In many ways, the story of Mad Men is as much the story of Peggy Olson (played by Elisabeth Moss) as it is the story of the tortured Don Draper. Almost all of the characters on Mad Men are stuck in the '50s or ill-prepared for the upheaval to come of the 1960s. All of them except Peggy, who, despite what was by all appearances a humble upbringing and education, has an almost savant-like ability to observe people and learn from their behaviors. It's an ability perfectly suited for the world of advertising and, lucky for her, she found an early benefactor in Don, who recognized quite a bit of his self-made self in this unlikely avatar from Bay Ridge.
Unlike, say Betty or Joan, Peggy isn't really locked into a particular style. She's definitely the least stylish of all the main female characters on the show, but she also has something of an experimental streak in her because it's never just one color family or silhouette or style with her. She's on a journey from the first day she sets foot in the offices of Sterling Cooper and she doesn't realize it, but it's a journey that an entire generation of women are about to make with her, and for the first time. Peggy's clothes are therefore a bit contradictory. She experiments with styles, but only within the fairly strict parameters of her working class Catholic upbringing and her impatience with a lot of the trappings of what was once called "feminine wiles." She's feminine and sexual, smart and ambitious, but she's modest to a fault and isn't particularly interested in landing a husband or defining herself according to the wishes of men. She's a revolutionary and she has no idea that she's one.
As a side note, Tom always had a special fondness for the character because in 1960, his mother, named Peggy, was fresh out of a Queens Catholic high school and working as a secretary in Manhattan for a big insurance company. She's not a fan of the show because it mostly bores her. In a way we can understand. When the inevitable dramatic examinations of the Reagan years become de rigeur, we can't imagine it will be of much interest to us either. She also found all the sleeping around a little ridiculous and wanted it known that she didn't know anything about that sort of thing, and then talked about which churches in Manhattan she liked to visit on her lunch hour.
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She looks young and fresh, but not at all stylish, colorful or sexy, which prompts the charming Pete Campbell to ask her if she's Amish. Basically, she looks like the Brooklyn Catholic schoolgirl she still is at this point. She stands out against the more colorful Manhattan secretaries.
Season 1 Episode 2 - "Ladies Room"
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It sets the period nicely by having all the men drool over Peggy even though by modern standards, she looks awful. This certainly wasn't stylish in 1960, but it was passable for a girl from the outer boroughs. To our 2010 eyes, it's the height of frumpery, something you'd only see old ladies wear. In 1960, it's modest and practical. Work clothes. The kind of items you'd get a lot of wear out of. The kind of clothes your mom buys for you.
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This is the cutest thing she's worn yet. Like we said, Peggy's not really locked into any one color scheme. She'll wear neutrals and jewel tones, pastels and plaids and earth tones. The only thing you never see her in is a floral. We're not sure why she was wearing yellow so often in the early episodes except that it set her apart from Joan, who never wears that color.
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This is Peggy trying to be Joan. It's a Joan-like purple with a matching scarf ("Men love scarves," Joan told her on her first day at SC), as form-fitting as Peggy Olson will allow, with Joan-like short sleeves. Unsurprisingly, it looks terrible on her. It's just not her style. You can really see how, especially in the early days, Peggy was really trying to find her footing, from a clothing perspective. Joan derided her fashion choices almost constantly, so it would make sense that Peggy would (almost certainly subconsciously) make an attempt at a Joan look.
Season 1 Episode 5 - "5G"
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This is actually really cute. Peggy's clothes look like discount department store clothes, which befits her social station and income level. She didn't get this at some chic little boutique. She got it somewhere with racks and racks of the same dress in different colors at a marked-down price. Subsequently, a lot of her clothes don't look as if they were hand-tailored to fit her body, a detail a lot of costumers miss when they're dressing working class characters. To a lesser extent, you see this with Joan as well, although her clothes look a little more expensive than Peggy's.
It's Peggy trying on yet another style. A girly pink, form-fitting in the Joan manner with totally Peggy collar and cuffs.
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Again, it's a slightly different style, a a blue and black checked dress with a full skirt, dropped waist, and the requisite collar and cuffs that are becoming Peggy's trademark. She's still got those Catholic schoolgirl touches, but it's definitely a work outfit, practical and probably durable.
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This looks like a brand new outfit and yet again, something new for Peggy. It feels more of the moment than a lot of her wardrobe which has too much of a '50s flavor to it. That type of overblouse would become an early '60s staple thanks to Jackie Kennedy, who favored them. The plaid and that type of structured collar that sits away from the shoulders are pure early 1960s and serve to make the idealistic Peggy look young and fresh next to the worldly Joan, even though, again, it doesn't look at all expensive. It almost looks homemade, in fact.
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It makes sense that Peggy's wardrobe at this point would be so uneven. Even if someone is trying to find her style, she's still got to find something to wear to work every day on a limited budget. This is pure 1950s, from the dark brown color to the striped piping. She probably wore this on her first day at Miss Deaver's Secretarial School.
Still, despite the fact that it's not magazine cover fashionable, it serves an important character function as it causes such a sharp distinction to be made between Peggy and the brightly colored secretaries around her who all coo and purse their lips at the sight of the lipstick samples. Peggy in her dark, serious brown (the color of a man's suit, a signal to her upcoming entry into the men's side of the business world) is thinking about what their reactions mean rather than joining them in the reaction.
[Screencaps: projectrungay.blogspot.com - Photo Credit: amctv.com/originals/madmen]
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Labels: Mad Men, Mad Style