Feeling Frida's Pain
Determined to play the artist in a credible biopic, Salma Hayek signed on as a producer, seeing the film, finally in production, through troubled times.
By DANA CALVO
MEXICO CITY--Seated in the path
of a sunbeam in her otherwise dark bedroom, Dolores Olmedo Patiño
looks like a woman who expects flattery. She wears thick makeup,
fire-engine red lipstick, false eyelashes and two diamond rings the size
of gum balls. She is believed to be about 90, but when a visitor asks her
the year of her birth, she looks away in disgust.
Beyond the dim room, over
Olmedo's shoulder, her estate gleams in the background. In the distance,
a group of schoolchildren waits for entry into the Dolores Olmedo Patiño
Museum, where they will find works by the great Mexican muralist Diego
Rivera.
Some of the paintings and sketches
bear personal notes he wrote to Olmedo--his model, love and wealthy patron.
But that was 70 years ago, before Rivera fell madly in love with a young
artist named Frida Kahlo. Only after Kahlo's death did Rivera return to
Olmedo. He asked her to purchase the rights to his and Kahlo's art because
he couldn't afford it himself.
And that's how a very old and
very proud Mexican woman became a source of great interest to Hollywood--and,
in particular, to the Latino starlet Salma Hayek.
Hayek and Miramax Films had long been
interested in a biopic about the tempestuous life of Kahlo. But to make
their movie, "Frida," they needed permission to film her art (or
replicas). Other stars were also interested in Kahlo's life and art for
rival film projects--Madonna for one, Jennifer Lopez for another. But despite
rumors about other visits, Olmedo says only Hayek showed up at her
estate to talk about the rights to Kahlo's work.
She said there were several encounters
over the course of one year, but Hayek remembers just one meeting--and
she still feels a bit uneasy about it.
"I don't think she really liked
me," Hayek said, describing a visit in which Olmedo took out a bottle of
champagne, and the two women spent several hours drinking and talking.
Finally, Hayek asked for permission to use the paintings or their likenesses.
By both accounts, it was a delicate
moment.
Olmedo leveled a stare at her.
"For how long do you want the
rights?" Olmedo asked.
Hayek said she would need them
for two years.
"You're being stupid," Olmedo
said.
"She told me to ask for five years,
because," Hayek recalled, "she said, 'You never know what's going to happen.'"
That was three years ago.
With a lighted cigarette dangling
from her hand and one long fake eyebrow striped across her face, Hayek
fidgets while a
cameraman measures the balcony for a party scene. She's on the
set of "Frida," finally playing the role of Kahlo, the free-spirited
woman whose life had more than its share of suffering and sex.
Kahlo's husband, Rivera, was equal
parts genius and womanizer, but Kahlo had her own passions. Among the men
and women
with whom she carried on affairs was Leon Trotsky, the Russian
Communist who sought refuge in Mexico City in 1937. Kahlo also
endured chronic physical pain as a result of a near-fatal trolley
accident when she was a teenager.
Her past and her artwork made
her an international icon. But will the public pay $8 apiece to see if
Hayek, a former soap opera
actress, can play a convincing disabled, bisexual painter?
"It's a very difficult movie to
get done because it's a film about an artist," Hayek said recently at the
end of a long day of filming in the
southern section of this capital city. "And name me one movie
about an artist that has made money. And she's unusual. You'd think (the
studios) would have jumped at something fresh, but because it
wasn't part of the formula, it took more time."
The idea of "Frida" was hatched
six years ago. Three years ago, Hayek sought Olmedo's blessing, and in
April the cameras started
rolling for the Miramax production. It also took about eight
screenwriters, three production deals, a handful of producers and $12
million. "Frida" is a low-budget, high-profile project. The
cast includes such names as Hayek, Ashley Judd, Alfred Molina, Geoffrey
Rush, Edward Norton and Antonio Banderas. It's being directed by Julie
Taymor (the stage version of "The Lion King," the film "Titus"),
one of the most creative and coveted directors around.
The screenplay, which needed work
last winter even though Hayek ran out of money, was tightened and clarified
by Hayek's boyfriend, Norton. And just days before "Frida" began filming,
Lopez walked away from her own Kahlo film, which would have been produced
by Francis Ford Coppola and directed by Luis Valdez.
A few miles from Olmedo's home
lies one of the film's sets. On a recent Saturday morning, a street performer
in white face swallowed fire and twirled lighted batons. Outside the enormous
home where
filming was underway, rickshaw drivers pedaled their canvas-covered
carts past a long line of trailers for the actors. By 11 a.m., the strong
lights had already cranked up the temperature inside.
After nine weeks of 16-hour days,
everyone was exhausted. Taymor slammed her leg into a piece of equipment,
and agreed to get it bandaged after she
began to feel lightheaded. Hayek seemed distracted both in front
of the camera and on the set when she was merely passing time. A Times
reporter who had
waited eight hours to speak with her was given only 10 minutes
on the set. She got up three times to do takes of a scene, then returned
to elaborate on Kahlo's
famous eyebrow.
"It's someone else's hair," Hayek
explained, pointing at the space between her eyes. In every self-portrait,
Kahlo embellished her eyebrow so it sat like a
heavy lid above a poised, determined-looking face. On the jittery
Hayek, it looks like a lost caterpillar.
Wearing a traditional, long green
skirt and boxy shirt, Hayek absent-mindedly touches her black tresses,
which are pulled back into braids tied on top of her
head in a green ribbon. If she seems nervous, it's easy to see
why. "Frida" has 200 scenes, and Hayek is in 199 of them. The movie rests
almost entirely on her
shoulders.
The role spans most of Kahlo's
life, from age 16 to her death at 47 in 1954. It is by far Hayek's most
challenging role, which isn't saying much considering she
has spent the past decade appearing in undemanding fare such
as "Wild Wild West" (1999), "Fools Rush In" (1997) and "From Dusk Till
Dawn," (1996). Miramax
was worried enough to send an acting coach to the set, although
Hayek said Taymor was the only person who helped her with her acting.
"Julie is very open. She listens,"
Hayek said. "She doesn't overwhelm you with information."
For Kahlo to be portrayed with
credibility, Hayek must slip into the artist's tormented soul. Hayek said
she researched Kahlo's life in an effort to feel more
connected to the role. She spoke with a handful of people who
knew Kahlo well, including Trotsky's grandson, who met Kahlo several times
when he was a
young boy. She was struck by how many people talked about the
artist with warmth and affection.
"Frida was capable of unconditional
love and capable of teaching a man who didn't know how to love," Hayek
said.
To get a better sense of Kahlo's
personal development, Hayek collected and archived as many photographs
as she could find. "I had every picture of Frida smoking--which she only
did with her left hand, even though she painted with her right hand."
Hayek must inhabit a character
who relied on her paintings as a catharsis for chronic physical pain. As
she dug deeper into the character, Hayek discovered a mirrored image in
Kahlo's self-portraits.
"She shows her left leg as the
injured one, but her injured leg was actually her right one," Hayek said
triumphantly. "At first, I though it was because she was painting as she
looked in the mirror, but now my theory is that she understood physical
pain but made her left leg symbolic of emotional pain. In paintings where
her left leg is the injured one, she was going through very painful times."
On the set this day, the mood
was especially manic because Miramax co-chief Harvey Weinstein had arrived.
At a picnic table behind the house, Taymor sat next to him for lunch. Across
from them sat co-producer Sarah Green and Hayek, who peeled shrimp from
her paella and ate it ravenously. Weinstein said he had just seen the early
footage and would give them four more days of production. His
decision brought filming time to 11 weeks, a long shoot for
a low-budget movie.
That night, Taymor was ecstatic,
describing how time-consuming it was to perfectly compose each scene on
celluloid. She has had input on everything in the film, from the soft patina
of Hayek's cotton shirts to the five Kahlo paintings used as scene openers.
