![]() ![]() He knows she’ll keep his secret, because he’s keeping hers: We flash back to Peggy in the hospital after giving birth, and Don is the only person to visit her. We knew Peggy had Pete’s baby at the end of Season 1, but we didn’t know exactly what happened until this episode, where Don gets into an accident with mistress Bobbie Barrett in the car and has to call Peggy to bail him out. Don visits Peggy in the hospital (Season 2, “The New Girl”) Peggy is touched, and shakes Don’s hand firmly, assuring him, “I will do my sincere best.” Yes, Don’s decision is intended to get under Pete’s skin - but it’s also a vote of confidence for his eager underling.ģ. When Pete brings in the Clearasil account, a light bulb appears over Don’s head: “We have the perfect writer for that… Peggy Olson.” Pete thinks it’s a joke, since she’s still Don’s secretary, so Don calls Peggy in and immediately promotes her to junior copywriter. Don promotes Peggy to junior copywriter (Season 1, “The Wheel”)Īfter impressing Freddy Rumsen during the Belle Jolie lipstick campaign, Peggy starts writing ad copy, working on women’s products like the Rejuvenator. But Don forgives her, encouraging her to “go home, put your curlers in… we’ll get a fresh start tomorrow.” This is the beginning of a beautiful… something.Ģ. Later, Peggy clumsily tries to seduce Don, an advance he quickly rebuffs (“I’m your boss, not your boyfriend”). There’s an instant rapport and mutual respect between the two Don defends her when Pete casually lobs a few sexist remarks her way. In Mad Men’s very first episode, a young, naïve Peggy joins the Sterling Cooper secretarial pool and introduces herself to Don as the “new girl” while waking him up from a nap (the first of many). Peggy is hired as Don’s secretary (Season 1, “Smoke Gets In Your Eyes”) In honor of Mad Men’s final episode, let’s take a look back at the 11 crucial moments that helped cement Don and Peggy’s relationship as one of the most fascinating we’ve ever seen on TV. Related: The 24 Best ‘Mad Men’ Scenes, Ranked After all, Don and Peggy’s relationship is really the heart, the soul, and the spine of the series, as they’ve progressed over a decade from boss/secretary, to mentor/mentee, to workplace rivals, to (finally) equals. Peggy didn’t even appear in this week’s penultimate episode (boo!), but we can’t imagine Sunday’s series finale won’t give us at least one more scene between the consummate Madison Avenue ad man and his ambitious protégé. But above all else, Mad Men is about human relationships, and the finest example of that is the complex, ever-evolving relationship between Don Draper and Peggy Olson. ![]() Sure, Mad Men is about advertising, and American corporate culture, and the tidal wave of cultural change that crashed down upon us in the 1960s.
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