Betty Draper
Elizabeth "Betty" Hofstadt Draper Francis is a fictional character in the AMC television series Mad Men (2007–2015), portrayed by January Jones as the first wife of protagonist Don Draper, an advertising executive in 1960s New York. Born in 1932 in Cape May, New Jersey, Betty represents the archetype of the affluent suburban housewife, former fashion model whose outward poise masks profound personal discontent, marital discord, and psychological distress amid rigid gender norms.[1] She bears three children—Sally, Bobby, and Gene—with Don, endures his infidelity, undergoes psychotherapy that yields limited insight, engages in an extramarital affair, and later remarries politician Henry Francis before her terminal lung cancer diagnosis in 1970.[2] Betty's portrayal highlights causal factors of her maladaptive behaviors, including overbearing parenting, emotional detachment, and vanity tied to her physical allure, which erode as she ages, reflecting first-principles constraints of her era's limited opportunities for women's self-actualization beyond domesticity and appearance.[3][4] Despite criticism of Jones's restrained performance as wooden or symptomatic of Betty's repression, analyses affirm it as deliberate, capturing the character's existential stagnation and the era's suppression of female agency without romanticizing her flaws or excusing relational failures.[5][6] Her arc underscores empirical realities of mid-century domestic life, where beauty and status offered illusory fulfillment, often precipitating untreated anxiety and relational breakdown rather than empowerment narratives imposed retroactively.[7]
Creation and Portrayal
Casting and Selection of January Jones
January Jones was initially cast in Mad Men after auditioning multiple times for the role of Peggy Olson, the ambitious secretary who becomes a copywriter, rather than for Betty Draper.[8][9] Creator Matthew Weiner, who had final say on principal casting alongside the network, noted the scarcity of suitable candidates for female leads during the 2007 pre-production phase, prompting him to adapt roles based on auditions.[10] Jones, then 29 and known primarily for supporting roles in films like American Wedding (2003), impressed Weiner despite not fitting Peggy, leading him to offer her an underdeveloped supporting part as Don Draper's wife.[11] The character of Betty Draper originated minimally in Weiner's original pilot script, completed in 2000 but shelved until Lionsgate and AMC greenlit the series in 2007; Weiner had envisioned focusing solely on Don Draper's advertising world without domestic scenes.[11] Observing Jones's poised, restrained demeanor—which evoked 1960s elegance with an undercurrent of emotional reserve—Weiner expanded Betty into a central figure, scripting additional home-life sequences to showcase her as the archetypal suburban housewife grappling with unspoken discontent.[12] Jones recalled Weiner directly pitching the pivot: after her Peggy reads, he mentioned "another role, but I don't really know what's going to happen with it," ultimately tailoring it to her strengths in conveying icy perfection masking vulnerability.[8] Selection emphasized Jones's physical resemblance to period icon Grace Kelly, whose poised beauty Weiner cited as inspirational for Betty's aesthetic, aligning with the show's commitment to historical verisimilitude in mid-century advertising culture.[13] Unlike more experienced actresses considered for other roles, Jones's relative inexperience allowed Weiner flexibility in shaping the performance, though her limited prior television work raised initial network concerns about lead viability, which Weiner overrode based on chemistry tests with Jon Hamm, cast as Don in early 2007.[10] This decision proved pivotal, as Betty's arc became integral to exploring themes of gender roles, with Jones filming her first scenes by mid-2007 for the July 19, 2007 premiere.[14]Character Development by Matthew Weiner
Matthew Weiner conceived Betty Draper as a tragic figure from the outset of Mad Men, envisioning her arc as one of inherent melancholy tied to the constraints of 1960s gender roles and her reliance on physical beauty for identity.[15] He intended her presence as Don Draper's wife to serve as a narrative surprise, exploring "how this woman had gotten into this situation" of suburban domesticity despite her education and modeling background.[16] Weiner drew inspiration from the era's societal expectations, portraying Betty as an intelligent, Bryn Mawr-educated woman whose "best job in the world"—maintaining a luxurious housewife role with minimal housework—nonetheless isolated her, leaving her "caught in between" traditional femininity and emerging changes.[16] Central to her development was the theme of vanity as a tragic flaw, with Weiner emphasizing how Betty's identity hinged on her looks: "This vanity of a woman whose entire identity is based on her looks... she was a model... educated and she reads, she’s intelligent, but [beauty] is really how she’s defined."