Kahlo used influences from the
indigenous people of Mexico as well as her own anguish to create vivid
works of emotional isolation. They are not subtle, and Taymor is using
one of the most wrenching images, "The Broken Column" (1944), which is
also Olmedo's favorite self-portrait.
In the painting, Kahlo's naked
torso is ripped down the middle to reveal a spine of cracked marble. Her
body is held together by straps, and her skin is pierced with long, sharp
tacks that stand straight up. Taymor refers to works like this as "pain-tings."
"She made no attempt to pretty
her art," Taymor said of Kahlo's work, "and that's how she survived. She
transformed horror and adversity into art. It's an exorcism."
For many people, these images
contain an honesty and a brutality that are unmatched. Kahlo is beloved
by people from almost every stratum even though she was an advocate of
the working class.
And her reputation (and value) in the art world has grown over
the year: In May 1990, one of her self-portraits commanded nearly $1.5
million at Sotheby's, making it the priciest piece of Latin American artwork
ever sold at auction. (And this month the U.S. Postal Service issued a
Frida Kahlo stamp.)
Relying on the power of Kahlo's
art, Taymor takes long shots of actors holding poses of selected works
until the camera gets close enough for them to break out of repose and
emerge into flesh and blood. Taymor opens the wedding scene of 1929 with
a portrait of Kahlo standing next to Rivera. He holds a palette of paints,
and they both look placidly at the viewer. But this is Taymor's surreal
world, so
the palette is made of cookie dough, and Rivera's appetite cannot
be suppressed. After a few seconds, he breaks out of position and takes
a hearty bite of the palette. Behind the couple, a group of wedding guests
begins to dance.
"The film is about infidelity
and loyalty, and it deals with a woman who loves a man with the ups and
downs," Taymor said. "I hope we never see her as a martyr. We know right
on who he is, and she goes full blast into that relationship."
Taymor thinks "Frida" can do what
only a few movies have been able to do: tell a story about an artist that
appeals to moviegoers who aren't necessarily familiar with the artist or
her work.
"I hope this is not an art-house
film," Taymor said. "I hope it goes beyond that."
The cast is made up of many of
Hayek's friends and actors she has worked with. As the crew lighted a scene,
Hayek helped Judd select Mexican tile for the bathroom and kitchen of her
Tennessee home. Judd's decision to play Italian photographer Tina Modotti,
an openly bisexual communist, was a sign of devotion to Hayek. Judd had
never heard of Modotti, but she told Hayek she would do whatever
was necessary to help the "Frida" project. That meant, among
other things, working with a dialect coach to make sure her Italian-accented
English sounded true.
Mia Maestro, an Argentine actress
who starred in last year's HBO original movie "For Love or Country: The
Arturo Sandoval Story," has worked with Hayek on four projects in the past
few years and was cast to play Kahlo's sister, Cristina. "I didn't have
to audition," Maestro said, smiling. "Salma was the casting director."
Norton was cast as Nelson Rockefeller,
the millionaire who hired Rivera to paint a mural in New York City and
then became enraged when it glorified communism. Norton, known for his
controlling temperament, barred a Times reporter from the set one day.
Others were less testy. Molina,
who plays Rivera, was positively energetic at the end of a day of filming.
Hayek first approached Molina in 1998, when she went backstage after his
performance in "Art" on Broadway to give him a script. She told him that
"Frida" would soon be on track, and that he was perfect for the role of
Rivera. Molina, who had heard about the project, committed the next summer
to star in it with her.
Beginning in January, Molina ate
"two of everything" to hit his target weight of 230 pounds for the burly
Rivera. He also shaved back his hairline more than an inch and was fitted
for a prosthetic nose.
By the end of a hot day, it had started to melt and was drooping.
"You wouldn't cast Tom Cruise
in this role," Molina said, pointing out that Rivera is an antihero he
won't try to redeem. "His faithfulness was very hard to prove. It was almost
nonexistent, but even after they got divorced, he came back to her. . .
. At the end of her life, when she was in her 40s and severely crippled
and he was in his 70s, there was still a physical dimension. That passion
was very evident.
"The biggest challenge is making
outrageous people plausible."
