you are entirely write that Betty and Bobbie Barrett dress in ways that enunciate the roles they want to play; Bobbie famously (among Mad Men enthusiasts) is the character who says, "This is America. Pick a job and then become the person who does it." As this statement itself suggests, much of what do in taking on a role is to perform it convincingly. The sheath dress may seem to enable a more public persona than the the a-line or full-skirted kind but in actuality there's a sense in which both involve a lot of doing. Hendricks both likes the effect of girdled look and observes the wear and tear it makes on her body. Keeping one's full-skirted look fresh and clean while doing housework is no doubt harder than it looks. There seems to be a kind of a dialetical relation behind the notion that "clothes make the woman," no?
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