The Doorway

For other topics, see Doorway (disambiguation).
"The Doorway"
Mad Men episode
Episode no. Season 6
Episode 1 & 2
Directed by Scott Hornbacher
Written by Matthew Weiner
Featured music "Hawaiian Wedding Song" by Elvis Presley[1]
Original air date April 7, 2013 (2013-04-07)
Running time 89 minutes
Guest actors

Ray Abruzzo as Jonesy (the doorman)

"The Doorway" is the two-part sixth season premiere of the American television drama series Mad Men. Officially counted as the first two episodes of the season, it figures as the 66th and 67th overall episodes of the series. It was written by series creator and executive producer Matthew Weiner and directed by executive producer Scott Hornbacher. It originally aired on the AMC channel in the United States on April 7, 2013.

The episode takes place in late December 1967 and on the early morning of January 1, 1968.[1]

Plot

Part I

The episode opens with a point of view shot of "Jonesy" (Ray Abruzzo), the Drapers' doorman, who is in the throes of a heart attack. Dr. Arnold Rosen, a cardiac surgeon who also lives in the building, attends to him with chest compressions.

Don (Jon Hamm) is next shown lying on a beach reading Dante's Inferno, beside a sweating, bikini-clad Megan (Jessica Paré), who has just ordered a second cocktail. The Drapers are mixing business and pleasure on a trip to the Royal Hawaiian Hotel on an expenses-paid trip from Sheraton, which owns the hotel and is an SCDP client. At a luau, Megan, now a recognizable actress on a TV soap opera, is approached by a middle-aged woman seeking an autograph. "She really knew me," comments Megan. Don seems put off. That night, Don, unable to sleep, goes to the hotel bar, spots a young man completely drunk and scrunched up at the bar. Don encounters another slightly drunk man, who recognizes Don's lighter as an indication that he had served in the US military and identifies himself as Private Dinkins, a soldier on R&R from a tour in Vietnam. Dinkins reveals that he has been in the midst of his own bachelor party and points to the drunken man as his best man. He invites Don to give away his bride at the ceremony. The next morning after waking up alone, Megan finds Don participating in the ceremony on the beach and snaps a photo.

In New York, Betty (January Jones), Sally (Kiernan Shipka), Henry's mother Pauline, and Sandy (a 15-year-old whose mother has died and who is staying with the Francises) attend The Nutcracker. On their way home, Betty gets pulled over for speeding. Back at home with Henry (Christopher Stanley), Bobby, and Gene, Sandy - who says she is going to Juilliard - shows off her skill at playing the violin, performing the popular Nocturne in E-flat Major, Op. 9, no.2 by Chopin. Later, while in bed, Betty teases Henry about his leering at Sandy while she played the violin, and shocks him by jokingly offering to help him gag and rape the girl.

When Megan and Don return home from their Hawaii trip, Megan asks Jonesy how he's feeling. In a sudden flashback to an event earlier in the same location, Don and Megan watch Jonesy collapse from an apparent heart attack. Dr. Rosen begins applying chest compressions, as is shown in the opening shot of the episode, and at Rosen's direction, Don removes Jonesy's jacket, while Megan phones an ambulance. Flashing forward again to the present, Jonesy is apparently healthy and back at work, joking that his wife "couldn't wait to get [him] out of the house." He hands Megan a script that a messenger had delivered.

In the middle of the night, Betty gets up to make a snack and finds Sandy in the kitchen, smoking a cigarette and unable to sleep. Sandy reveals that Juilliard rejected her and that what she really wants is just to live in New York City. Betty urges Sandy to wait a few more years, and this sparks an argument between the two. Betty confides her unpleasant experience living in an overcrowded, low-rent Manhattan apartment when she was modelling, while Sandy expresses admiration for people living in a commune in the Village, and says she once visited such a group on St. Mark's Place.

Peggy (Elisabeth Moss), now living with her boyfriend Abe, receives a late-night call from Bert Peterson from Cutler Gleason and Chaough. A comic appearing on The Tonight Show has made jokes about American soldiers in Vietnam cutting off Viet Cong soldiers' ears and wearing them around their necks like trophies, rendering CGC's planned Super Bowl commercial for Koss headphones (featuring the slogan "Lend Me Your Ears") potentially too controversial. Peterson wants Peggy to develop a new ad. Peggy tries unsuccessfully to reach Ted Chaough (Kevin Rahm) in Colorado by phone about the crisis.

Don chats with Dr. Rosen in their building's elevator as they leave for work. Rosen expresses interest in the Leica cameras SCDP is promoting, and Don offers him one free if he'll stop by Don's office.

