Middlebrook, Diane Wood, 1939-2007
Variant namesDiane Wood Middlebrook was a longtime English professor at Stanford University. In 2002 she left Stanford as Professor Emerita to focus on her writing. She was the author of Anne Sexton, A Biography; Suits Me: The Double Life of Billy Tipton; and Her Husband: Hughes and Plath, a Marriage; among other works.
From the description of Suits me : the double life of Billy Tipton : research and production records, 1897-1998 (inclusive), 1989-1998 (bulk). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 465097530
Biography / Administrative History
Diane Wood Middlebrook (1939-2007), biographer and longtime professor of English at Stanford University, was educated at the University of Washington (A.B., 1961) and Yale University (M.A, 1962; Ph.D., 1968). She joined the Department of English at Stanford in 1966 and remained there until 2002, when she left to focus on her writing full-time. Although she also published literary criticism and poetry, Middlebrook is best known for her biographies: Anne Sexton, A Biography (1991), Suits Me: The Double Life of Billy Tipton (1998), and Her Husband: Hughes and Plath, a Marriage (2003).
Middlebrook was approached by Kitty Oakes, the fifth and final wife of jazz musician Billy Tipton, in 1991 while on a promotional tour for Anne Sexton. Tipton's death in 1989 made international news after it was discovered that he was a woman who had been living as a man for over fifty years. Oakes proposed that Middlebrook write a book about Tipton and offered Middlebrook exclusive access to family papers and photographs. For the next several years Middlebrook conducted extensive research, including interviews with Oakes, other family members, friends, and music industry associates of Billy Tipton. The biography, titled Suits Me: The Double Life of Billy Tipton, was published by Houghton Mifflin in 1998.
From the guide to the Suits Me : The Double Life of Billy Tipton : research and production records, 1897-1998, 1989-1998, (Stanford University. Libraries. Dept. of Special Collections and University Archives.)
Diane Helen Wood Middlebrook was born on April 16, 1939 in Pocatello, Idaho. She attended public elementary and high schools in Spokane, Washington, where she lived with her parents and two sisters. She attended Whitman College in Walla Walla, Washington and later transferred to the University of Washington in Seattle, receiving her B.A. in 1961. She continued on to earn her M.A. (1962) and PhD (1968) from Yale University.
Middlebrook began her teaching career in 1966 at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California in the English department and remained there until her retirement in 2002. In addition to teaching, Middlebrook also held positions as Director of Stanford’s Center for Research on Women (1977-79), and Associate Dean of Undergraduate Education (1979-81). For three years she held the Howard H. and Jessie T. Watkins University Professorship, a chair endowed to promote innovative education at Stanford. She was also chair of Stanford’s Feminist Studies Program from 1985-88. Additionally, Middlebrook was a founding trustee of the Djerassi Resident Artists Foundation, which supports an interdisciplinary arts center in the Santa Cruz mountains in California.
Middlebrook married three times. Her first two marriages, to Michael Shough and Jonathan Middlebrook, respectively, were annulled. She and Jonathan Middlebrook had one daughter together, Leah Middlebrook. In 1977, she started seeing Carl Djerassi and they wed in 1985. Djerassi and Middlebrook spent the last 28 years of her life together.
Aside from her teaching, Middlebrook is best known for her biographies. In 1991, she published her biography on poet Anne Sexton. This biography generated great controversy over her use of more than 300 hours of tape-recorded psychiatric sessions as part of her research. In 1998, Middlebrook’s biography, Suits Me: The Double Life of Billy Tipton, became a best seller. The book studied the life of Tipton, a cross-dressing female jazz musician, who lived as a man from age 19. Middlebrook’s most recent biography, Her Husband, was published in 2003 and analyzes the marriage of Ted Hughes and Sylvia Plath. Middlebrook ’s book discusses how the poets’ volatile marriage was vital to making them the distinguished poets they became.
During the course of her lifetime, Middlebrook received numerous fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Bunting Institute at Radcliffe College, the Stanford Humanities Center, the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, and the Rockefeller Study Center of Bellagio.
Middlebrook leaves behind a manuscript that is groundbreaking in a different way-a biography of Ovid, a work that will be indelibly linked with her life’s end. In 2008, which would have been the 2000th anniversary of Ovid’s banishment from Rome and of his completion of Metamorphoses, Middlebrook and Viking Press had planned to publish the biography.
During the last years of her life, Middlebrook and her husband Carl divided their time between their San Francisco and London homes. Middlebrook was diagnosed with cancer. Middlebrook kept writing until November 15, 2007, and on December 15, 2007, after a long and hard-fought battle, she succumbed to the disease.
From the guide to the Diane Middlebrook papers, Middlebrook (Diane) papers, 1958-2008, (John Hay Library)
Role | Title | Holding Repository |
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Filters:
Relation | Name | |
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correspondedWith | Parnassus: poetry in review | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Sexton, Anne. | person |
associatedWith | Stanford, Donald E. (Donald Elwin), 1913-1998. | person |
associatedWith | Stone, Wilfred Healey, 1917- | person |
associatedWith | Tipton, Billy, 1914-1989. | person |
Place Name | Admin Code | Country | |
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United States |
Subject |
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American literature |
American poetry |
Biography as a literary form |
Jazz musicians |
Jazz musicians |
Transgender people |
Transgender people |
Occupation |
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Musicians |
Poets, American |
Biographers |
Activity |
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Person
Birth 1939-04-16
Death 2007-12-15
Americans
English