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Ted
Hughes was born in Mytholmroyd near Hebden Bridge in 1930 and there
are still people in the village who knew him as a boy.
Donald
Crossley was a boyhood friend. He remembers: "Ted was a great
fisherman. He dearly loved fishing. It was his greatest love, salmon
fishing, and it all began here when we were boys."
He
does not think the new film tells the right story: "I think
they ought to have done some of the early life of Ted. This is where
it began up on these hillsides."
Ted
Hughes became one of the leading poets of his generation and in
his work he often explored the cruelty in nature. Hughes first went
hunting and trapping in the Calder Valley. Donald Crossley adds:
"This is where his rapport with nature began."
Speaking
at the time of his death Yorkshire novelist and poet, Glyn Hughes,
said: "The image of Ted that people have is of a rather dour
man that wrote gloomy poems full of violence but a better word would
be energy. What people generally don't know from his reputation
is what a warm-hearted, convivial, vivacious life-living man he
was."
Hughes'
distinctive style earned him critical acclaim and, in 1984, the
post of poet laureate. He widened his audience to millions with
the publication of The Iron Man, a story that was to become a favourite
with both children and parents.
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| Sylvia
Plath's graveyard in Heptonstall church |
Today,
as the new film shows, Hughes is remembered as much for his marriage
to Sylvia Plath which lasted for just six years. A few months after
it ended Plath committed suicide.
Sylvia
Plath is buried in Heptonstall
churchyard but not everybody has been happy with the inscription
on her grave, 'Sylvia Plath Hughes,' and in the past there have
been attempts to desecrate the grave.
Speaking
at the time of Hughes' death West Yorkshire Sylvia Plath fan, Elaine
Connell, said: "People always want to blame someone for a suicide
but personally I've never held Hughes responsible for Plath's suicide
and she did try and kill herself when she was in her early 20s before
she ever met him."
Elaine
Connell, who has written a book about her heroine, now says she
is very excited by the new film: "I think everyone is interested
in the idea of a genius who died young and in tragic circumstances.
I think it is the same sort of thing that promotes interest in,
say, Marilyn Monroe, Princess Diana and James Dean."
Meanwhile,
people in Hebden Bridge are waiting for the summer months to see
if this Hollywood movie will attract more tourists to the town.
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