Category: Mad Men

Christina Hendricks: “Mad Men” – Season 5 Teasers
Published on March 14th, 2012 by Flo & Filed in Articles and Interviews,Mad Men. Comments Off

In this week issue of Entertainment Weekly Christina Hendricks, Elisabeth Moss (Peggy)  and January Jones (Betty) talk about the upcoming season of “Mad Men“.

On the aftermath of Don’s proposal to Megan in the season 4 finale
HENDRICKS : “This is a proposal that was announced in the workplace. Of two people who work in the same office. It’s obviously going to affect everyone around them.”
MOSS: “I felt the same as Peggy and Joan did [in the finale], where you’re just like, ‘What?’ And feeling nervous about it, nervous about it for Don. Just knowing who he is, that he finally started to live something that was at least true to himself, as much as he was going down hard in this downward spiral all of Season 4. Getting engaged again just felt like a quick solution, a Band-Aid. But that said, things are complicated and he fell in love. And when people fall in love quickly, it’s always surprising and you’re always a bit nervous about it.”

On what to expect from Joan
HENDRICKS : “You’re going to learn a lot more about where Joan comes from very quickly.”

On Joan’s pregnancy
HENDRICKS : “Just because we’ve left her pregnant doesn’t mean that there’s one option.”

On fan reaction to Joan’s romantic life
HENDRICKS : “A lot of people say, ‘I hope your husband dies at war,’ which is a horrible, horrible thing to say about someone. But [Greg] has left such a bad taste in people’s mouths that I get that comment even more than ‘We wish Joan and Roger were together.’”

On whether or not Hendricks wants to see Joan end up with Roger
HENDRICKS : “I don’t know, I think they’re sort of a hot mess together. But it’s hot regardless, so
.”

Source

Christina Hendricks: “Mad Men” Spoilers: Tv Guide – March 13th
Published on March 14th, 2012 by Flo & Filed in Mad Men. Comments Off

I need Mad Men intel. March 25 can’t come soon enough! — Trish
ADAM:
At the risk of having someone poison my Old Fashioned (hic!), I can only offer three teases as a tasty aperitif. (Bigger spoilers will only ruin your appetite!) Three people have moved into different homes. Two are afraid they’re losing their jobs. And one reveals a sexy hidden talent to all!

Christina Hendricks: “Mad Men” – Season 5: “Did you miss me?” Promo
Published on March 14th, 2012 by Flo & Filed in Mad Men,Multimedia. Comments Off

Christina Hendricks: “Mad Men” Episodes 5.01 – 5.05 – Official Descriptions
Published on March 12th, 2012 by Flo & Filed in Mad Men,Miscellaneous. Comments Off

5.01/5.02 – “A Little Kiss” (2-hour premiere)
In the season five opener, we’re welcomed back with a surprise for Don as Pete and Roger butt heads, and Joan clashes with a houseguest.

5.03 – “Tea Leaves”
As Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce tries to build upon its current business, Peggy is given new responsibility. Don and Harry indulge a client.

5.04 – “Mystery Date”
Don runs into someone from his past. Joan makes a decision, and Roger gives Peggy extra work.

5.05 – “Signal 30”
Lane strikes up an interesting friendship. Pete entertains guests.

Christina Hendricks: “Mad Men” Season 5 Promotional Shoots
Published on March 10th, 2012 by Flo & Filed in Gallery,Mad Men. Comments Off

Gallery Links
[004] Mad Men > Season Five > Promotional Photoshoots > Cast
[003] Mad Men > Season Five > Promotional Photoshoots > Solo

Christina Hendricks: “V Magazine” – The Big Shot
Published on March 2nd, 2012 by Flo & Filed in Articles and Interviews,Gallery,Mad Men,Magazines Coverage. Comments Off

Christina Hendricks is celebrating the forthcoming beginning of the fifth season of “Mad Men” by posing in a new photo shoot for V Magazine.

Here’s part of the interview:

“Oh, I can totally go unnoticed. I ran around all day today. Not a mention,” insists Christina Hendricks, star of AMC’s 1960s period series Mad Men. “In Los Angeles you know the neighborhoods where you’re more likely to get noticed. And then you probably put on lipstick.”