Roger Sterling (John Slattery) is now seeing a psychiatrist, and during a session he discusses a new love interest as well as his feelings that his employees respect him but don't really know or care about him. Roger laments that neither he nor his life's direction seems to be changed by his experiences, and he seems anxious about aging toward death.

While sharing an elevator, Bob Benson (James Wolk), who says he works in accounts on SCDP's second floor, tries his best to make an impression on Don, although Don struggles to remember who Benson is. At the office Don finds the copywriting team (now openly smoking marijuana) hoping for feedback about his trip to inspire a concept for the Royal Hawaiian pitch. Photographers are taking pictures of the partners, and Don finds his office rearranged for that purpose. Now alone in his office, Don stares out the window and hears the ocean.

Don meets with a few of the new copywriters and criticizes their ideas for advertising a Dow oven cleaner; he's particularly concerned with the trivialization of the "love" construct. The receptionist shows Dr. Rosen into the room, but he halts her at the door so he can witness Don at work before he is noticed. Don then retrieves Dr. Rosen his promised Leica camera (M2 model) while Rosen leers at a passing secretary. The doctor lets Don in on the New Year's Eve plans their wives have been making, sharing that he'd instructed his wife, Sylvia, to "keep it in the building."

As Roger tries to arrange a date with his new girlfriend, his secretary, Caroline, walks into his office visibly upset. She informs Roger that his mother died that morning of a stroke. Although she bursts into tears upon delivering the news, Roger is relatively unfazed, saying "she was 91 years old, it's hardly a shock." He then instructs Caroline to request Joan's (Christina Hendricks) help to make funeral arrangements.

In Don's office, while the photographers are attempting to capture him in his element, he lights up a cigarette and realizes he's still holding onto PFC Dinkins' Zippo lighter, which bears the inscription: "IN LIFE WE OFTEN HAVE TO DO THINGS THAT JUST ARE NOT OUR BAG."[2] When the photographer finally gets the attention of a now-distracted Don, he tells Don, "I want you to be yourself."

Part II

At home, Megan wakes Don to tell him she's been called in to work today, and for the rest of the week. This will cause her to miss Roger's mother's funeral, which she regrets. When Megan leaves, Don gets out of bed and, again finding Dinkins' lighter, and throws it in the garbage. Before leaving for the funeral, he starts drinking while watching TV.

Betty learns from Sally that Sandy has left for Manhattan, despite Betty's wishes. Sandy had told Sally she was going to Juilliard early, which Betty knows is not true.

As Roger mingles with some of his mother's friends at her funeral gathering, his ex-wife Jane arrives and offers Roger his mother's ring back, so he can pass it on to his daughter, Margaret, or bury it with his mother. Roger insists that Jane keep it. Some catered food is delivered that Roger didn't order; it turns out to be from Bob Benson. Don arrives at the funeral drunk. As Roger starts addressing the guests, his first wife Mona (Margaret's mother) shows up along with her current husband, which irritates Roger. At the same time, one of Roger's mother's elderly friends cuts him off and demands to deliver the first eulogy, which Roger obliges. As the woman speaks about Roger's mother's devotion to him, Don vomits into an umbrella stand, so Ken Cosgrove (Aaron Staton), Pete Campbell (Vincent Kartheiser), and Harry Crane (Rich Sommer) escort him out of the room. Before the eulogy can resume, Roger confronts Mona's husband for appearing uninvited, and quickly loses his temper, shouting, "This is my funeral!" and then kicking everybody out. But no one moves, so Roger storms off to a bedroom.

Mona goes to Roger, who is lying on his mother's bed, covering himself with the guests' fur coats. He tells her she shouldn't have brought her husband; she agrees. He says his mother is dead and he says he doesn't feel anything. Mona replies he seems emotional. Roger says he needs a drink, and Mona responds she knew he loved her, so there's nothing to drink about. She gently prods Roger to spend more time with his daughter Margaret. He sits up and makes a pass at Mona, who laughs him off.

Pete and Ken bring Don home, and he drunkenly asks Jonesy what he saw when he died. Jonesy reports he saw a light and then says he doesn't like to think about it. Don wonders if the light was like hot tropical sunshine and if he heard the ocean.

Betty goes to Greenwich Village looking for Sandy and finally finds the house where she stayed with a bunch of squatters. She is appalled at the condition of the rundown building. She finds Sandy's violin and asks two guys in the kitchen about her. They say she was around but haven't seen her lately. The leader of the squatters arrives and says Sandy left for California, with no forwarding address. Betty tries to leave with the violin, but the leader says he bought it from Sandy. Betty takes the violin anyway, then changes her mind and leaves it in the front hall, perhaps symbolic of giving up on trying to save Sandy.

