Hamm: I Can't Imagine Having Miley's Fame

Jon Hamm, who found fame relatively late when he took on the role as Don Draper in Mad Men, has told Sky's Entertainment Week he can't understand how people cope when they become famous earlier in life.

"I can't imagine dealing with the likes of success and fame and being a young person in this landscape," he said.

"I can't imagine it. If you look at Miley Cyrus or Jennifer Lawrence or any of these people and they're handling it with reasonable grace and aplomb - they seem to be enjoying themselves and be relatively well adjusted people in the world.

"It's a tricky landscape to navigate and you've got a lot of people who want a lot of things from you and it's hard to say no, especially when you're young and you think you're bulletproof and you think you're going to live forever and be famous forever."

The actor finished filming Mad Men earlier this year and is due to star in a Christmas special of Charlie Brooker's series Black Mirror.

He has been working on the American drama about the advertising industry as Don Draper since 2006 when they filmed the pilot, and says it was bittersweet saying goodbye to the series and all his friends and colleagues.

"We finished shooting 3 July, and I've been sitting on the knowledge of how this television programme ends and will continue to do so until April when its out," he said.

"It was rather a long day, and it was rather a lot of people's last day so there were lots of speeches and a lot of hugs and tears and a lot of laughter.

"It ended in a sort of massive drinking session at about 2am.

"So obviously it was the end of a massive chapter in all of our lives as people and as actors - most of us weren't particularly famous when it started and got significantly more famous as the series progressed.

"We're all very close friends and remain in each other's lives and consider each other family in some weird way.

"We'll always have this wonderful experience to look back on and so it was bittersweet."

Hamm was invited to appear in the special edition of Black Mirror - called White Christmas - by Brooker, but despite the series' focus on technology and social media, he remains a Twitterphobe.

"I've a very minimal social media profile, in fact it's non existent - it's as minimal as you can possibly get.

"I feel very old when I talk about that with people - Instagram and Twitter and Facebook - because it holds no appeal for me and all it does is make me feel like my father."

Also on this edition of Entertainment Week, we speak to Brian Blessed about playing King Lear opposite his daughter, Martin Freeman on saying goodbye to The Hobbit and Eddie Redmayne discusses the pressures of playing a genius.

Plus, we give our verdict on the latest film releases.

:: Watch Entertainment Week on Sky News - Saturdays at 3.30pm and 8.30pm - and any time on Catch Up.