[16] This informed key plot points, such as her psychological therapy in Season 1 and later manifestations of unhappiness, including the Season 5 weight gain storyline, which Weiner reframed not as a mere accommodation for actress January Jones's pregnancy but as a "physical manifestation" of Betty's eroded self-esteem after Don's remarriage to a younger woman, symbolizing her "domestic conundrum" and loss of her "job" as the beautiful wife.[16] He collaborated closely with Jones from casting, discussing Betty's internal emptiness despite outward perfection, influenced by her reading of The Feminine Mystique, to underscore a woman "more than that and maybe wasted in a way."[15] Weiner defended Betty's flaws, including her perceived shortcomings as a mother, as realistic reflections of women raised under rigid norms: "We were all raised by women like this... it’s easy to hate [her]" but her actions stem from adherence to "imaginary rules" that others flout, contrasting her stagnation with characters like Peggy Olson who adapt.[17] Her arc culminated in terminal lung cancer, a deliberate acknowledgment of smoking's consequences without sentimentality, allowing late growth—"she grew up in such a gigantic way" upon facing death—yet retaining her core detachment, as in entrusting final instructions to her daughter via letter rather than embrace.[15] This endpoint reinforced Weiner's initial tragic vision, positioning Betty as a casualty of unchanging vanity and era-bound suppression, distinct from the series' more transformative figures.[2]Performance and Acting Techniques
January Jones portrayed Betty Draper with a subtle and restrained acting style that emphasized emotional repression, using nuanced facial expressions and minimalistic body language to depict the character's simmering internal conflicts, such as frustration, denial, and unarticulated resentment, without relying on overt dramatic outbursts or verbose dialogue.[3] This approach captured Betty's multifaceted nature—childlike yet manipulative, placid yet calculating—through understated shifts in demeanor, from airy detachment to white-hot fury conveyed via micro-expressions and poised stillness, aligning with the 1960s housewife's societal constraints on emotional display.[3] Lacking formal acting training early in her career, Jones drew on personal experiences, channeling real-life emotions like loneliness, anger, and heartache directly into her auditions and performance, fostering an instinctive immediacy that Mad Men creator Matthew Weiner praised as an "athletic intensity" blending hardness with childish vulnerability to render Betty's self-unawareness authentic.[18] In challenging scenes, such as those in Season 6 requiring a fat suit to simulate Betty's temporary weight gain, Jones adapted by focusing emotion conveyance through restricted upper-body gestures and facial subtlety, as the prosthetics—applied over 6-7 hours daily—limited overall mobility and demanded innovative restraint to maintain character depth.[19] Her technique earned critical recognition, including a 2010 Primetime Emmy nomination for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series, highlighting the effectiveness of her method in humanizing a character often critiqued for detachment.[20]Fictional Character Biography
Pre-Series Backstory and Early Marriage
Elizabeth Hofstadt was born in 1932 in Cape May, New Jersey, to Gene and Ruth Hofstadt, members of a prosperous East Coast family with roots in the Philadelphia area.[21] She spent summers in Cape May, reflecting her family's affluent lifestyle that emphasized social status and traditional expectations for women.[21] Hofstadt attended Bryn Mawr College, where she studied anthropology, before embarking on a career as a fashion model in New York City and Italy during the early 1950s.[22] It was in this professional milieu that she met Donald Draper, an advertising executive at Sterling Cooper, whose courtship led to their marriage in May 1953 when she was 21 years old.[23] [24] The couple relocated to a suburban home in Ossining, New York, embracing the postwar ideal of domesticity. Their early years together produced two children: daughter Sally, born in November 1954, and son Robert, born around 1957.[25] This period represented a facade of upper-middle-class stability, with Draper providing financially while Hofstadt managed the household, though Don's undisclosed past as Dick Whitman sowed latent tensions that would later surface.[8]Seasons 1-2: Initial Marital Strains and Family Beginnings
Betty Draper enters Mad Men as the poised yet inwardly troubled wife of advertising executive Don Draper, residing in a suburban home in Ossining, New York, with their young children, daughter Sally (born circa 1957) and son Bobby (born circa 1959).[2] In season 1, set in 1960, she manifests psychological symptoms including numbness in her extremities and episodes of anxiety interpreted as panic attacks, prompting consultation with a physician who refers her to psychiatrist Dr. Arnold Wayne for Freudian analysis.[4][26] Dr. Wayne's sessions reveal Betty's repressed frustrations, and in a breach of confidentiality, he discloses to Don that Betty perceives their marriage as lacking emotional fulfillment, with her stating Don appears unhappy and distant.[27] This underlying marital discord is compounded by Don's undisclosed infidelities, such as his affairs with bohemian artist Midge Daniels and department store heir Rachel Menken, which erode the foundation of their relationship without Betty's direct knowledge.[28] Betty attempts to alleviate her distress through equestrian riding lessons, but symbolic acts like firing a rifle at birds damaging her garden underscore her simmering discontent and isolation as a 1960s housewife.[29] Transitioning into season 2 (1962), marital strains intensify as Betty uncovers Don's hidden box containing documents from his prior marriage to Anna Draper, including divorce papers, shattering illusions of his singular devotion and prompting accusatory confrontations.[30] Don's continued liaison with restaurateur Bobbie Barrett further intrudes on family life, heightening Betty's suspicions after incidents like Don's unexplained absences and a car accident cover-up.[28] Amid these tensions, the Draper family expands with Betty's unexpected pregnancy, discovered in the season 2 finale during the Cuban Missile Crisis; she initially considers abortion but proceeds, resulting in the birth of son Eugene Scott Draper (named after her recently deceased father) early the following year.[31] This development temporarily reconciles the couple, yet Betty's growing assertions of autonomy—through renewed modeling pursuits and horse riding—signal emerging independence against the backdrop of persistent relational fractures.[2]Seasons 3-4: Infidelity, Divorce, and Personal Crises
In season 3, set in 1963, Betty's marital discontent escalates amid Don's continued extramarital affairs, prompting her to seek psychiatric treatment for psychosomatic symptoms including numbness in her hands and arms, which her therapist attributes to repressed frustrations within the marriage.[32] She gives birth to the Drapers' third child, a son named Eugene Scott Draper after her ailing father, a decision imposed by her family that leaves her resentful, particularly as her father's senility and eventual death exacerbate family tensions.[33] At a Kentucky Derby-themed party hosted by Roger and Jane Sterling in May 1963 (episode "My Old Kentucky Home"), Betty encounters Henry Francis, a special aide to New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller, sparking mutual attraction. This leads to Betty initiating an extramarital affair with Francis, consummated off-screen but depicted in her secretive meetings, including a tense encounter at her home in episode 9, "Wee Small Hours," aired October 11, 2009, where the maid Carla grows suspicious of the visitor.[34] Don learns of the affair through Roger Sterling and confronts Betty, who admits to seeking emotional fulfillment absent in their relationship, yet they do not immediately separate.[35] Concurrently, Betty discovers evidence of Don's fabricated identity—documents revealing his birth name as Dick Whitman and prior marriage to Anna Draper—prompting her to demand full disclosure; Don confesses his past deceptions, including identity theft during the Korean War, but the revelation irreparably erodes trust.[30] By the season 3 finale, "Shut the Door. Have a Seat," aired November 8, 2009, Betty files for divorce, departing for Reno, Nevada, with infant Gene and Henry Francis to expedite the no-fault proceedings required under state law at the time, while Don retains custody arrangements for the older children. The divorce is finalized by early 1964, as depicted in season 4's premiere "Public Relations," aired July 25, 2010, after which Betty marries Francis in November 1963 and relocates the family to a new home in Rye, New York. Post-divorce, Betty faces ongoing personal crises, including strained co-parenting with Don, who visits the children amid his own remorse, and subtle dissatisfaction in her hasty remarriage, evidenced by her cold interactions and lingering resentment toward Don's influence.[36] Her therapy continues sporadically, highlighting unresolved issues of identity and autonomy in a post-marital life still tethered to suburban expectations.[37]Seasons 5-7: Remarriage, Independence Efforts, and Terminal Illness
In season 5, which is set in 1966, Betty has remarried Henry Francis, a divorced aide to New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller, following her divorce from Don Draper; the couple quickly weds to minimize scandal and relocates the family, including children Sally, Bobby, and Gene, to a new home in Rye, New York. Their union provides Betty with a more stable and affectionate domestic life, as Henry demonstrates consistent support and maturity absent in her prior marriage. Betty grapples with post-divorce emotional strains, including weight gain linked to stress and overeating, and experiences a health scare when a neck lump prompts medical tests revealing a benign thyroid condition rather than malignancy. She responds by adhering to a strict diet, successfully shedding the excess weight by subsequent episodes. Throughout seasons 5 and 6, Betty's appearances are limited, focusing on family dynamics and occasional tensions, such as her lingering resentment toward Don's second wife, Megan, which leads her to disclose Don's past deceptions to daughter Sally during a supervised visit. Henry remains a steady presence, handling household decisions while Betty manages child-rearing, though subtle frictions arise from her adjusted self-image and the family's adaptation to their altered circumstances. In season 7, set in 1969-1970, Betty pursues greater personal autonomy by enrolling in college-level psychology courses at a local institution, reflecting an effort to redefine herself beyond traditional homemaking roles after years of marital upheaval. This initiative ends abruptly when she falls down a flight of stairs at school, fracturing a rib and necessitating hospital evaluation. The examination uncovers advanced lung cancer, diagnosed as terminal with an estimated survival of nine months to a year despite surgical options.[38][39] Opting against invasive treatments that could diminish her remaining vitality, Betty prioritizes composure and family preparation, calmly informing husband Henry and maintaining daily routines like smoking and school attendance. She counsels daughter Sally, then a teenager, to forgo emotional dependency on men, urging her to secure financial independence through education and career, drawing from her own regrets over unfulfilled potential. Betty's condition deteriorates rapidly; she dies off-screen in late 1970, leaving a poignant letter for Sally that underscores self-reliance and grace under adversity.[40][41]Psychological and Thematic Analysis
Mental Health and Personality Traits
Betty Draper exhibits symptoms of anxiety and depression throughout Mad Men, often manifesting as psychosomatic complaints such as hand numbness, insomnia, and nervousness, which she attributes to repressed anger and marital dissatisfaction.[7] Her therapy sessions with a Freudian analyst prove ineffective, reinforcing her sense of victimhood by focusing on her supposed childhood aggressions rather than addressing contemporary stressors like infidelity and societal role constraints.[7] Creator Matthew Weiner described Betty as a "tragedy from the beginning," portraying her melancholy as rooted in unfulfilled aspirations and the era's gender expectations, which stifle her intellectual potential despite her intelligence.[15] Personality-wise, Betty displays traits of emotional immaturity and self-absorption, frequently reacting petulantly to perceived slights, such as Don's affairs or her children's demands, which analysts attribute to narcissistic tendencies exacerbated by her beauty and early objectification as a model.[42] She oscillates between poised grace—likened to Grace Kelly—and impulsive volatility, including binge eating, reckless riding, and confrontational outbursts, suggesting underlying borderline-like instability driven by identity loss post-motherhood and divorce.[43] Weiner noted audience hostility toward her "ice queen" facade, but emphasized her hardening as a response to betrayal, not inherent monstrosity, highlighting causal links between personal agency deficits and relational failures.[16] Her parenting reflects detachment, potentially depressive in nature, prioritizing appearances over empathy, as critiqued in psychological reviews of 1960s maternal norms.[44]Representation of 1960s Housewife Realities
Betty Draper's portrayal in Mad Men captures the constrained domestic existence of many educated middle-class women in early 1960s America, where societal expectations emphasized marriage, motherhood, and homemaking over professional fulfillment. As a Bryn Mawr graduate and former model, Betty embodies the archetype of the "happy housewife heroine" who, despite outward perfection in her suburban Ossining home, experiences profound dissatisfaction and emotional numbness.[45] This reflects historical accounts of suburban isolation, with women like Betty limited to child-rearing and household management amid absent husbands focused on careers.[46] By 1960, only about 38 percent of American women participated in the paid workforce, often in low-status roles, leaving many full-time homemakers grappling with unutilized potential.[47] The character's reliance on tranquilizers, such as those prescribed by her psychiatrist, mirrors the era's medicalization of female discontent, where symptoms of malaise were frequently attributed to individual pathology rather than systemic constraints.[48] Betty Friedan's 1963 The Feminine Mystique documented similar sentiments among college-educated housewives, describing a pervasive "problem that has no name" involving isolation and loss of identity, which resonated with surveys of women feeling trapped in repetitive domestic routines.[49] Mad Men creator Matthew Weiner drew from such realities, portraying Betty's numbness and passive-aggressive behaviors as authentic responses to unfulfilled ambitions, including her brief modeling career curtailed by marriage.