Back at the Sterling house, Margaret chats with Roger. He gives her a jar of water from the River Jordan that his mother kept and used to baptize all the family members. Margaret wonders if her grandmother left her anything else. It turns out her husband Brooks wants to make an investment in the refrigeration business. Roger tells her to have him sit down with him and present a written business proposal. She is thrilled, but leaves the water behind.

Megan finds a hungover Don in bed, where she left him earlier, and reports that her character "pushed Derek's mother down the stairs" on the soap opera. They're making her character into a "lying, cheating whore" and she's clearly thrilled because it means her part will be bigger. She asks if he will still love her if she's a lying, cheating whore. He says he will but will walk behind her on the stairs. She also gives back the lighter, which the maid found in the garbage.

It's late on New Year's Eve. Peggy is working, and her boyfriend brings her a choice of submarine sandwiches. She asks him to try the client's headphones and think of "some words" to describe them. Her staff comes in with new lines for the ad, to replace the original "lend me your ears" reference. They say they have three ideas and read her three lines. She asks for other ideas, pointing out that they gave her three versions of the same idea, and if they can't figure out which part is the idea and which part is the execution of the idea, then they are of no use to her. She notices her boyfriend enraptured by the music on the headphones and moving to the beat, and she gets an actual idea.

Don arrives in the office for the presentation to Sheraton. He gives Dawn the lighter and asks her to find a way to get it back to PFC Dinkins.

Roger is back in analysis, talking about his ex-wife and daughter. He talks about his mother and says she gave him his last new experience; now it's just a slow march to death. The therapist says Roger feels lost. Roger says he doesn't feel anything.

Ken says hello to Bob, who is now loitering in the lobby. He shames him for sending food to Rogers mother's funeral, and for using a funeral as an opportunity to suck up to Roger and try to get himself noticed. He tells him to go back to his office and do some work, or otherwise people will think he has nothing to do.

The Sheraton people show up for the first pass. Don shows them the ad, a drawing of shoes, a suit coat, and a tie with footprints next to it leading into the ocean. He says they're not selling a geographical location but an experience. He waxes poetic about the air and the water at the resort, and how the place put him in a state. The tagline is: "Hawaii. The jumping off point." To the execs, it looks like the man in the ad committed suicide a la A Star Is Born. He is confused that they're reading it that way. They wonder where the hotel is in the ad and think the ad is a little morbid because it could make people think of suicide.

Betty comes home on New Year's Eve as a brunette. Bobby and Sally mock her, while Henry says: "Elizabeth Taylor, what have you done with my wife?"

Caroline informs Roger that the man who shines his shoes has died. The man's family sent over his shoeshine kit because Roger was the only one who asked about him. Roger takes the kit into his office and opens it. When he takes out a brush he starts uncontrollably sobbing.

New Year's Eve finds the Drapers entertaining the Rosens and another couple from their building. The other couple relays a story about a man from his office who got caught in a men's room stall at Bloomingdale's with another man. Megan goads Don into showing slides from their Hawaiian trip. He lingers on the snap Megan took of the Dinkins' wedding.

Later on New Year's Eve, Peggy chats with Stan over the phone as they both work. They gossip about Roger and Joan. Ted comes in to talk to Peggy. She explains she may have found a solution. She shows him outtakes of the ad with the actor in the toga clowning around while wearing the headphones. She says she envisions a voiceover: "Koss headphones: sound so sharp and clear you can actually see it." He loves it and tells her she's good in a crisis and to let the workers go home. Stan, who had been listening over the phone, comments that he thinks Teddy likes her.

Later in the night, the other couple has left the Drapers. The Rosens and Drapers had such a good time they missed midnight. But then Dr. Rosen gets a call for emergency surgery. There is a snowstorm outside, so Don and Arnold Rosen head down to the building's storage room to get Rosen's skis. Don asks what it's like to have a life in his hands. Arnold replies it's a privilege and an honor to have the responsibility. He says Don gets paid to think about things people don't want to think about, and he gets paid not to think about them. Rosen puts on his skis and heads off. Don heads back in, and promptly goes to bed with Arnold's wife, Sylvia (Linda Cardellini), who had given him Dante's Inferno to read while in Hawaii. She asks what he wants for the new year. He says, "I want to stop doing this." She replies, "I know".

Don goes home and picks up the newspaper. It is 1968. He gets into bed with Megan, who kisses him and wishes him, "Happy New Year."

Cultural references

A Star Is Born

Don's proposed ad reminds the client (and Roger) of the suicide in the film A Star Is Born (1954).

Dante's Inferno

Allusions to Dante's Inferno are abundant throughout the episode, including Don's reading the book while lying on Waikiki Beach, next to Megan. Writes Chicago Sun-Times critic Lori Rackl: "The episode is permeated with the first installment of the Italian poet's "Divine Comedy," a three-part allegorical journey through the afterlife. Don is a '60s version of Dante, trapped in the depths of hell, searching for his Virgil to guide him along the virtuous path that leads to eternal paradise."[3]

Rackl further observes, Don opens the scene by reading "a line from Dante's allegorical tale: 'Midway in our life's journey, I went astray from the straight road and woke to find myself alone in a dark wood,' he says." She continues: "This opener dovetails with the season five finale, when a tempting female stranger in a dark bar asks Don that pivotal question: 'Are you alone?'"

Some critics have noted the episode is structured around Don's sinful progression through the nine circles of hell. WSJ.com's Evangeline Morphos shares: "I’m afraid—and thrilled—that this season will take us further into the rings of hell."[4]

  1. Limbo - Don is on the beach.
  2. Lust - Don has sex with Megan.
  3. Gluttony - Don feasts and smokes marijuana.
  4. Greed - Don wants to cut the maid's paycheck (hoard) and gives a free camera (squander).
  5. Anger - Don angrily criticizes his copywriters' work (wrath) and gets drunk at the funeral (sullen).
  6. Heresy - Don asks Jonesy about his after-death experience.
  7. Violence - Don tries to advertise suicide.
  8. Fraud - Don presents his perfect marriage to his neighbors.
  9. Treachery - Don is in bed with Sylvia.

Ears

Because a comedian makes a tasteless joke on The Tonight Show about American servicemen's stringing Viet Cong soldiers' ears on necklaces, Peggy has to scrap her "Lend me your ears" headphones campaign. The soldiers he is referring to recall the Tiger Force, a task force of the United States Army, 1st Battalion (Airborne), 327th Infantry Regiment, 1st Brigade (Separate), 101st Airborne Division, which fought in the Vietnam War.[5] The highly decorated unit, founded by Colonel David Hackworth in November 1965 to "outguerrilla the guerrillas",[6] suffered heavy casualties.[7] It was also investigated for allegedly committing numerous war crimes, including the one described by the comic,[8] and were found guilty.[9] Despite this, the Army decided not to pursue any prosecutions.[10]

The slogan borrows from the first line of Mark Antony's oft-quoted funeral oration from Act III, scene II of William Shakespeare's play, Julius Caesar. As WSJ.com editor Christopher John Farley notes: "Antony’s speech features lines that speak directly to some of the themes of 'Mad Men.'" Farley further observes: the phrase also pops up in The Beatles’ 1967 song “With a Little Help from My Friends".[4]

From Here to Eternity

Roger alludes to From Here to Eternity (1953), which was set in Oahu, when he asks Don if, while in Hawaii, he saw Ernest Borgnine being chased down an alley with a knife. In multiple episodes, including this one, Roger cites his own experience being stationed at Pearl Harbor before and during the 1941 attack.

It's a Wonderful Life

The soap opera in which Megan plays Corinne is set in Berkshire Falls. Karlan asks: "Is this a sly takeoff on the Bedford Falls of It's a Wonderful Life? Whose life, among our characters, is wonderful and who has abandoned wonder and hope?"[4]

Meditations in an Emergency

WSJ.com editor Pamela S. Karlan is reminded of Don's reciting the following lines from Frank O'Hara's Meditations in an Emergency in Season 2: "Now I am quietly waiting for the catastrophe of my personality/to seem beautiful again,/and interesting, and modern…. It may be the coldest day of/the year, what does he think of that? I mean, what do I? And if I do,/perhaps I am myself again."[4]

Production

"The Doorway"—a double-length episode which serves as the first two episodes of the season—was written by series creator and showrunner Matthew Weiner and directed by executive producer Scott Hornbacher. Principal photography for the episode began in October 2012, with Jon Hamm and Jessica Paré filming scenes in Hawaii.[11] Weiner said of the premiere's structure: "it's really constructed like a film. It is its own story and hopefully it foreshadows the rest of the season."[12]

