The Telepgraph and Daniel Snowman at The Guardian are both printing obituaries for Leonie Cohn, a former talks department producer at the BBC. Leonie Cohn, for those who have read mine and Gail Crowther's paper "These Ghostly Archives", will now be a familiar name in regards to Sylvia Plath, "Ocean 1212-W", and the BBC. The Telegraph's article even discusses, with startling familiarity, Cohn's relationship to Plath:
"One figure who eluded Leonie Cohn in the early 1960s was the American poet and novelist Sylvia Plath, whose lengthy prose piece about her upbringing was being planned as the centrepiece for a radio documentary, to be produced by Leonie Cohn, called Landscape on Childhood.
"One figure who eluded Leonie Cohn in the early 1960s was the American poet and novelist Sylvia Plath, whose lengthy prose piece about her upbringing was being planned as the centrepiece for a radio documentary, to be produced by Leonie Cohn, called Landscape on Childhood.
"Leonie Cohn had suggested a title for these reminiscences – Ocean 1212-W – but arrangements for the recording were abruptly terminated when Plath, the estranged wife of the poet Ted Hughes, committed suicide in February 1963. Leonie Cohn's final letter to Plath, dated three days before her death, is possibly the last Plath received."
Cohn passed away on 9 August.