[50] While not all 1960s housewives reported unhappiness—some studies indicated contentment in domestic roles tied to stable marriages—Betty's arc highlights the vulnerabilities for those in strained unions, where infidelity and emotional distance exacerbated feelings of irrelevance.[51] Her evolution, including riding lessons and political engagement later in the series, underscores emerging shifts toward greater agency, aligning with the pre-feminist stirrings that propelled second-wave activism by mid-decade.[52] This representation avoids romanticization, emphasizing causal links between rigid gender norms and psychological strain without universalizing the experience.[53]Motherhood and Interpersonal Relationships
Betty Draper's motherhood in Mad Men is depicted as emotionally fraught and reflective of mid-20th-century domestic constraints, marked by detachment and inconsistent parenting of her three children: daughters Sally and the infant Gene, and son Bobby. She frequently prioritizes her own psychological struggles over nurturing, as seen when she manipulates access to Sally's child psychologist sessions to address her personal dissatisfaction rather than the child's needs.[54] Creator Matthew Weiner defended this portrayal, arguing that Betty represents the archetype of mothers from that era, stating, "we were all raised by women like this," emphasizing generational norms over modern judgments of inadequacy.[55][17] Her relationship with Sally is particularly strained, evolving from Betty's frustration with her daughter's precocious behaviors—such as cutting her own hair or exploring sexuality—to moments of reluctant guidance amid mutual resentment. Betty views Sally's insecurities as echoing her own unmet desires for validation, often responding with criticism or physical discipline, like slapping her in response to adolescent curiosity.[54] This dynamic underscores Betty's unresolved childhood influences, including a domineering mother and absent father, which Weiner linked to her parenting style as a product of inherited dysfunction rather than inherent malice.[56] With younger children Bobby and Gene, interactions are more peripheral; Bobby faces benign neglect, while Gene's naming after Betty's dying father symbolizes her brief, idealized maternal redemption before her own terminal illness.[57] Interpersonally, Betty's first marriage to Don Draper begins with mutual attraction but deteriorates due to his chronic infidelity and identity deceptions, culminating in divorce by 1964 after years of simmering alienation.[30] Don's unresolved maternal traumas exacerbate their disconnect, rendering Betty a peripheral figure in his life despite shared parenthood.[30] Her subsequent union with Henry Francis, a political aide met during her marriage to Don, offers comparative stability; Henry demonstrates patience and affection, supporting the family transition without the volatility of her prior relationship, though Betty's neuroses persist.[58] Weiner portrayed this shift as Betty seeking security over passion, aligning with her pragmatic interpersonal evolution amid personal crises.[55]
Reception and Controversies
Critical Evaluations
Critics have offered mixed assessments of Betty Draper's character arc, often praising her as a poignant embodiment of mid-20th-century female dissatisfaction while critiquing her portrayal as increasingly unsympathetic and underdeveloped. In a 2010 Vulture analysis, Betty is described as hardening into an "icier, vainer, more alien" figure amid the personal growth of other female characters, suggesting the writers transformed her from a nuanced housewife into a narrative foil for Don Draper's evolution.[54] Similarly, a 2012 TIME review argues that post-divorce, the series lost sympathy for Betty, reducing her to a threadbare antagonist rather than exploring her inner life with the depth afforded to male leads.[6] These evaluations highlight a perceived shift where Betty's vanity and emotional rigidity—rooted in her beauty and societal role—serve more as plot devices than fully realized traits.[2] Positive critiques emphasize Betty's tragic realism, positioning her as a casualty of rigid gender norms rather than inherent villainy. A 2024 Collider piece contends that the show failed Betty by denying her emotional thaw, portraying her depression and maternal flaws as symptoms of an unexamined era's constraints, with January Jones delivering a "reserved and disquieting" performance that captures silent inner turmoil.[4] IndieWire's 2015 retrospective lauds her as the series' most compelling figure for subverting maternal ideals, depicting a "cold, brass-tacks" mother whose flaws mirror the authenticity of flawed human behavior over idealized tropes.[59] This view aligns with NPR's 2009 assessment of Jones' portrayal as "raw, frightening, and seductive," crediting her for conveying Betty's suppressed anger beneath a composed facade, thus underscoring the character's complexity in reflecting housewife alienation.