Reception

Critical response

The episode was very well received by critics. Alan Sepinwall of HitFix called the premiere "thoughtful, moving and gorgeous in that 'Mad Men' way."[13] Lori Rackl of the Chicago Sun-Times wrote: "Packed with symbolism and cryptic, thought-provoking fodder, the sublime two-hour episode could be the subject of a college course.[14] Todd VanDerWerff of The A.V.Club graded the double episode "A-" and observed: "This is still one of TV’s best shows, still moving confidently and at the height of its powers, filled with great characters and terrific storytelling. It’s been on the air long enough now to have a rich, complicated history of its own, and watching it all spool out—both as it happened and in the changed visages of the characters—continues to be one of TV’s chief pleasures. And always there are those objects and items, ghosts and totems of lives that once were. A cigarette lighter. A piece of office decoration that reminds one of sadly departed Lane. A copy of Dante’s Inferno. A set of skis. A seemingly non-descript Mason jar. Mad Men has always been about the relentless march of history, about the way that time waits for no man. Increasingly, though, it’s taking advantage of its own history, something that gives it a richness and depth most shows on TV barely even aspire to. And at its center are some of the greatest characters in TV history."[15]

Critics also noted, however, the darkening nature of the show. For example, Michael Hogan of The Huffington Post observed early on in his episode review: "Man, that was one saddening episode of "Mad Men". He closed with: "Instead of alleviating our anxiety, 'Mad Men' dares to depict it, give it shape, rub our faces in it. We can't help loving Don and Roger, but look at what they do. Look at how they live. / They're monsters. And they look an awful lot like us."[16]

Ratings

The original broadcast on April 7, 2013, was watched by an estimated 3.4 million viewers. The episode was down in viewership from the fifth season premiere, which received 3.5 million viewers, but increased in viewership from the fifth season finale, which attained 2.7 million viewers.[17]

Further reading

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Leeds, Sarene (April 7, 2013). "'Mad Men' Premiere Recap: The Jumping Off Point". Rolling Stone. Wenner Media. Retrieved April 8, 2013.
  2. Jen Chaney (April 9, 2013). "What Mad Men Has to Do with the JFK Assassination". Esquire.
  3. Rackl, Lori (April 7, 2013). "'Mad Men' season six premiere: Don as Dante, stuck in a revolving 'Doorway'". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Dellinger, Walter (April 7, 2013). "‘Mad Men,’ A Conversation: Inferno". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
  5. Sallah, Michael D.; Weiss, Mitch; & Mahr, Joe (October 19–22, 2003). "Tiger Force". Toledo Blade. pp. 22–23.
  6. Sallah, Michael D.; Weiss, Mitch; & Mahr, Joe Mahr (October 19–22, 2003). "Tiger Force". Toledo Blade. pp. 13–14, 23, 224.
  7. Sallah, Michael D.; Weiss, Mitch; & Mahr, Joe (March 28, 2004). "Unit's founder says he didn't know of atrocities". Toledo Blade.
  8. Sallah, Michael D. & Weiss, Mitch (October 19, 1983). "DAY 1". Toledo Blade.
  9. Sallah, Michael D.; Weiss, Mitch; & Mahr, Joe Mahr (October 19–22, 2003). "Tiger Force". Toledo Blade. pp. 22–23.
  10. Sallah, Michael D.; Weiss, Mitch; & Mahr, Joe Mahr (October 19–22, 2003). "Tiger Force". Toledo Blade. pp. 22–23.
  11. Andreeva, Nellie (October 25, 2012). "‘Mad Men’ Shooting In Hawaii: Photo". Deadline.com. Retrieved April 10, 2013.
  12. Snierson, Dan (January 23, 2013). "AMC's 'Mad Men' gets return date, plus Matthew Weiner talks season 6". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved April 10, 2013.
  13. Sepinwall, Alan (April 7, 2013). "Season premiere review: 'Mad Men' - 'The Doorway': Break on through to the other side". HitFix. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
  14. Rackl, Lori (April 7, 2013). "‘Mad Men’ season six premiere: Don as Dante, stuck in a revolving ‘Doorway’". Voices: Chicago Sun-Times.
  15. VanDerWerff, Todd (April 7, 2013). "Mad Men: 'The Doorway'". A.V. Club (Onion, Inc.).
  16. Hogan, Michael (April 7, 2013). "Don Draper Cheating Twist: Why it's the Saddest Thing Ever". The Huffington Post.
  17. Blake, Meredith (April 8, 2013). "'Mad Men' ratings down slightly in Season 6 premiere". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 10, 2013.
  18. Haglund, David (April 7, 2013). "The Mad Men Premiere’s Dark Vietnam Subtext". Slate. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
  19. Sherry Buchanan (2007). Vietnam Zippos: American Soldiers' Engravings and Stories (1965-1973). University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226078281.

External links

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