Authors: Andrew Cracknell
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âYou want some respect? Go out and get it yourself.'
DON DRAPER TO PEGGY OLSEN MAD MEN
K
rone, still dubious about the campaign said later, âI finished up three ads, went on vacation to St Thomas, depressed, came back two weeks later, and I was a star.'
Mad Men's
Don Draper completely missed the point of the âLemon' ad; âI don't know what I hate about it most', he said. But everyone was talking about the campaign and it wasn't just people in advertising. College students had the ads posted on walls and curious customers were strolling into VW dealerships quoting the copy.
The irony of the VW campaign launching just one year after Detroit's most catastrophic marketing failure, the launch of the Ford Edsel, shouldn't be missed. The two case histories, one for a grotesquely overblown and glitzy automobile launched with unprecedented levels of Madison Avenue flatulence, the other for an honest and functional car announced with self-deprecating but intelligent wit, illustrated perfectly the gulf between DDB and the rest of the business.
One aspect of the Edsel disaster was not lost on Bob Gage. As he half-mischievously put it, âThere is a great danger in research as a basis to work from. One of the biggest flops of the century was the⦠what was the name of that car? I don't even recall it now⦠which was an entirely researched design. It had everything everybody wanted, except that nobody wanted it.'
This was heady renegade stuff. This was an agency with a major success on its hands desecrating the altar at which Madison Avenue worshipped, laughing at research. The effect on the rest of the business, particularly the new young creative people, was explosive. At last they had a champion who proved that agencies didn't have to be run (and ads didn't have to be done) in the old tired way, and that a creatively-oriented agency could credibly be held up as not just a creative but a business success.
There were other small pockets of creative endeavour around New York. CBS under Bill Golden at TV and Lou Dorfsman at Radio had acted as a sort of graphics finishing-school, with a stream of future first-class designers and art directors passing through in the mid to late 1950s. Herb Lubalin, a lifelong friend of Dorfsman, who gained notoriety in 1963 as the designer of the eventually banned avant-garde erotic magazine
Eros
, was Creative Director at Sudler & Hennesey. A noted experimenter with type, Lubalin, like Golden and Dorfsman, attracted a greater share of future creative award winners than this small, mainly pharmaceutical agency should logically have had. Bob Kuperman, later to head the VW group at DDB, Carl Fischer, one of New York's leading advertising photographers for four decades, and George Lois were just three of them.
But none of them had the critical mass and national fame of DDB â John Kennedy, anticipating his 1964 presidential campaign, was said to have asked his staff about âthe VW agency'. And critically, in the eyes of the young iconoclastic creative people pushing their way upwards, it was recognised to be âBernbach's place', an agency led by a copywriter, as opposed to an account man.
Jack Dillon explains the implications of this when describing life at DDB as a writer later in the sixties: âThere are a lot of writers and art directors in other agencies who, I'm sure, are very creative and able. But they are not working for agencies run by a writer or an art director. They are working for agencies run by businessmen.'
Referencing the early days of advertising agencies, he continues, âWriting ads was offered as an extra service by a businessman, not as the main thing that an agency did⦠its status had already been established. Creative people were and are usually under non-creative people. Bill Bernbach changed this. Bernbach was a copywriter and⦠he knew what good and bad advertising were.'
Many times since, creative leadership has proved to be less than dazzling. But Bernbach, with Mac Dane and Ned Doyle, was building a glittering business, both financially and creatively. And the thinking amongst the new creative community was if he can do it, so can I.
One person who had already tried was Fred Papert. He had written his first copy in the 1940s for Woolf Brothers men's clothing store in Kansas City while working there as a salesman to pay his way through a journalism course at the University of Missouri.
He had a series of jobs as a âragamuffin copywriter' at Benton and Bowles and Y&R, and then became creative director at Kenyon and Eckhart. He was fired from that company while working on the Pepsi account, for which he had wanted to do experimental photography at the agency's expense. Joan Crawford, the wife of the Pepsi President, vetoed his request. Papert objected, and summoned by his boss told him no matter who they were, clients shouldn't tell the agency what to do with its own money. His boss said âYou're right. You're also fired.'
At his next agency, Sudler & Hennessey, he met and briefly worked with the young George Lois, but he had already started to formulate the idea of having his own place. The line-up for his new outfit was a little eccentric; the four partners were two married couples, Fred and Diane Papert, both writers, Bill Free, an art director, and his wife Marcella, another writer. Sadly it didn't last; within a year Papert was on the phone to George Lois at DDB, offering him his name over the door if he would take Free's place.
LOIS WAS, AND STILL IS
, a hugely energetic man, with so much going on in his head he often struggles to get it all out. He talks fast, in a thick Bronx accent, with frequent expletives emphasising his absolute views. Things â any things â are either sensational or a piece of shit, an idea will either knock you off your ass or it's the worst thing you've ever seen. The phrase George Lois is least likely ever to use? âIt'll do.'
He was born in 1931 and brought up in an almost exclusively Irish area of the Bronx. âThe discrimination against my family from another immigrant population, the Irish, sure didn't bother me, I literally had 25 to 30 fist fights with kids in my neighbourhood. I won all of my fights, then wound up being friends with everybody.
George Lois. One way or another, he'll knock you off your ass.
