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Duck, who had been watching the coverage but had unplugged the television shortly before Peggy's arrival, turns the news back on after the two have had sex to discover that Kennedy has died. Margaret Sterling, decked out in her wedding dress, sobs that her wedding, which is the following day, has been ruined.
Don and Duck are amused because Heineken is a client of Sterling Cooper's, and Don has been trying to convince them that housewives are their primary market. Everyone laughs, but Betty is clearly upset by the situation. After the dinner party, she accuses Don of embarrassing her and believing he knows everything about her.
Instead, Duck uncovers Bob's secret: much like Don Draper, Bob's adopted an assumed identity to compensate for an embarrassing and impoverished past. None of his college references check out, he's from a poor area of West Virginia, and he was the manservant of a vice-president at Brown Brothers Harriman – not an employee of the firm itself in ...
In 2007, Moses joined the cast of AMC period drama series Mad Men playing a recurring role as Herman "Duck" Phillips. [5] In 2009, he received another Screen Actors Guild Award, this time for Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series. [2] The series ended in 2014.
Date Name Age Notes Sources March 1 Iris Apfel: 102 Fashion designer. Guest starred as herself in Today, Project Runway All Stars, Celebrity Page and others. [63] March 2 Mark Dodson: 64 Actor (Ewoks: The Battle for Endor, Arachnicide). He made guest appearances in Darkwing Duck and Bonkers. [64] March 3 Chris Mortensen: 72
The next day at work, Jane brings in shirts from Menken's for Don to use. Freddy drops by to see Peggy and realizes the executives loved the presentation when she stood in. Don is summoned to Roger's office, where he finds Duck Phillips and Pete. He is finally informed about Freddy’s accident in the office.
Duck then meets with executives from his former London firm, Putnam, Powell & Lowe, who refuse to hire him. Duck, in desperation, informs them of Sterling Cooper's vulnerable position and pitches a buyout, with Duck being appointed President. PPL then offers the buyout to Bert and Roger, through Duck. Roger's looming divorce makes the sale ...
Don chooses the latter and remembers his past in the Korean War–including the accidental death of Lt. Donald Draper in 1950 and his switching identities with the lieutenant to escape his own grotesque past. He then comes home and disappointedly watches Nixon's concession speech.