It’s difficult to accept that after four seasons of embodying Joan Harris (nĂ©e Holloway)—the efficient, famously voluptuous office manager who thanklessly presides over Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce wearing a parade of wiggle dresses—Hendricks could still enjoy anonymity. Fans will surely be looking for her when Mad Men returns on March 25th, eager to discover more about her character’s unexpected pregnancy. “It probably surprised a lot of people. It certainly surprised me,” she says. “Joan certainly has motherly instincts—at least in a bossy way.” Hendricks is more savvy now than she was when Mad Men introduced its distinctive brand of cerebral, obsessively art-directed drama. For example, she no longer turns black-and-blue from wearing her character’s restrictive girdles and garters. “Now I put moleskin underneath the rubber so it doesn’t rub against my skin,” she says. “I still get a little bruised up, but I’m learning the tricks of the trade.”

Born in Knoxville, Tennessee, Hendricks landed her first consequential role in 1999 on MTV’s teen soap Undressed—a Skins precursor that served as a Mickey Mouse Club for maturing young actors (“Most people in Los Angeles have that on their rĂ©sumĂ©,” the multiple Emmy-nominee explains with a laugh). She played a college student named Rhiannon who crashes at her aunt’s house with a rapper she meets at a bus station (YouTube can fill in the rest). “I used to play characters more naĂŻve than Joan, who is so sophisticated and
not jaded, but worldlier,” she says. “I’ve definitely learned from playing a character that is so confident and resilient.”

Which is not to say that during her rise to fame the radiant natural blonde did not receive her share of industry-issued validation. She can share a proper fashion anecdote dating to her time modeling in the mid ’90s, like walking in a Hussein Chalayan show or inspiring a young Karen Elson to dye her hair a career-boosting red. But because of her work on Mad Men, Hendricks now commands red carpets—and has even orchestrated some bonafide Hollywood bombshell moments, like at the 2011 Golden Globe Awards when she lost an $850,000 bracelet on loan from Chopard, and after an event worker found the ornament and returned it to her, pleaded with security to allow her to leave the auditorium and deliver it to her publicist for safekeeping, whereupon the guard watched as Hendricks pulled the 124 carats of platinum-set diamonds out of her acclaimed cleavage and passed them to her rep through a crack in the door. Bull’s-eye. “I couldn’t put it in my purse,”

You can read the rest here.

Gallery Link
[006] Photoshoot & Portrait Sessions > Session #69

Christina Hendricks: On “Mad Men”, Sexual Confidence, and Her Early Goth Days
Published on February 29th, 2012 by Flo & Filed in Articles and Interviews,Mad Men,Magazines Coverage. Comments Off

On a bright January afternoon, I meet Christina Hendricks at Dusty’s, a rustic French-American bistro in Silver Lake. It’s one of her favorite spots to eat in Los Angeles, and not far from her home. The 36-year-old actor, dressed in a fetching black dress that clings to her famous curves, strides confidently to the table, seeming supremely comfortable in her body. It’s a body that, thanks to an assembly line of red carpet appearances, provocative magazine spreads, and her standout role as sumptuous secretary Joan Holloway on AMC’s flagship drama, Mad Men, has become a national obsession. It drives men to helpless, testosterone-fueled fantasies, and women to reevaluate traditional Hollywood notions of beauty—maybe the spotlight isn’t only for the thin and waifish after all? But today, Hendricks, whose trademark crimson hair is partially concealed under a snug, black-and-white knit cap, blends in with the rest of the diners, almost. In the dim lighting, her alabaster skin is almost translucent, and as a lighter version of that familiar, breathy voice rolls across the table at me like wisps of smoke, hints of Joan Holloway creep through.

When Mad Men first premiered in 2007, it surprised everybody. HBO passed on the drama that centered around an advertising agency in 1960s Manhattan, laying bare the sexism, homophobia, and racism of the era. The show eventually found a home on upstart network AMC, and turned its relatively unknown cast, including Hendricks, into overnight stars. “Everyone seems the same, which is nice,” says Hendricks of her costars, which include Jon Hamm and Elisabeth Moss. “If there was a difference from Season 1, it’s that everyone’s on their cell phones a lot more because our managers and publicists are always calling.”

For those who have yet to plunge into Mad Men‘s martini-drenched universe, Joan Holloway is a brassy office manager and den mother to all the other women at Madison Avenue advertising agency Sterling Cooper Draper Pryce, and a pro at hypnotizing ad men with a glance of those cerulean eyes or a swivel of those hourglass hips. Over the course of four seasons, we’ve watched as she batted away constant harassment using her own sexuality as ammo, carried on a torrid affair with one of the company’s founders, and finally managed to land a doctor husband, though not before he sexually assaults her in her workplace. (They still managed to make their dinner reservation.) When we last saw her, Holloway had transformed into a homemaker, though a danger-fueled liaison left her pregnant with the child of her former boss.

