Pubdate: Mon, 9 Dec 2002 Source: Age, The (Australia) Copyright: 2002 The Age Company Ltd Contact: http://www.theage.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5 PORTRAIT OF A TEMPTRESS The upcoming biopic Frida , starring Salma Hayek, deals with the many love affairs of famous Mexican artist Frida Kahlo, including her dangerous liaison with exiled Russian Communist, Leon Trotsky, played by Australian Geoffrey Rush. But Rush's key role is not the only Australian interest in this long-awaited film about one of the 20th century's most sexually adventurous and daringly artistic women. Frida, just released in the United States and due to begin its Melbourne run on Boxing Day, opened the Venice Film Festival in September with a standing ovation. The movie tells of Kahlo's marriage to communist artist Diego Rivera. Their love was potent, but so was his appetite for other women. At one stage he slept with her younger sister, a betrayal symbolised in a new London play, La Casa Azul, with the passing of Kahlo's dress between the two siblings. In the past two decades - mainly since Hayden Herrera's 1983 biography Frida - Kahlo has become a mono-browed pin-up for the feminist movement. The art world's Sylvia Plath. The new film and play strive to capture the woman behind the legend: the impassioned artist, the demanding invalid, the insecure wife - and the bi-sexual adultress. Kahlo also had a close friendship with legendary Tasmanian-born screen swashbuckler, Errol Flynn. Flynn gave only vague details of his brief, but memorable stay at Kahlo's house in his autobiography My Wicked Wicked Ways, and made no mention of having had romantic contact with her. They met in late 1935 when Frida, the talented artist of Mexican and German parentage, was 28 and still married to Rivera, then 49. Both were having many affairs and Kahlo had just discovered that Rivera had slept with her sister. Flynn, then 26, and his future first wife, the Mexican actress Lili Damita, visited the Rivera home in Mexico City in the company of another beautiful Mexican actress, Dolores Del Rio, a highly paid Hollywood star. Mexico's top star, Salma Hayek, had been trying for seven years to play Kahlo before finally receiving the go ahead last year. Damita and Del Rio were lauded for their glamour, but Kahlo clearly dressed to catch Flynn's attention, as evidenced in his rapturous description: "My excitement increased when in walked Rivera's young wife. What a beauty she was. With long raven hair, piercing eyes, beautiful mouth, and a figure draped exotically in a Mexican zarape, like a bath towel a girl wraps around under her armpits. Only the zarape she wore was so flimsy you could see through it, and she wore nothing underneath." Flynn admitted he got high smoking Rivera's home-grown marijuana while the women were hitting the tequila. Still under the influence, Flynn bumped into Kahlo again: "(She) now wore a violently coloured robe off the shoulder ... There was a small red bow at the back of her neck around the fluent length of hair, and then the raven mane dipped downward like a black snake to the cleavage of her buttocks. I stared ... all was exotic." Eighteen months later, the gaunt, middle-aged Russian exile Trotsky - hardly in Flynn's class in the looks department - arrived in Mexico with his wife, and Kahlo quickly began her famous affair with him. Trotsky, one of the leaders of the Russian Revolution, had been banished from Russia by his arch rival, Stalin, in 1929, and then was forced to roam the world seeking asylum to avoid Stalin-backed assassins. Rivera, then an admirer of Trotsky, persuaded Mexico's President Cardenasto to let the exile in, and when Trotsky and his wife Natalia showed up in January 1937, Rivera and Kahlo were waiting to greet them. Kahlo let the couple stay in her family's old home, the famous Blue House of Meaghan Delahunt's novel. Kahlo's clandestine affair with Trotsky was extremely dangerous and lasted several months before they both agreed to end it, fearing Rivera and the Mexican authorities would find out and have him deported. There was also the constant fear of an assassination attempt. Trotsky was eventually murdered in August 1940 by Stalinist agent Ramon Mercador, using an alpine climbing axe, and Kahlo, who had met Mercador in Paris a year earlier, was briefly under suspicion. Although she was famous in Mexico, she was interrogated at length by investigating police before convincing them of her innocence. After World War II ended in 1945, exhibitions of Kahlo's daring and highly emotional paintings made her almost as famous as her husband. But she suffered from ill health most of her adult life as the result of severe injuries received in a bus crash when she was a teenager, and she had to have a leg amputated a year before her death in 1954. It is not surprising that it has taken so long for a feature film to be made of her life because her lifelong communist leanings would have made conservative Hollywood studio heads somewhat reluctant to finance such a project. Mexico's top star, Salma Hayek, had been trying for seven years to play Kahlo before finally receiving the go ahead last year. With the help of special make-up, especially Kahlo's famous trademark thick connecting eyebrows, she has an amazing physical resemblance to the Mexican artist, and even appears in the movie with Kahlo's wispy hair above the upper lip. Kahlo was by no means embarrassed by her unibrow - on the contrary, she defiantly emphasised it in her numerous self-portraits. Publicity photos of the movie Frida, showing Hayek made-up with the unibrow, have ignited memories of Hollywood's famous unibrowed actor Tyrone Power, who was ordered by 20th Century Fox chief Darryl F. Zanuck to have his eyebrows drastically trimmed and separated before he could make his screen debut. Hayek, 36, a former soap opera star in Mexico, made her breakthrough in Hollywood in 1995 in Desperado, and is now regarded as the most successful Mexican star since the 1930s when Del Rio was landing all the Latino glamour roles. Fortunately, she has managed to beat both Jennifer Lopez and Madonna to bring the Kahlo story to the screen. "It is only right and proper that the role of Frida in this movie is played by a Mexican," she said in a recent interview. "In a way, Frida was very much like Mexico - her body may have been broken, but her soul was indestructible." Moonlight Cinema, in the Royal Botanic Gardens, opens its season tomorrow with the Australian premiere of Frida. It opens elsewhere on Boxing Day. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake