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Sylvia Plath(1932-1963)

  • Writer
  • Additional Crew
  • Soundtrack
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank
Sylvia Plath
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.
BornOctober 27, 1932
DiedFebruary 11, 1963(30)
BornOctober 27, 1932
DiedFebruary 11, 1963(30)
IMDbProStarmeterSee rank

Known for

The Bell Jar (1979)
The Bell Jar
5.2
  • Writer
  • 1979
The Bell Jar
The Bell Jar
  • Writer
    Fred Dryer and Stepfanie Kramer in Hunter (1984)
    Hunter
    6.9
    TV Series
    • Additional Crew(Lady Lazarus)
    Sharon Mason, Sylvia Plath, Al Mason, Laura Mitchell, Taby Koohi, Attila, Serge Chubinsky-Orlov, Sean Mathieson, Bobby Burrows, Julian LeBlanc, Yana Yaseneva, Becky E. Shrimpton, Derek Stephen Brown, Brian Cook, Jen Viens, Pierre Cruz, Maria Cundari, Oksana Koulinitch, Marcela Huerta, Ian Fults, Ana Nikolic, Glynn Ball, Rob Poelvoorde, Jorge Orellana, Gregory Sorokin, Julia Nazarova, Myrna Ball, Dana Gavanski, Angelina Christopher, and Peter Rupp in The Missing Me (2010)
    The Missing Me
    Short
    • Writer
    • 2010

    Credits

    Edit
    IMDbPro

    Writer



    • Ramón de Rubinat
      Podcast Series
      • works
      • 2025
    • Three Women Uk Radio Drama Festival 2023 (2023)
      Three Women Uk Radio Drama Festival 2023
      Podcast Series
      • Writer
      • 2023
    • Luciana Lambert in Daddy (2016)
      Daddy
      TV Movie
      • Writer
      • 2016
    • Laura Jorgensen in The Colossus (2010)
      The Colossus
      4.4
      Short
      • writer
      • 2010
    • Sharon Mason, Sylvia Plath, Al Mason, Laura Mitchell, Taby Koohi, Attila, Serge Chubinsky-Orlov, Sean Mathieson, Bobby Burrows, Julian LeBlanc, Yana Yaseneva, Becky E. Shrimpton, Derek Stephen Brown, Brian Cook, Jen Viens, Pierre Cruz, Maria Cundari, Oksana Koulinitch, Marcela Huerta, Ian Fults, Ana Nikolic, Glynn Ball, Rob Poelvoorde, Jorge Orellana, Gregory Sorokin, Julia Nazarova, Myrna Ball, Dana Gavanski, Angelina Christopher, and Peter Rupp in The Missing Me (2010)
      The Missing Me
      Short
      • poem: "Mad Girl's Love Song"
      • 2010
    • In the Pink
      TV Movie
      • poems: Morning Song and The Applicant
      • 1982
    • The Bell Jar (1979)
      The Bell Jar
      5.2
      • based on the novel by
      • 1979
    • The Book Programme (1973)
      The Book Programme
      TV Series
      • poems
      • 1976
    • Desmond Dekker in Review (1969)
      Review
      6.3
      TV Series
      • poems
      • 1971

    Additional Crew



    • Above Ground
      5.6
      Short
      • inspired by
      • 2007
    • Fred Dryer and Stepfanie Kramer in Hunter (1984)
      Hunter
      6.9
      TV Series
      • poem: Lady Lazarus
      • 1988

    Soundtrack



    • La veu latent
      Short
      • lyrics: "The Womb"
      • 2022
    • The Bell Jar (1979)
      The Bell Jar
      5.2
      • writer: "Mad Girl's Love Song" (poetry excerpts from), "Lady Lazarus" (poetry excerpts from)
      • 1979

    • In-development projects at IMDbPro

    Personal details

    Edit
    • Official site
      • biography, bibliography, articles, pictures
    • Height
      • 5′ 9″ (1.75 m)
    • Born
      • October 27, 1932
      • Winthrop, Massachusetts, USA
    • Died
      • February 11, 1963
      • Primrose Hill, London, England, UK(suicide)
    • Spouse
      • Ted HughesJune 16, 1956 - February 11, 1963 (her death, 2 children)
    • Children
      • Frieda Hughes
    • Other works
      Novel: "The Bell Jar", 1963.
    • Publicity listings
      • 4 Biographical Movies
      • 4 Print Biographies
      • 1 Portrayal
      • 4 Articles

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      She had a genius-level IQ of 166, according to a test she took in 1944.
    • Quotes
      Oh, satisfaction! I don't think I could live without it. It's like water or bread, or something absolutely essential to me. I find myself absolutely fulfilled when I have written a poem, when I'm writing one. Having written one, then you fall away very rapidly from having been a poet to becoming a poet in rest. I think the actual experience of writing a poem is a magnificent one.
    • Nickname
      • Sivvy

    FAQ

    Powered by Alexa
    • When did Sylvia Plath die?
      February 11, 1963
    • How did Sylvia Plath die?
      Suicide
    • How old was Sylvia Plath when she died?
      30 years old
    • Where did Sylvia Plath die?
      Primrose Hill, London, England, UK
    • When was Sylvia Plath born?
      October 27, 1932

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