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April 1, 2015

NEW YORK -- How time flies in this very mad world. It seems like only yesterday the 1960s were dawning for Don Draper, his family and his comrades at the Sterling Cooper advertising agency. Now, as if in the blink of an eye, the '60s are waning as "Mad Men" nears the end of its run...

By FRAZIER MOORE ~ Associated Press
Elisabeth Moss, left, Jon Hamm and Rich Sommer appear in a scene from "Mad Men." The final season premieres Sunday night on AMC. (Jaimie Trueblood ~ AMC)
Elisabeth Moss, left, Jon Hamm and Rich Sommer appear in a scene from "Mad Men." The final season premieres Sunday night on AMC. (Jaimie Trueblood ~ AMC)

NEW YORK -- How time flies in this very mad world. It seems like only yesterday the 1960s were dawning for Don Draper, his family and his comrades at the Sterling Cooper advertising agency.

Now, as if in the blink of an eye, the '60s are waning as "Mad Men" nears the end of its run.

When the series begins its final stretch at 9 p.m. Sunday on AMC, the passage of time will be palpable for all concerned -- the series' characters, its audience and "Mad Men" mastermind Matthew Weiner.

"I'm out of work," cracked Weiner, who wrapped shooting in July, finished postproduction last October and, in December, vacated his office of seven years.

He is excited about what the last lap will bring, but, during this recent conversation, was customarily tight-lipped.

Matthew Weiner
Matthew Weiner

"We deal with the consequences of material success," he says, hinting at what lies ahead for the agency's newly well-to-do partners. "The incredible windfall they got at the end of last season wasn't just a plot device. It is propelling them into these last seven episodes: Once all your material needs are met, what else is on your mind?"

In an interview before "Mad Men" premiered in July 2007, Weiner explained why he had placed his ambitious new drama in the 1960s.

"By talking about that era," he said, "I can talk about everything right now that I care about." Things such as civil rights. Sex. Gender roles. The nature of adulthood.

And that he has done, season after season, with a drama of modern society as viewed through the prism of modernity as it was a half-century ago.

Weiner centered the action on Draper, whose gift for image-making, seduction and strategic chicanery was suited to the advertising game.

Meanwhile, Draper, like the '60s, was sufficiently removed, but not too far removed, from the present day to lend it fresh perspective -- what Weiner calls "the quotidian reality of everyday behavior and desire and aspiration and frustration" -- with startling currency, not to mention retro chic.

Even so, Weiner's choice of time frame was remarkable, since he, now 49, fell short of membership among the usual custodians of '60s lore: baby boomers.

And his chosen hero, Draper, born in the 1920s, was older than the boomer crowd.

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"The story has been told mostly through the baby boomers," Weiner said. "They got their hands on the wheel, and they've been taking us on a tour of the quote-unquote 'Turbulent Sixties' ever since. But that way, we see it through the eyes of a child. I wanted to focus on what an adult was during that period."

When "Mad Men" began, Draper was in his mid-30s, and increasingly he has viewed that decade through wary eyes.

"Matt used a lot of incredibly resonant 1960s touchstones," said Jon Hamm, who under Weiner's guidance brought Draper to life. "But it's in a very wise way, because he's never leaned on them. It's never been a travelogue through the '60s or a history lesson. It's just been about these people who came out of Matt's mind and have been working through their lives in this tumultuous, tricky time. We navigated those incredibly choppy waters with his characters," who have also included those portrayed by co-stars Elisabeth Moss, John Slattery, Vincent Kartheiser, Christina Hendricks, Rich Sommer, Aaron Staton and Robert Morse.

"Mad Men" tapped into the '60s ethos with authenticity. But that wasn't all. From the vantage point of 50 years' distance, Weiner also drew on his unfolding life -- even his experience of doing the show.

When Don, in the second season, says, "I keep going to a lot of places and ending up somewhere I've already been," it's not just an expression of his existential angst. It's also Weiner's lament as a writer feeling pressure not to repeat himself in each script.

Negotiations that pitted Weiner against AMC and the series' studio figured into "Mad Men" -- particularly a clash that dragged for months before a new contract was signed in March 2011 and delayed the show's return for its fifth season.

"There's a lot of negotiating that season," said Weiner, including failed negotiations that spurred Draper's fed-up protegee, Peggy Olson (Moss), to leap to a rival agency. "That was on my mind."

The autobiographical, historical and imagined commingle in a series that has been formula-averse. The tale unwinds at times with specificity, at times like a half-remembered dream.

Things that go unsaid become as forceful as the show's most penetrating dialogue. Episodes are densely packed and yet meditative. Sometimes hard-edged, sometimes mystical.

"In a weird way," said Weiner, "what happens is not as important as how it happens."

No wonder viewers plunder "Mad Men" for any buried clues. Item: In the final moments of last year's finale, set in July 1969, agency founder Bert Cooper (Morse) appears a few hours after his death in a vision to Draper, breezily performing a song-and-dance number that had viewers stewing over its meaning.

"The show is famous for being byzantine," Weiner acknowledges. "But I can't believe that someone singing 'The Best Things in Life Are Free' was up for conversation. That was EXACTLY what I was trying to say!"

It was a sweet, poignant scene, all right, and it set up these final seven episodes with the most heretical message possible by a series whose characters proclaim: The best things in life are the products we sell.

"Oh, my God! I didn't even THINK about that," Weiner said, laughing as his timeless drama nears the end. "Lucky for me I'm not in advertising!"

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