Music on Mad Men: Who is Don Draper...and Just Who is Yma Sumac?

Christina Hendricks and Brian Batt in the AMC series "Mad Men"
Christina Hendricks and Brian Batt in the AMC series "Mad Men" - AMC
Drake Lelane

Well here we are, with only one episode left of the best new show of the season, and, like The Sopranos, the climax of the series came with the penultimate episode. Mad Men creator Matthew Weiner wrote the explosive series penultimate Sopranos episode "The Blue Comet," so he's well acquainted with the David Chase school of season enders. With Mad Men, it's no different, as we find out how Dick Whitman became Don Draper via flashbacks triggered courtesy of Pete's blackmail.

The factual setting drama for this episode is election night -- Kennedy versus Nixon. Or, as Don/Dick sees it, silver-spooned Pete versus self-made man Don. After the metaphorical candidates head home, the rest of the employees throw a party, which is home to our only music placement of real note. Peruvian singer Yma Súmac's "Gopher Mambo" plays while secretary Alison is chased around the steno-pool by Ken, and use of the artist's music isn't just for its kitsch-like fun. Around 1950, rumors spread that Yma was actually a Jewish secretary at Capitol Records named Amy Camus, who was born in Brooklyn, not Peru (Amy Camus is a backwards spelling of Yma Sumac).

This challenge (a hoax, I should point out) to her exotic identity was a serious blow to her career at the time. She bounced back, though, since fans ultimately replied like Bert Cooper with "Mr. Campbell, who cares?" How does her being Jewish affect how I much I like to mambo to her freakish octave-like singing?

This party, meanwhile, has devolved into a Dionysus-like affair, with alcohol, sex... and a one-act play. This play within the show has more to it then just to embarrass Paul "Orson Welles" Kinsey -- the title, "Death is My Client," alone achieves that -- but also to tell us more about Dick Whitman/Don Draper. As I mentioned last week, Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged celebrated its 50th anniversary today, and I still think it's no accident that this episode coincides with the occasion. Kinsey's play references two character names (not counting "that hack Cosgrove,") Galt and Tollefson. John Galt is a central character from Atlas Shrugged, one referred to often in a question: "Who is John Galt," much like this series' question -- "Who is Don Draper?"

The other character is Tollefson, which could very well be Garrison Keillor's character from The Lake Wobegon Boy -- a small town boy who makes a new life for himself in upstate New York. Sound familiar? I realize Keillor's work is from a different era entirely, but it's just too perfect for me not to at least suggest that Weiner might be positing Rand's (from the right) and Keillor's (from the left) contrasting ideologies upon Don/Dick's mythology. Meanwhile, in the play, Sal (as Tollefson) kisses Joan, and their reactions afterwards are priceless. Sal beams with pride, and Joan has a subtle look that suggests she's realizing he might just be gay... an imposter metaphor once again referring to Don.

As the party continues on, another song plays, "Metro Polka" by Frankie Lane. This is used mostly for the lyric "I asked her for a little kiss, a little kiss, a little kiss" as Harry and Hilda lock lips. After they take it to the next step in Harry's office, Mad Men uses more subtle brilliance using Harry's glasses as metaphor for his marriage. He takes them off to slip out of his marriage. Later, when he scrambles to find them he's distraught, and when they turn up broken, it's indicative of how Harry feels his marriage is. At this point, Hildy recognizes Harry's marital fear and apologizes. "I hope I didn't step on them," says Hildy, meaning, again, his marriage. It's scenes and details like this that make me love this series so much.

And what about Don? Who knew he was really such a coward, someone who pissed himself at the first sign of combat and killed his commanding officer (and future identity) through ineptitude. (That Lt. Don Draper was an engineer, is another Atlas Shrugged reference, by the way -- John Galt was an engineer.) When Don's faced with the prospect of being found out, he can't escape who he really is and turns coward again. Thankfully, Rachel calls him on it, and takes him to task after seeing Dick Whitman the coward for herself. "You haven't thought this through," she says, which Don/Dick would use against Pete later. Peggy also unwittingly props him up with her complaint -- "People who are not good get to walk around doing what they want... it's not fair."

Don/Dick takes these weapons and confronts Pete, willing to "bury himself" if necessary to make sure Pete doesn't succeed in his black mail. Bert Cooper's "Mr. Campbell, who cares?" is the climactic question answering a question... the one the series posed all season: "Who is Don Draper?" It was what you'd expect from an Ayn Rand Objectivist, and you have to imagine that Cooper would be even more enamored with Draper if he knew just how far he had to re-invent himself. Ultimately, it's the story of an American dream, morally ambiguous warts and all, and we should thank our lucky stars that it's back for another season.

Mad Men - Ep112
1. "Gopher Mambo" - Yma Sumac
2. "Metro Polka" - Frankie Laine

Previously: The Virtue of Selfishness (Episode 1.11)

drake lelane
himself an impostor at the music/soundtrack blog thus spake drake



post a comment



Most Recommended
Popular Photo Galleries