[3] January Jones' acting as Betty has drawn particular scrutiny, with some reviewers questioning her emotive range while others defend it as ideally suited to the role's glacial demeanor. Slate's 2013 critique notes Betty's reputation as one of TV's "worst characters" and "unlikable," attributing this partly to Jones' stiff delivery, which amplifies perceptions of meanness over misunderstanding.[60] In contrast, multiple analyses, including Collider's, affirm Jones' restraint as a strength, enabling a portrayal of psychological repression that avoids melodrama and aligns with Betty's era-bound stoicism.[4] These debates often conflate character design with performance, as evidenced in Jezebel's 2010 piece, which frames Betty's "Ice Princess" traits and harsh parenting—such as shaming her daughter—as polarizing yet emblematic of unfulfilled aspirations, rather than actor shortcomings.[61] Overall, evaluations underscore Betty's role in illuminating causal links between personal agency deficits and relational dysfunction, though critiques persist that the narrative prioritized thematic symbolism over empathetic depth.[54][4]Fan Debates and Backlash
Fans expressed significant division over Betty Draper's portrayal as a mother, with many condemning her as emotionally distant and neglectful toward her children, particularly Sally and Bobby, citing incidents like leaving Sally unattended or prioritizing personal grievances over family needs.[62][63] This criticism intensified after episodes depicting her strict discipline or apparent indifference, leading some viewers to label her the "worst mother in TV history."[64] In contrast, defenders argued that such judgments ignored the era's parenting norms and Betty's own psychological constraints, including untreated depression and the fallout from Don's serial infidelity, positioning her actions as contextually realistic rather than villainous.[65][66] A prominent debate centered on perceived double standards in fan reactions, where Betty faced harsher scrutiny for flaws like vanity and pettiness compared to Don Draper's comparable or worse behaviors, such as chronic lying and abandonment.[64] Critics of this backlash highlighted how Betty's limited agency in a patriarchal 1960s society amplified perceptions of her as "icy" or immature, while Don's charisma often elicited sympathy; empirical fan analyses showed condemnations of Betty frequently emphasized her emotional restraint, whereas defenses focused on her endurance of marital betrayal.[67][54] The 2015 episode "Time and Life" sparked backlash over Betty's temporary weight gain, dubbed "Fat Betty," with some fans expressing disgust on social media and linking it to body image triggers, prompting discussions on whether the storyline humanized her or reinforced shallow judgments of her attractiveness.[68] Proponents of the depiction countered that it underscored Betty's vulnerability and the societal pressures on women, challenging viewers' expectations of her as perpetually poised.[68] Overall, post-series retrospectives noted that while initial vitriol painted Betty as a "monster," evolving fan discourse increasingly recognized her as a tragic figure denied full character thaw, reflecting broader tensions in interpreting period-specific gender constraints.[4][69]Awards and Nominations for Portrayal
January Jones' performance as Betty Draper earned her one nomination for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series in 2010, recognizing her work across the series' early seasons.[70][71] She did not win the award, which went to Kyra Sedgwick for The Closer. In 2012, Jones submitted in the supporting actress category instead, but received no nomination that year.[20] For the Golden Globe Awards, Jones was nominated twice in the Best Actress in a Television Series – Drama category: first in 2009 for her debut season portrayal, and again in 2010.[72][73] Neither nomination resulted in a win; the 2009 award went to Anna Paquin for True Blood, and the 2010 to Julianna Margulies for The Good Wife. These nominations highlighted critical recognition of Jones' depiction of Betty's emotional restraint and underlying turmoil, though the series' ensemble focus often overshadowed individual acting accolades.[71] No other major acting awards, such as Screen Actors Guild or Critics' Choice, were bestowed specifically for the Betty Draper role based on available records. The lack of wins amid nominations reflects broader Emmy and Golden Globe trends favoring more dynamic lead performances over Jones' subtle, period-accurate interpretation of a repressed housewife.[71]| Year | Award | Category | Result | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2009 | Golden Globe | Best Actress in a Television Series – Drama | Nominated | For Season 1-2 portrayal.[72] |
| 2010 | Primetime Emmy | Outstanding Lead Actress in a Drama Series | Nominated | For overall performance through Season 3.[70] |
| 2010 | Golden Globe | Best Actress in a Television Series – Drama | Nominated | For Season 3 developments.[72] |