I posted this over four years ago and forgot about it, but then son Chris and his wife Ruth referred to it--they're researching the Sixties and Seventies for a TV show script--and I thought it was pretty funny, so I'm re-posting it.
Megan on Mad Men
As the reaction to Mad
Men’s season premiere last Sunday proves, today’s younger (than I am) generations
are fascinated with the lifestyle, the fashions and especially the presumed
decadence of life in Manhattan in the 1960’s.
For those of us who lived through it, the show brings nostalgia,
bittersweet memories of youthful foolishness, and frequent hilarity at anachronisms
that slip by, despite the dozens of people on the program who are working to
make every ash tray, cocktail shaker and plaid blazer authentic to the period.
I was 19 and in college when the 1960’s began. In the summer of 1963 I graduated
from the University of California, Berkeley (English Lit.), and entered
Columbia’s Graduate School of Journalism in the fall for a year-long Master of
Science program. My first
job after graduating was in public relations at Lever Brothers—in the iconic
Lever House on Park Avenue. After
six months there, I moved a few blocks uptown to work at the Ladies’ Home Journal, at 54th and
Lexington (right across from what would be Studio 54 where Andy Warhol and
Truman Capote played.)
There were no three-martini lunches for someone as low on
the masthead as I was, but some of my colleagues did slip out for long lunch
hours with older gentlemen and would come back looking rumpled and a bit
tipsy. One voluptuous blonde
was having a relationship with a married account executive at J. Walter Thompson
and kept us abreast of all the drama.
Yes, I did smoke at the time--in fact when I went to college
there was a “smoking room” on my floor in the freshman dormitory where obsessive students
like myself could sit up all night smoking, studying and living on Mars Bars
out of the vending machine. I
smoked from the age of 18 until at 29 I married a Greek-American New York Times
reporter who insisted I quit. (And I’m still married to him 42 years later.)
The thing you have to understand about the Sixties—and this
is starting to be portrayed on Mad Men—is
that at some point in the decade there was a watershed moment when everything
changed 180 degrees: everything from
fashion, music and lifestyle to views on race, women’s rights, health—you name
it.
When people talk about the “Swinging Sixties” they’re
talking about the last years of the decade, from about 1966 on. The first part of the sixties was a lot
like the 1950’s—conservative, uptight, well-mannered (although archaic in
beliefs about sex, race, whatever.)
Clothing was conservative
and preppy, fitted to the body.
Just look at the pleated skirts and man-tailored blouses that Peggy, the
secretary-turned-copywriter on Mad Men
is still wearing in the season premiere, which takes place in 1966.
Here is a photograph of me in the spring of 1965 when I was
headed for the airport in Los Angeles to fly back to New York after a visit
with my parents. Can you believe
the hat, shoes and gloves? I
wouldn’t believe it myself if I didn’t have the photo as proof.
And here are two photos of me on the job in 1964 and
65. You can see that we are
rocking the sculpted beehive
hairdo’s that were so lacquered with spray that they were un-squashable,
inspiring jokes about rodents nesting
within.
So we women all looked and dressed pretty much like the
earlier seasons of Mad Men. Then something happened. I’ve often pondered what it was
that revolutionized the Sixties.
When I left Berkeley in 1963 the Free Speech movement was just a-bornin’
and it slowly moved across the country bringing sit-ins and riots on campuses,
not to mention the surging of the Civil Rights movement. The Beatles came to
New York in 1964 which was a cause
of great excitement at the magazine. And there was the Summer of Love in San
Francisco in 1967.
And suddenly hems rose to incredible heights while dresses,
once structured and controlled,
became loose on the body, like tunics.
On the Mad Men premiere last
Sunday, when Megan, the new Mrs. Don Draper sang her French song and did her sexy
dance, which shocked and alarmed her colleagues and her new husband, she was
wearing a black, flowing mini
dress that illustrated perfectly the new fashions and attitudes. Everything that had been up tight until
1966 soon became flowing and loose and very, very short.
In this photo from Feb. 1967, when I was discussing a magazine article with Ruth Jacobs on the
“Jewish Home Show”, you can see that my beehive has been replaced by a pseudo-Vidal Sassoon, asymmetrical bob. Though
you can’t see it, my A-line dress with a yellow stripe down the side is very short.
On April 1, 1968, I left New York and the Ladies’ Home
Journal to travel and work in Europe.
I was leaving partly to get away from the Greek-American reporter who, I
was sure, would break my heart.
As soon as I left New York, Martin Luther King was
assassinated, then Bobby Kennedy, then, a year later, Ted Kennedy drove off a
bridge at Chappaquiddick and the Charles Manson murders terrorized Los Angeles. From my vantage point overseas, it seemed
that my country was literally
coming apart.
I had scored an editing job in London, when Swinging London
was peaking. I met the Beatles, bought clothes
from Biba Boutique and shared a flat with three young women who were waiting to
turn 21 so they could get their hands on their trust funds. Meanwhile they got
up at four every afternoon and circulated from one club to another all night. I, meanwhile, went to a nine-to-five
job and occasionally handed over my rent in advance when the girl who owned the
place got in a jam and had to be bailed out.
In 1969 I traveled to Greece, because I had reconciled with
the previously mentioned reporter, and he was vacationing there. I arrived with
a whole wardrobe of skirts so very short that he refused to introduce me to any
of his friends or relatives until I acquired something of a more respectable
length.
My asymmetrical bob had grown into a French twist and, for
some reason, I seem to be wearing a ratty rabbit fur (or something) coat . I won’t comment on the shoes, but it
all seemed very stylish at the time.
I went back to my job in my beloved London, but we
eventually agreed to marry (if I quit smoking), so in 1970, I returned to Manhattan.
On March 18, 1970, at least 100 feminists staged a sit-in at
the Ladies Home Journal, protesting the way the magazine’s mostly male staff
depicted women’s interests. They
occupied the office for 11 hours.
They held prisoner my highly respected boss, John Mack Carter, and the
managing editor Lenore Hershey.
They even smoked JMC’s cigars.
Unfortunately I wasn’t there to see this historic moment,
because by then I was writing articles for the company's foreign
syndication service and working mostly at home. But I suspect that pretty soon I may get to see a similar feminist
sit-in in the offices of Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce on Mad Men.
1 comment:
THANKS for re-posting thi! I have been watching Mad Men all summer- for the first time- and am basically obsessed with it. So- I let out a lil' Hoot & Hollar when I saw this show up in my feed! Perfect timing.
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