Hayek's casting efforts were tireless,
even when she was working on another movie. During the first day of filming
in Venice for Mike Figgis' "Timecode," Hayek saw Valeria Golino, the Italian
actress best known in the U.S. for her supporting role in "Rain Man." Hayek
told Golino she should take the role of Lupe, one of Rivera's ex-wives.
Within a few days, Miramax executives
received a homemade videotape shot at 5 a.m. of Golino sitting in her Venetian
hotel room reading a few lines from the script Hayek had brought with her.The
"Frida" project first started at HBO in 1994, with Academy Award-nominated
filmmaker Gregory Nava ("El Norte") writing a script. The project stalled,
although Hayek's audition for the lead role took on a life of its own.
"Frida" was acquired in July 1996 by Trimark, where a stream of hired writers
shaved down and built back up the script for a feature-length film.
At one point, Trimark told Hayek
they would consider laying out $2 million to make the movie, a figure she
said was devastatingly low.
"They were passionate about it,
but we could never have made this movie for that amount. Then they said
about $4 million, but it still wasn't enough," Hayek recalled the day after
the movie had been wrapped. "I was afraid that it wasn't going to be like
the movie I knew it could be. I said, 'If I'm going to star in it, I'd
like to be a producer as well. . . . I just want to make sure it gets made
right.' But they never
imagined how involved I would be in the process."
By spring 1998, "Frida" had bounced
to Miramax, which ordered a script overhaul from Rodrigo Garcia, son of
Colombian Nobel Prize-winning author Gabriel Garcia Marquez. After Garcia,
the script was given to two more writers, including Walter Salles, who
had been asked to direct. (Salles directed "Central Station," which was
nominated for best foreign-language Oscar in 1999.)
But by the end of last summer,
only a few of the parts in "Frida" had been cast. Mark Gill, president
of Miramax L.A., said the script was only "80% there." Salles was running
into scheduling conflicts with another movie he was working on, so once
again, "Frida" was a work in progress.
Only as the threat of possible
writers' and actors' strikes spread last fall did Miramax find itself on
the receiving end of quick-moving deals. Taymor called the day after she
read the script and agreed to take Salles' place. Several of Hayek's friends,
such as Judd, Banderas and Norton, agreed to act in the film for scale.
Norton volunteered to rewrite
the script at night for free, and Gill said he transformed it, bringing
in an irreverent sense of humor. "You don't have the turgid drama problem,"
Gill said, tapping the script, "which is a huge relief."
If it weren't for its famous cast,
"Frida" could be considered an art-house film. But Miramax is hoping to
help it cross over after an initial release next spring in Los Angeles
and New York. Gill used as examples of successful marketing campaigns other
Miramax films such as "Il Postino" and "Like Water for Chocolate."
Miramax is optimistic that the
movie will fare well overseas, especially in Japan, which Gill said has
"Fridamania." (Miramax already sold "Frida" to numerous foreign distributors
at this year's Cannes Film Festival.)
"Will everyone in the world go
see it?" Gill asked. "No. But will enough people go see it to make it worth
our while? Yes .... We at Miramax have done enormously well with movies
in the top 20 U.S. cities."
The key, Gill said, will be to
sell "Frida" as a heroic love story between Rivera and Kahlo.
"There's something about those
lives that are so instructive and alluring and engaging that--even if others
might call it a train wreck--it's a really fascinating double biography
or love story," Gill said. "I think any initial trepidations you might
have about the subject matter are overwhelmed by what these people did
with what they were given, which, of course, is an incredibly American
notion."
But for the aging, sometimes resentful
Dolores Olmedo Patiño, "Frida" is a love story that will not leave
her alone.
She is left to stare out at the
92 peacocks that roam her grounds and answer questions about her famous
rival. Asked if Kahlo would have become famous if Rivera hadn't fallen
in love with her, Olmedo looked up with exasperation.
"No. And nor would she have been
famous without me," she said in a husky voice. "In the future, Kahlo will
fade away. Frida is in style now."
Dana Calvo is a Times staff writer.
Copyright 2001