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TORONTO
(Hispanic PR Wire)
August 24, 2007
— Everybody knows that Frida is Salma Hayek's baby. So
proclaim the headlines, from Premiere to
Parade. Of course, the
story of a singular passion fulfilled is, admittedly, too juicy not to swallow
whole. It's almost as delicious as the compact storyteller herself, especially
when recounted in her fragrantly accented English.
Except that the
ambitious biopic about the proto-feminist Mexican painter, bisexual communist
and tequila-guzzling party-hearty gal Frida Kahlo, one of Miramax's Oscar
hopefuls that opens Friday in New York and Los Angeles, has two mommies.
Yes, Hayek, who's
either 34 or 36 but prefers to keep her age "a mystery," makes the
artist flesh, and gorgeous flesh it is, too. Her Frida isn't a tortured
martyr hooked on suffering. She drowns her sorrows in paint, embraces the joy
around her and engages in plenty of sex. Says the Mexican actress: "All the
people who knew her that are still alive, all of them talk about her sense of
humor, her warmth, her kindness."
But the film's dazzling
visual strokes, including 3-D paintings that come alive and form transitions
between scenes, reflect the creative DNA of director Julie Taymor, 49, recipient
in 1991 of a MacArthur "genius" grant and the brains behind Broadway's
groundbreaking incarnation of The Lion King.
"Frida is
the product of two people's interaction," says Jay Polstein, one of the
film's producers. The prestige production provides both women with the broadest
canvas yet to stretch their ample abilities on film.
No matriarchal turf
wars broke out, however. Alfred Molina, who plays muralist Diego Rivera, the man
and monster who casts a giant shadow over Kahlo's heart and art, assures:
"Julie and Salma got on very well. In a way, they were yin and yang to each
other, providing what the other didn't have. Wonderful meals always require
contrasting ingredients."
Don't totally blame the
media for not quite getting it right. For months, a vivacious Hayek has been
seducing the press, including the international swarm at the film festival here,
with tales of how she struggled to transform the calamitous collage of Kahlo's
life into a two-hour movie.
"Those seven years
of development I really treasure," says the star and producer, wrapped in
sophisticated black and perched in a noisy hotel bar so she can smoke, an
on-and-off habit she picked up while under Kahlo's sway. "I could have done
it five years ago. But I'm glad we didn't settle and waited."
Injury, infidelity
and Trotsky
The facts are
practically the stuff of legend by now. Hayek was the last diva standing after
Madonna and Jennifer Lopez lost bids to play Kahlo, who rose to icon status
after Hayden Herrera's definitive biography came out in 1983. The artist's
surreal paintings, shockingly personal exorcisms of pain and strife, now sell
for millions of dollars.
Hayek cast beau Edward
Norton, who also did a massive script rewrite, and pals such as Ashley Judd and
Antonio Banderas at discounted salaries. She scouted shooting locales and begged
for financing. She personally wooed Dolores Olmedo Patino, the model, lover and
patron of Rivera who owned the rights to his and Kahlo's paintings, and won
permission to use reproductions.
The perfectly groomed
Revlon model even went pluckless and unshaven to emulate the hirsute Kahlo.
Mention her onscreen underarm hair, and she says appreciatively, "I'm so
happy you noticed."
That's not all you'll
notice. The biopic's dramatic arc is massive, from Kahlo's crippling injuries
after a bus crash at age 18 and a tumultuous marriage to serial adulterer Rivera
to sundry affairs including a tryst with Russian exile Leon Trotsky before her
death in 1954 at 47. A career rebirth is in the offing for Hayek, who often
outclasses her bombshell-of-color output, such as the gory vampire thriller From
Dusk Till Dawn and the blockbuster misfire Wild Wild West.
But she is the first to
appreciate the contributions by Taymor, a stage veteran turned rising filmmaker.
"I'll tell you a
secret," Hayek says. "I like to be in charge. But I also like it when
I'm not in charge at all, and I relax. Once we got Julie, it was wonderful to
shut up and do as I was told. There's nothing better than to let go and
concentrate on your acting."
Hayek knew Kahlo the
woman inside-out, even telling producer Polstein she was Frida reincarnated. But
it takes an artist to truly know an artist. After several Hispanic male
directors were considered, including Gregory Nava (Selena) and Walter
Salles (Central Station), Miramax co-chief Harvey Weinstein recruited the
regal and willowy Taymor, whose only feature so far was 1999's Titus, a
visually astute yet over-the-top Shakespearean slaughterhouse.
"Julie does an
extraordinary job of making theater out of other people's cultures,"
Polstein says. The movie's focus on the relationship between Diego and Frida
also belies Taymor's intellectual reputation. "The criticism about Titus
was usually about it being too cerebral and not emotional. She wanted to prove
she could create on film something that was moving."
Taymor was excited by
the opportunity to display Kahlo's homeland in a new light, beyond the sombreros
and mariachi bands. In the '20s and '30s, "Mexico City was a bohemian mecca
for the artists, the intellectuals, the socialists, the communists. It was a
great era that we don't see in movies. This is a big love letter to
Mexico."
She was less sure about
Hayek, not knowing much about her save for her underwhelming résumé. But
Taymor was quickly convinced during their first meeting that only she had the
right qualities to do the part justice: "Salma's charisma, her passion, her
intelligence, everything that once you get past the exterior beauty of this
woman, you go, 'My God, what an incredible lady she is.' "
Taymor savored the
chance to nurture and observe Hayek's largely untested talents as they bloomed
before her. "I'm like a mother with her," she says in the quiet of her
hotel room, dressed from peasant top to espadrille toe in the bright blue hue
that graces Casa Azul, Kahlo's family hideaway in Mexico City.
"It's great to
work with Anthony Hopkins (on Titus), but he's also a great actor. If he
fails, you've been a real idiot. But with Salma, I think this is the first time
in 30 years as a director where I felt being a woman was an asset and almost a
necessity. Because we got very personal with each other."
Hayek admired the way
that Taymor used her imagination to propel the drama, not just to plaster the
screen with pretty pictures. But she wasn't always certain of her director's
choices.
Take the sequence in
which Rivera becomes the toast of New York's social whirl while Kahlo finds
refuge at the movies. She said of her ego-inflated husband at the time:
"He's like a big Mexican piñata with enough candy for everyone."
During a fantasy segment, Molina transforms into a human King Kong, clutching
Hayek's Fay Wray in his massive paw.
"The King Kong? I
was like, no, no, no. I can't see it," Hayek recalls. "And there is
Fred (Molina) looking at me. Argh. He's like, 'I hope this works.' But Julie is
brilliant. We had a wonderful working relationship, and we developed a very,
very nice friendship."
Director delivers
her vision
Taymor reveals herself
to be a paragon of diplomacy (and shows why Hayek was glad to have her around)
as she downplays a much-reported squabble last March with Weinstein, whose
operatic girth and occasional outbursts could qualify him as the Diego Rivera of
Miramax. Following a screening, the studio honcho supposedly verbally abused the
director with demands for edits and changes.
She insists that Frida
"is my cut. And I'm very, very happy with it, and so is he. So what we got
through were some tough moments, but we both feel very pleased we got there.
When you hear the word 'compromise,' you think somebody lost something. No. If I
found a way that satisfied me and satisfied him, that was the compromise."
Ultimately, Hayek and
Taymor may have more in common than not. They both are proving themselves
capable of going beyond the expected with Frida. Already, Taymor is
planning her next film project, possibly a non-musical version of The Flying
Dutchman.
Like Kahlo, they
combine career and romance — while Hayek is with Norton, Taymor has lived with
Frida composer Elliot Goldenthal for more than two decades. Says the
director: "It's an exceptional thing to be working together as two artists
and love what the other one does."
And neither is quite as
easy to pigeonhole as they seem. Says Molina: "Julie is very sexy, and
Salma is very intelligent. If she had been white and male, she would be as big
as Harvey Weinstein now, as successful and prominent."
Hayek is putting the
finishing touches on her directorial debut, a religious-themed Showtime movie
titled The Malonado Miracle with Ruben Blades and Peter Fonda. That's
because she found a new source of inspiration while making Frida: Taymor.
"The movie was
offered to me before Frida, and I thought I couldn't do it. I didn't
think I could direct. Then I worked with Julie." She went back to Showtime
and fiddled with the script. "I realized I was afraid to do it before
because I have a hard time with people taking me seriously as an actress, let
alone as a director. But Julie gave me the courage."
Once you go through a
birth of a baby together, even one named Frida, you can brave anything.