Mad Men's "I Have A Dream" Sequence

Last night, Mad Men might have taken its most eyebrow-raising cut so far on race relations. Suggested Reading Spades? What Diddy Will Be Doing In Prison This Fourth Of July A White Male TikToker Decided To Use Black Hair Relaxer… The Results Will Surprise You The True and Tragic Story of TLC’s Lisa ‘Left Eye’…

Last night, Mad Men might have taken its most eyebrow-raising cut so far on race relations.

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(spoiler alert)

Even though Carla (Deborah Lacey), Don and Bettyโ€™s African American housekeeper, had minimal dialogue, and even though references to MLKโ€™s โ€œI Have a Dreamโ€ speech and the murder of four black girls in Birmingham were deliberately oblique, the show managed to pack a lot in about the evolving black/white dynamic on the early โ€˜60s landscape.

Iโ€™m still convinced that the show is โ€œbetter off taking a smaller cut at race issues and really nailing the way they portray black characters, as opposed to weaving in a major racial theme and risking either overdoing or underdoing the nuanceโ€โ€”and in this case, I think it succeeded with that sort-of โ€œless is moreโ€ approach.

To recap: Henry, Bettyโ€™s would-be lover, shows up unannounced, and a simultaneously amorous but appearance-conscious Betty immediately remarks that theyโ€™ll forego any romance because โ€œMy girl is due back any minute.โ€

Itโ€™s a revealing comment. Though certainly commonplace for a housewife of the time and place to refer to her housekeeper as her โ€œgirl,โ€ it has more meaning to us since we know that really, Betty is the woman-child and Carla is Bettyโ€™s de facto babysitter and erstwhile disapproving parent.

Which only increases the racial irony when, later on, Betty offers Carla her unsolicited commentary on civil rights: โ€œMaybe itโ€™s not supposed to happen right now.โ€ The messageโ€”you run my household and keep my secrets, but equality might be out of the question. Itโ€™s not quite Kizzie (Leslie Uggams) and Missy Anne (Sandy Duncan) from Roots, but itโ€™s getting there.

This leaves Carla experiencing jeopardy on multiple levels. Sheโ€™s economically tethered to the Drapers, so any disintegration of their family unit can mean unemploymentโ€”kind of like black Americaโ€™s tie to the broader American economy. If you really wanted to stretch the allegory, Carla and Bettyโ€™s relationship is the relationship between black and white America. Carla is Bettyโ€™s moral compass, but she has to take pains not to look like she wants to be Bettyโ€™s moral compass.

Slateโ€™s Julia Turner points out that thereโ€™s an interesting juxtaposition of the perspective of the Northern, Westchester County housewives, who see Southern race violence as very, very far removed, and Carla, whoโ€™s an afterthought to them, even as sheโ€™s literally standing right there, serving them in a domestic capacity, while they discuss race relations at a Rockefeller fundraiser.

Mad Menโ€™s pull, apart from its art direction, is itโ€™s anthropological treatment of mid-century white moresโ€”made more interesting as it airs during the tenure of Americaโ€™s first black president.

The Drapers and Ossining should be able to see the evolution in society headed toward them, but they feel like itโ€™s still really far away. There are a few progressive souls, like Sallyโ€™s teacher (Abigail Spencer) who says she plans to make โ€œI Have a Dreamโ€ required reading on the first day of school. Sheโ€™s forecasting change the same way she sees Donโ€™s sexual advances coming. But just as she goes ahead and caves in to Don, anyway, she can see civil rights coming (she went to Bowdoin, after all), but itโ€™s still far removed. At the end of the day, sheโ€™s not a freedom rider or even an inner city schoolteacher, sheโ€™s dancing around a maypole in the โ€˜burbs.

โ€”DAVID SWERDLICK

David Swerdlick is an associate editor atย The Root.ย Follow him on Twitter.ย 

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