âI went to the greatest high school in the world, a place called Music & Art in New York. It was the greatest institution of learning since Alexander sat at the feet of Aristotle. I got this incredible education, it was kind of a Bauhaus education, 1945 to 1949. And I then didn't know quite what to do, but I figured I better go to another art school because I was aged 17 and a half and I didn't know where to get a job because it wasn't a field where people were looking for talent. I mean, there weren't many places you wanted to work at â you'd love to work for Paul Rand. You could try to do record album covers or book jackets, etc. So I went to Pratt Institute, paid for by tips I got delivering flowers for my father since I was a kid, because he expected me to be a florist.'
From Pratt he was taken on by Reba Sochis as the first employee in her rapidly expanding studio. âIn just one day working for Reba, you could learn more than in four years at Pratt or Cooper Union. She was the toughest boss in the world, but she was also the sweetest woman you could hope to know.' She was one of the biggest influences on his life, a genuine pioneer; while female copywriters were comparatively plentiful, female designers were almost unheard of, let alone one running her own studio.
After military service in Korea Lois returned to New York, first to CBS, briefly to Lennen and Newell, where he overturned the agency chief's desk because he'd been rude about his work and then to Sudler & Hennessy, where David Herzbrun first met him: âGeorge Lois was a tall Greek kid with a big nose and a big lopsided grin. He looked as if he'd been nailed together from scrap building materials'. He described âthe loose limbed way he walked and the way he talked with his hands, his shoulders hunched over'.
Herzbrun may be being a little harsh; a contemporary picture reveals strong-jawed matinee idol looks, and in Lois's own words, âI was far better looking than Don Draper'. He and Herzbrun were teamed together, while Fred Papert, who was metamorphosing into an account man, was busy trying to get business for the agency. But it wasn't easy, as Herzbrun recalls:
âGeorge had a way of making clients nervous. If they appeared to have any doubts about our work, he could be counted on to say something like “You fuckin' crazy? This is the best fuckin' campaign you saw in your fuckin' life”. This speech was usually delivered in a tone of mixed fury and contempt while George loomed over the clients with fists clenched.' His
street-fighting days were certainly not finished; it's possible they're still not over, as he claims to have been in a fight during a recent basketball game in which he was playing â at the age of 79.
BY 1959
, Lois had already done noticeable enough work to breeze into a job at DDB, leaving Papert and Herzbrun behind. His first year was sensational; by his own admission he managed to upset just about everyone at DDB, from Phyllis Robinson and Helmut Krone down, and win more major awards than anyone else. It's possible the two were connected; his lips are never far from his own trumpet and no set of rules was ever going to constrain George.
It may seem counter-intuitive to find that within an organisation as radical as DDB there were already rigid mores and inflexible cultural tics. But you'll frequently find that creative people within advertising agencies are amongst the most conservative â and tribal â on earth, and they don't like their boat being rocked.
George's first mistake was to spend the weekend before he joined painting his office and moving in his own furniture. Cutting edge though their advertising may have been, DDB's offices were grey and almost dowdy, and George's brilliant white walls and Eames chair stood out as a belligerent style challenge from the new boy. Then his energy, bellicosity and irrepressible confidence irritated enough people that eventually a deposition of creatives went to see Bernbach to complain about him. Bernbach listened to them and said (and bear in mind this is George's story), âYou don't understand â George Lois is a combination of Bob Gage and Paul Rand'. Could there be higher praise?
Robinson had already called Lois in to admonish him for rudeness to Judy Protas over an idea he'd had for the news broadcasts for CBS television, then a DDB client: âI broke it down into 24 small space ads all throughout the newspaper that said 1
PM
, 2
PM
, 3
PM
and each ad was an ad that said every hour on the hour, so when you looked through the paper you saw 24 ads, dominating the paper. It was a sensationally brilliant way to do something⦠and the writer comes in⦠and she says, “No, no, no, no George, you don't understand, we at Doyle Dane don't do small space ads, we only do big ads”, at which point I said “Get the fuck out of my
room.” In fact I told four or five writers to get the fuck out of my room. Until Phyllis Robinson called me in and tried to chew me out, we wound up being great friends afterwards, but instead of her chewing me out I chewed her out and told her that she'd got constipated writers.'
Woman or no woman, gentleman or no gentleman, you don't tell George Lois what is and isn't âdone' without running the risk of a stream of profanity, or worse. This doesn't make him an animal; it makes him passionate about his work. Ron Holland, a copywriter who worked with him for many years, says he is âalmost Edwardian in his politeness with people' and he will indeed treat you with a quiet, warm courtesy. Just don't tell him what to do on his layout pad.
When he got Papert's call, Lois didn't linger long. Although being part of the DDB creative department was, as art director Len Sirowitz later said, âlike being a team member for the 1927 New York Yankees', the only logical next step was his own shop. And it hadn't escaped his notice that no agency had ever set up with an art director as a partner â he would be the first. He had no doubt they could improve on what Bernbach was doing. His only condition was that he bring his own writer.
LOIS'S FIRST CHOICE
was Julian Koenig, white-hot from his almost public fame as the writer of the VW ads. He immediately agreed, for two reasons. First, he'd been knocking around advertising for ten years and he, too, was curious about branching out, to see if he could do it on his own. It was one of those âwill I spend the rest of my life wondering?' moments. Second, he had recently experienced an aspect of Bernbach's character that had irritated and annoyed him.