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  1. 15. Feb. 2024 · Jean Tatlock died in January 1944 at the age of 30 years old in real life, and Oppenheimer brings her tragic passing into the story through the titular character. J. Robert Oppenheimer learns about her death while working on the atomic bomb. Even though Jean and Robert had not seen each other for several years potentially, her death still had a ...

  2. 11. Dez. 2015 · Pash subsequently got permission to put an FBI bug on Tatlock’s phone. More recently, and more sensationally, there is an entire chapter on Tatlock’s death in Kai Bird and Martin Sherwin’s biography of Oppenheimer, American Prometheus (Knopf, 2005). They suggest that there is evidence that Tatlock’s death might not have been a suicide ...

  3. 20. Juli 2023 · Jean Tatlock. Library of Congress. Tatlock was born in 1914. Her father, John Tatlock, was an acclaimed professor of English medieval literature; her mother, Marjorie Feldman, had been one of his ...

  4. 2. Juli 2023 · In the spring of 1936, Oppenheimer met a young woman named Jean Tatlock at one of these parties. He already knew her father, an acclaimed Berkeley professor of Old English; professor John Tatlock ...

  5. 18. Aug. 2023 · Through Nolan’s gaze, Tatlock, played by Florence Pugh, is hypersexualized. From manic-depressive crying spells to dumping Oppenheimer’s flowers in the trash, Nolan’s Tatlock appears emotionally detached, cold, and hysterical at times. By representing Tatlock in this way, Nolan failed to capture her true romantic, intellectual, and mutual ...

  6. Jean Tatlock (1914-1944) was an American psychiatrist and Communist Party member. Tatlock's father was an English professor at the University of California, Berkeley. From him, she inherited a great love of English literature, particularly the poet John Donne. Tatlock met J. Robert Oppenheimer in 1936 while she was studying at…

  7. 19. Juli 2023 · Jean Tatlock posed for this photo while wearing her medical whites, and it’s possible that this is how she looked the last time J. Robert Oppenheimer saw her in June 1943. (Courtesy of John Tatlock)