Screen grab from Voices & Visions, 1988 |
Aurelia Plath in 1986 spoke on audiotape about Sylvia while rehearsing for an interview with Voices and Visions, a TV series about poets (PBS, 1988). PBS really wanted Aurelia on videotape, but first she said no, then maybe. Her friend since 1982 and U.Mass. professor of English, Dr. Richard Larschan, suggested they practice audiotaping some conversations about Sylvia’s life and poems. Aurelia was more forthcoming on tape than on paper, he says; and at age 80 she didn’t give a fig anymore for what the neighbors thought, and that’s a bonus for us. Here they discuss Sylvia’s first published poem from 1941, when Sylvia was 8 years old:
“Every Sunday she looked for the children’s page in the Boston Herald, which I had shown her in the newspaper. And she thought she’d send her [poem] in.”
“So, in other words, it was self-initiated?”
“It was self-initiated.”
“And this is at the age of…?”
“Oh, about 8.”
“That’s very interesting because she’s taking initiative and trying to get public recognition, it seems to me, at the age of 8.”
“Uh-huh.”
“Why else would you print something?”
[Several-second pause.] “She wanted the dollar.”
In 1983 Aurelia had announced she would no longer speak
publicly about her daughter. Yet three years later Voices and Visions got Aurelia on
video: a coup for its producers and for us an encounter with a primary source.
Short clips from the six hours of Larschan’s “practice,” “amateur” audio and videotapes went into two half-hour educational videos about Sylvia’s poetry, produced in 2000 by U.Mass. and televised for remote college credit. One discusses Sylvia’s “mother poems,” the other her “father poems.” Writer and narrator Larschan assumes the viewer can accept that Plath’s father and mother poems have elements of myth. That’s how Plath transformed literal truth into emotional truth. In “The Myth of the Monstrous Mother” video, Aurelia throws both light and shade on poems such as “Medusa” (“The ‘stooges’ were Sylvia’s friends!”) and recites ecstatically from “Three Women.”
The two Larschan videos were on VHS only, and rare. They are now viewable through this site, the posting of June 7, 2022.
3 comments:
Wow!!! What a treasure trove. Had she done a lot of interviews about her daughter before 1983? The PBS show is the only one I've seen, of course, and I imagine she did some interviews after Letters Home came out. I can understand why she'd feel "done" with the topic.
Thank you for this engrossing blog on Aurelia Plath. She's been given short shrift, IMHO.
I have seen the Voices and Visions Sylvia Plath episode on YouTube. I taped it off PBS in the late 80's. I know longer have that on VHS, unfortunately. Maybe whoever holds the copyrights could release the entire Voices & Visions series onto DVD. There are some of us who still prefer the physical format.
The Voices and Visions episodes are on YouTube! The Plath episode with Aurelia is at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZPFQOtGSr4o
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