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Mad Men's' other Emmy episode entries

 

BEST DRAMA SERIES
"Smoke Gets In Your Eyes" (Episode 1) or "The Wheel" (Episode 13)

BEST DRAMA ACTOR
Jon Hamm, "Mad Men" - "The Wheel"

BEST DRAMA ACTRESS
Elisabeth Moss - "Hobo Code" - Episode 8

BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR
Vincent Kartheiser - "New Amsterdam" - Episode 4
John Slattery - "Long Weekend" - Episode 10

BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS
January Jones - "The Wheel" - Episode 13
Christina Hendricks - "Babylon" - Episode 10
Maggie Siff - "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" – Episode 1

BEST GUEST ACTOR
Robert Morse - "Nixon vs. Kennedy" - Episode 12

BEST GUEST ACTRESS
Rosemarie Dewitt- "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" – Episode 1

BEST DIRECTION OF A DRAMA SERIES
Phil Abraham - "Hobo Code" – Episode 8
Andrew Bernstein -"Babylon," - Episode 7
Lesli Linka Glatter - "5g," - Episode 5
Tim Hunter - "New Amsterdam" – Episode 4
Alan Taylor - "Smoke Gets In Your Eyes" - Episode 1
Matthew Weiner - "The Wheel" – Episode 13

BEST WRITING FOR A DRAMA SERIES
Matthew Weiner, "Smoke Gets In Your Eyes" - Episode 1
Chris Provenzano, Matthew Weiner - "Shoot" – Episode 9
Lisa Albert, Maria Jacquemetton, Andre Jacquemetton - "Nixon vs. Kennedy" - Episode 12
Andre Jacquemetton, Maria Jacquemetton, Bridget Bedard, Matthew Weiner - "Long Weekend" - Episode 10
Robin Veith, Matthew Weiner -"The Wheel" – Episode 13

 

Credits: Gold Derby

 

Smoke, Drink, Man, Woman

by Jonathan Kelly 

Mad Men, the Golden Globe–winning AMC drama, begins its second season next month.

Oh, the good old days, when men could knock back a few martinis at lunch and bed women as compulsively as they smoked Lucky Strikes, while no one furrowed a brow at the office.

This high-water mark of male chauvinism is the milieu of Mad Men, the Golden Globe–winning AMC drama, which, after picking up a legion of obsessed fans, begins its second season next month. Set in 1960, the show follows the advertising executives of the fictitious Madison Avenue firm of Sterling Cooper as they one-up each other with cynical jingles and dream about the Pan Am account, with its perks of flying first-class to London, with service by the stewardesses resuming at the Dorchester. Despite the fact that he was born on the eve of Woodstock, creator Matthew Weiner, 42, has recaptured the era with authenticity and without nostalgia. His secret? “Good fiction of the time—I’m talking about Salinger and Cheever—gives you a sense of place. That’s what I wanted this to feel like.” (The pilot, written eight years ago, was Weiner’s entrée to the writers’ room of The Sopranos.)

But it’s the characters who fascinate: Don Draper (Jon Hamm), dark, mysterious, breathtakingly handsome, yet emotionally castrated; Roger Sterling (John Slattery), a well-oiled dandy who laughs at his own jokes and sees arrogance as his greatest asset; and Sterling’s mistress, bosomy office manager Joan Holloway (Christina Hendricks). Perspicacious and flirty, she is the precursor of the flower generation, while Draper’s wife, Betty (January Jones), is the gorgeous orchid, frozen in Eisenhower-era black-and-white. The appeal of these characters transcends time. “Men were allowed to do different things back then,” says Weiner. “They feel exactly the same way now, but they just can’t act on it.”

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The Best and the Brashest

Go behind the scenes of Vanity Fair’s photo session with the cast of AMC’s period series Mad Men. Commentary by Jonathan Kelly.

Watch Video 

 

Credits: Vanity Fair 

 

Nominees - Best Show You're Not Watching

 

 

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