Season 3 | |
No. of episodes | 13 |
Original run | 16 August 2009 8 November 2009 |
DVD release | 23 March 2010 |
Season chronology | |
previous Season 2 |
next Season 4 |
Overview[]
Season 3 ran from 16 August 2009 to 8 November 2009. It consisted of 13 episodes, each running approximately 47 minutes in length. AMC broadcast Season 3 on Sundays at 10:00 pm in the United States.
Season three takes place six months after the conclusion of Season 2 (roughly April/May 1963) and ends in December 1963. It chronicles the end of the "Camelot era" as the characters go through immense change in their professional and personal lives.
Season 3 was exalted by television critics and was a major winner in many television awards. Mad Men won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Drama Series, Golden Globe Award for Best Drama Series, and acknowledgement by the American Film Institute.
Production[]
- Number of episodes produced: 13
Cast[]
Main Star[]
- Jon Hamm as Don Draper (13 episodes)
- Elisabeth Moss as Peggy Olson (12 episodes)
- Vincent Kartheiser as Pete Campbell (12 episodes)
- January Jones as Betty Hofstadt (13 episodes)
- Christina Hendricks as Joan Holloway (10 episodes)
- Bryan Batt as Salvatore Romano (8 episodes)
- Michael Gladis as Paul Kinsey (11 episodes)
- Aaron Staton as Ken Cosgrove (10 episodes)
- Rich Sommer as Harry Crane (12 episodes)
- Robert Morse as Bertram Cooper (11 episodes)
- John Slattery as Roger Sterling (12 episodes)
Co-Star[]
- Jared S. Gilmore as Robert Draper (13 episodes)
- Kiernan Shipka as Sally Draper (13 episodes)
- Alexa Alemanni as Allison (11 episodes)
- Jared Harris as Lane Pryce (9 episodes)
- Patrick Cavanaugh as Smitty Smith (8 episodes)
- Christopher Stanley as Henry Francis (7 episodes)
- Alison Brie as Trudy Vogel (6 episodes)
- Deborah Lacey as Carla (6 episodes)
- Chelcie Ross as Conrad Hilton (6 episodes)
- Abigail Spencer as Suzanne Farrell (6 episodes)
- Ryan Cartwright as John Hooker (5 episodes)
- Edin Gali as Kurt Smith (5 episodes)
- Julie McNiven as Hildy (5 episodes)
- Ryan Cutrona as Eugene Hofstadt (4 episodes)
- Anne Dudek as Francine Hanson (4 episodes)
- Crista Flanagan as Lois Sadler (3 episodes)
- Eric Ladin as William Hofstadt (3 episodes)
- Peyton List as Jane Siegel (3 episodes)
- Mark Moses as Herman Phillips (3 episodes)
- Samuel Page as Greg Harris (3 episodes)
- Laura Regan as Jennifer Crane (3 episodes)
- Talia Balsam as Mona Sterling (2 episodes)
- Embeth Davidtz as Rebecca Pryce (2 episodes)
- Elizabeth Rice as Margaret Sterling (2 episodes)
- Audrey Wasilewski as Anita Olson Respola (2 episodes)
- Sarah Drew as Kitty Romano (1 episode)
- Darren Pettie as Lee Garner, Jr. (1 episode)
- Myra Turley as Katherine Olson (1 episode)
Episode[]
Season # | Series # | Image | Title | Writer | Director | Original airdate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 27 | "Out of Town" | Matthew Weiner | Phil Abraham | 16 August 2009 | |
2 | 28 | "Love Among the Ruins" | Cathryn Humphries Matthew Weiner |
Lesli Linka Glatter | 23 August 2009 | |
3 | 29 | "My Old Kentucky Home" | Dahvi Waller Matthew Weiner |
Jennifer Getzinger | 30 August 2009 | |
4 | 30 | "The Arrangements" | Andrew Colville Matthew Weiner |
Michael Uppendahl | 6 September 2009 | |
5 | 31 | "The Fog" | Kater Gordon | Phil Abraham | 13 September 2009 | |
6 | 32 | "Guy Walks Into an Advertising Agency" | Robin Veith Matthew Weiner |
Lesli Linka Glatter | 27 September 2009 | |
7 | 33 | "Seven Twenty Three" | Andre Jacquemetton Maria Jacquemetton Matthew Weiner |
Daisy Von Scherler Mayer | 27 September 2009 | |
8 | 34 | "Souvenir" | Lisa Albert Matthew Weiner |
Phil Abraham | 4 October 2009 | |
9 | 35 | "Wee Small Hours" | Dahvi Waller Matthew Weiner |
Scott Hornbacher | 11 October 2009 | |
10 | 36 | "The Color Blue" | Kater Gordon Matthew Weiner |
Michael Uppendahl | 18 October 2009 | |
11 | 37 | "The Gypsy and the Hobo" | Marti Noxon Cathryn Humphris Matthew Weiner |
Jennifer Getzinger | 25 October 2009 | |
12 | 38 | "The Grown-Ups" | Brett Johnson Matthew Weiner |
Barbet Schroeder | 1 November 2009 | |
13 | 39 | "Shut the Door. Have a Seat" | Matthew Weiner Erin Levy |
Matthew Weiner | 8 November 2009 |