![]() But I think the thing about Sylvia is that she has these desires, and then she tries to quash them with her faith, but she's not very good at it. Linda Cardellini: Being raised Catholic myself, I think people who are Catholic tend to carry a lot of guilt. Do you think there's something particular about Sylvia that Don is attracted to, beyond her being beautiful and available? GQ: During Sylvia and Don's scene in the Italian restaurant, we saw a streak of jealousy she asked if Don would go home with a different woman if she wasn't there. But I didn't know that they would get caught. By the end of the two-hour premiere, I knew that she was going to play a part in Don's storyline. So I just kept going with it, and enjoying the idea that I didn't know what was going to happen. And Matt Weiner said, "I just want you to know that it's a great character, so don't worry." And I figured if I could trust anybody in television, Matt Weiner was the person to trust. The first episode I had, there were no lines. How early on did you figure out what kind of role Sylvia was playing in this season? GQ: Nobody knows much about their _Mad Men _roles going in. ![]() If a person does something for you that nobody else can, that's the most important thing in the world to you, then you're going to feel for that person at that moment. Linda Cardellini: I think there are still feelings between the two of them, and I think it almost lends itself to what Bob Benson said to Pete: iIf somebody took care of you, would do anything for you, would you not have feelings for them? That could be how Sylvia feels, and that's why she goes back to something that she already ended. Was it as simple as she felt indebted to Don because of what he did for her son? ** **GQ: Tell me why you feel Sylvia re-initiated the affair.
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