“The amazing thing about Joan is how confident she is,” Hendricks says, between sips of Sancerre and nibbles on french fries. “I was never that confident. When we shot the pilot I was like, Who is this woman? I’m not friends with people like that.” But today, her self-confidence is brimming. Starring on a hit show might do that to a girl, but Hendricks admits that Joan’s sass was contagious. “She’s living in the ’60s, but she uses sexual innuendo, which is taboo. Because of that—and a very tight green dress—she became a sexual character. She was very openly saying, I have sex, and I don’t care if you judge me. I’m not going to apologize for who I am. Those qualities resonated with people, and have given me confidence.”

She’s a character that, like Hendricks herself, has experienced some of womanhood’s watershed moments in the five years we’ve known her. “Just as I have changed, and as significant things have happened in my life, like getting married and moving into a new home, Joan has gotten married and gotten pregnant,” Hendricks says. All of this has added up to a softer Joan Holloway, who once teased a white colleague for seeing a black woman. “She was a lot bitchier than she is now. She’s mellowed out and wised up. With the more responsibility that she’s gotten at work and in her life, she can’t be as flip as she was. There’s a lot more on her shoulders these days. ”

Growing up in Knoxville, Tennessee, Hendricks had no inkling of the Tinseltown success that awaited her. With her mother, a psychologist, and her British father, whose job working for the US Forest Service caused them to move often, Hendricks dotted the country throughout her childhood, spending swathes of her youth in places like Twin Falls, Idaho, and Fairfax, Virginia. In her teens, she acted in community theater and did ballet, experiences that ignited a passion for performance. “I studied pretty much everyday,” says Hendricks of her stint as a dancer. “Then, when I was 15, I realized I wasn’t going to be a professional dancer and I sort of had to readjust. I already knew that performance was something that made me happy,” she says.

Before she discovered acting, Hendricks expressed herself through fashion. “When I was in junior high, I was sewing my own clothes,” she says. “I had these looks. Sometimes they were very tragic. I wore a pair of green, silk, MC Hammer–style pants with the low crotch, Birkenstocks, and my hair in a turban. What that look was, I don’t know, but it was kind of amazing.” In high school, she embraced goth culture, and the black fishnets and makeup that came with it. “I wasn’t one of those sloppy, dirty goths. I thought it was very beautiful and I went out of my way to do it right, in a very high-fashion kind of way.” (Of Mad Men’s influence on her current style, she says, “I now have a section in my closet devoted to pencil skirts.”)

To read the rest of the article and interview.

Gallery Link
[006] Photoshoot & Portrait Sessions > Session #67

Christina Hendricks: “Mad Men” Official Season 5 Poster Debuts
Published on February 27th, 2012 by Flo & Filed in Gallery,Mad Men. Comments Off

Christina Hendricks: “Mad Men” Season 5 Promo – “Joan is back”
Published on February 22nd, 2012 by Flo & Filed in Mad Men,Multimedia. Comments Off

Christina Hendricks: “Mad Men” Season 1 – Screencaps
Published on February 17th, 2012 by Flo & Filed in Gallery,Mad Men. Comments Off

Another gift for the site’s birthday: I’ve just added in the gallery screencaps from all the episodes back from Season 1 of “Mad Men” plus some missing promotional pictures and behind the scenes. Enjoy!

Gallery Links
[002] Mad Men > Season One > Episodes Stills > 1.02 – “Ladies Room”
[002] Mad Men > Season One > Behind the Scenes

Gallery Links
[203] Mad Men > Season One > Screencaps > 1×01 – “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes”
[191] Mad Men > Season One > Screencaps > 1×02 – “Ladies Room”
[097] Mad Men > Season One > Screencaps > 1×03 – “Marriage of Figaro”
[176] Mad Men > Season One > Screencaps > 1×05 – “5G”
[681] Mad Men > Season One > Screencaps > 1×06 – “Babylon”
[086] Mad Men > Season One > Screencaps > 1×07 – “Red in the Face”
[099] Mad Men > Season One > Screencaps > 1×08 – “The Hobo Code”
[166] Mad Men > Season One > Screencaps > 1×09 – “Shoot”
[503] Mad Men > Season One > Screencaps > 1×10 – “Long Weekend”
[224] Mad Men > Season One > Screencaps > 1×11 – “Indian Summer”
[274] Mad Men > Season One > Screencaps > 1×12 – “Nixon vs. Kennedy”
[049] Mad Men > Season One > Screencaps > 1×13 – “The Wheel”