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Today's Inspiration

August 3, 2010
Betty Draper loves a makeover. She’s redone her home, her hair, and her wardrobe, all in attempts to be her own woman, and yet! Betty’s reinventions are all tied (like she’ll always be tied!?) to Don, and this latest incarnation of Elizabeth Francis nee Draper nee Hofstadt? No different than the rest. 

As Don’s wife, Betty was Grace Kelly at her height. Like a movie star dropped in Ossining, her wardrobe, hair, and makeup all served to enhance her youthful yet polished beauty. She looks like a living, breathing Barbie Doll, ready to be shown off at industry events in Manhattan.  
As her first marriage starts to disintegrate, Betty, no fool, has her second lined up—and a new look to go along with it. If Betty is some 6 or so years younger than Don, and Don is at least 6 years younger than Henry (based on greyness of hair and age of adult children, approximately), then she’s at least a decade younger than her new husband. Unlike that strumpet Jane Siegel Sterling, Betts realizes the gravity of her situation—now the wife of a respected lawyer/political figure in the Republican Party, she’s going to dress the part.
You can see her transformation begin in Season 3—by the time Margaret’s wedding rolls around, Betty has swapped out her trademark candy confection-gowns for an icy blue suit (a suit!) with a fur collar.

Dancing with Don and gazing longingly at Henry, she’s already beginning to look the part of Mrs. Francis, and not unlike Grace Kelly post-addition of royal husband. 

When we meet again in Season 4, Betty’s overhaul is even more striking. At Thanksgiving Dinner, 1964, she looks, well—old. Her brocade suit is mother-of-the-fall-bride, and her hair and makeup are pure Lady Bird Johnson, the First Lady after the Most Fashionable First Lady of All Time.  

The funny thing about Betty’s new looks? They never seem to stick. Not a moment after her fancy (and expensive) decorator placed 42 Bullet Park road in the ‘success’ category, her id went and put a fainting couch right in front of her hearth. The Anita Ekberg Betty of Rome was left behind in the Hilton courtyard, but her resentment at being forced to give it up somehow made it past airport security. 
Only time will tell if Betty’s new look (and the marriage that inspired it) will last.
*Footnote by Angela Serratore

Betty Draper loves a makeover. She’s redone her home, her hair, and her wardrobe, all in attempts to be her own woman, and yet! Betty’s reinventions are all tied (like she’ll always be tied!?) to Don, and this latest incarnation of Elizabeth Francis nee Draper nee Hofstadt? No different than the rest. 

As Don’s wife, Betty was Grace Kelly at her height. Like a movie star dropped in Ossining, her wardrobe, hair, and makeup all served to enhance her youthful yet polished beauty. She looks like a living, breathing Barbie Doll, ready to be shown off at industry events in Manhattan.  

As her first marriage starts to disintegrate, Betty, no fool, has her second lined up—and a new look to go along with it. If Betty is some 6 or so years younger than Don, and Don is at least 6 years younger than Henry (based on greyness of hair and age of adult children, approximately), then she’s at least a decade younger than her new husband. Unlike that strumpet Jane Siegel Sterling, Betts realizes the gravity of her situation—now the wife of a respected lawyer/political figure in the Republican Party, she’s going to dress the part.

You can see her transformation begin in Season 3—by the time Margaret’s wedding rolls around, Betty has swapped out her trademark candy confection-gowns for an icy blue suit (a suit!) with a fur collar.

Dancing with Don and gazing longingly at Henry, she’s already beginning to look the part of Mrs. Francis, and not unlike Grace Kelly post-addition of royal husband. 

When we meet again in Season 4, Betty’s overhaul is even more striking. At Thanksgiving Dinner, 1964, she looks, well—old. Her brocade suit is mother-of-the-fall-bride, and her hair and makeup are pure Lady Bird Johnson, the First Lady after the Most Fashionable First Lady of All Time.  

The funny thing about Betty’s new looks? They never seem to stick. Not a moment after her fancy (and expensive) decorator placed 42 Bullet Park road in the ‘success’ category, her id went and put a fainting couch right in front of her hearth. The Anita Ekberg Betty of Rome was left behind in the Hilton courtyard, but her resentment at being forced to give it up somehow made it past airport security. 

Only time will tell if Betty’s new look (and the marriage that inspired it) will last.

*Footnote by Angela Serratore

5:06pm  |  91 notes   |  Betty Draper |  Fashion |  Grace Kelly |  Makeover |  Angela Serratore 
November 26, 2009

Betty meet Grace.

4:48pm  |  3 notes   |  Betty Draper |  Grace Kelly |  Mad Med Movie Club 
This is Grace Kelly. The antithesis to Ava Gardner and the same archetypal beauty of Mrs. Betty Draper.
What’s the story on Mrs. Kelly?
Well! There are many delicious parallels. Just look-wise, her and Birdie have a lot of the same things going on. Demure, delicate, the suggestion of high class. Kelly was from money and while attending a fancy Pennsylvania academy, Ravenhill, she did some modeling with her sisters and appeared in amateur plays.
Kelly went to the same dramatic arts school as Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn. She had a relatively short and glorious stint in Hollywood: 6 years. Her regal-ness  was best exploited under director Alfred Hitchcock. She starred in Rear Window and To Catch a Thief. The New Yorker applauded her virginal beauty and ‘quiet confidence’ . She cinched an Oscar for Country Girl in 1954.
Then she literally became a princess: Kelly married Prince Rainer of Monacc in 1956. Her official tittle became Her Serene Highness, the Princess of Monaco and she spent the second half of her life throwing charity balls and giving out awards to dignitaries and starlets.
She died in a car crash in 1982 on the streets of Monaco while driving her daughter to their country house.

This is Grace Kelly. The antithesis to Ava Gardner and the same archetypal beauty of Mrs. Betty Draper.

What’s the story on Mrs. Kelly?

Well! There are many delicious parallels. Just look-wise, her and Birdie have a lot of the same things going on. Demure, delicate, the suggestion of high class. Kelly was from money and while attending a fancy Pennsylvania academy, Ravenhill, she did some modeling with her sisters and appeared in amateur plays.

Kelly went to the same dramatic arts school as Spencer Tracy and Katherine Hepburn. She had a relatively short and glorious stint in Hollywood: 6 years. Her regal-ness  was best exploited under director Alfred Hitchcock. She starred in Rear Window and To Catch a Thief. The New Yorker applauded her virginal beauty and ‘quiet confidence’ . She cinched an Oscar for Country Girl in 1954.

Then she literally became a princess: Kelly married Prince Rainer of Monacc in 1956. Her official tittle became Her Serene Highness, the Princess of Monaco and she spent the second half of her life throwing charity balls and giving out awards to dignitaries and starlets.

She died in a car crash in 1982 on the streets of Monaco while driving her daughter to their country house.

4:43pm  |  12 notes   |  Grace Kelly |  Betty Draper |  Mad Men Movie Club