Sylvia Plath(1932-1963)
- Writer
- Additional Crew
- Soundtrack
Sylvia Plath was born in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, to Otto and
Aurelia Schoeber Plath, both professors. When Sylvia was eight, Otto
died of complications from diabetes. Her mother struggled to give
Sylvia and her younger brother every advantage of a superior education.
Self-consciousness and anxiety about status and money contributed to
profound insecurity Plath concealed all her life beneath a facade of
energy and brilliant achievement. Sylvia published her first poem at
age eight. By the time she entered Smith College on scholarship in
1950, she had published many poems and short stories in newspapers and
ladies' magazines. She was selected as a guest editor of Mademoiselle
Magazine in 1953. Amid feverish overwork at Smith, she broke down in
her junior year and attempted suicide. She spent almost a year in a
mental hospital and was given electroconvulsive shock treatments.
Sylvia eventually returned to Smith, graduating summa cum laude and
winning a Fulbright fellowship to study at Cambridge University in
England. In February 1956, she met poet
Ted Hughes, and married him four months
later. After Sylvia received her MA from Cambridge, the couple lived in
Massachusetts (teaching at Smith and Amherst Colleges), then returned
to England. The marriage was for six years a strong union of supremely
dedicated writers. Ted's poem collections were critically praised, as
was Sylvia's first volume of poetry, The Colossus, published in 1960.
Sylvia worked on her autobiographical novel, The Bell Jar, which
narrated a college student's nervous breakdown and recovery. Despite
thriving careers and the birth of two children, personal jealousies and
a return of Sylvia's depression troubled the marriage. Sylvia soon
faced Hughes's infidelity, expressing herself through increasingly
angry and powerful poems. After the couple separated in fall 1962,
Sylvia's deep depression was fueled by the worst winter in a century,
poverty, and the struggle to care for two infants. She committed
suicide in February 1963, just two weeks after The Bell Jar's
publication. In the 40 years following her death, Sylvia Plath has
become a heroine and martyr of the feminist movement, with her work
foreshadowing the feminist writing that appeared in the 1960s and
1970s. Sylvia's poems remain a terrifying record of her encroaching
mental illness--graphically macabre and hallucinatory, but full of
ironic wit, technical brilliance, and tremendous emotional power. Her
Selected Poems, published by Ted Hughes in
1981, won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry.