Find Famous People Fast!

Browse by Name:

Sylvia Plath

Poet / Writer

Sylvia Plath's haunting and personal poems and her tragic life story have placed her in the pantheon of contemporary American poets. Plath grew up outside Boston, graduated from Smith College and attended Cambridge University in England on a Fulbright Scholarship. In 1956 she married English poet Ted Hughes and, after a brief period teaching at Smith, settled in Devon, England. In 1960 she published her first collection of poems as The Colossus to favorable reviews, but her marriage to Hughes dissolved and Plath moved to London with her two children. Between 1961 and 1963 she wrote dozens of poems, but continued to struggle with a mental illness that had already caused her to attempt suicide twice. In 1962 her play Three Women was performed on BBC, and her semi-autobiographical novel, The Bell Jar, was published under a pseudonym. In February of 1963 Plath gassed herself to death with her kitchen oven. Most of her published works appeared posthumously, including Ariel (1965), Winter Trees (1972) and Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams (1979, a collection of short fiction). In 1981 The Collected Poems of Sylvia Plath was published, edited by Hughes; it won a Pulitzer Prize in 1982.

Extra credit: The 2003 film Sylvia starred Gwyneth Paltrow as Plath and Daniel Craig as Hughes.

Blog posts mentioning Sylvia Plath:
Watson v. Franklin, Round 27

Four Good Links

Plath, Sylvia

Biographical profile heavy with analysis of her work

Sylvia Plath

Biographical background and commentary on her work

More on Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath

New York Times archive of stories (requires free registration)

Sylvia Plath Homepage

Informational tribute from a fan

Vital Stats

Birth

27 October 1932

Birthplace

Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts

Death

11 February 1963
(suicide, age 30)

Best Known As

Poet and author of The Bell Jar