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BECOMING FRIDA KAHLO

Frida Kahlo, 1932
Courtesy of The Detroit News
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Rogan Productions
Frida Kahlo, 1932

Premieres Tuesdays, Sept. 19 - Oct. 3, 2023 at 9 p.m. on KPBS TV / PBS App

BECOMING FRIDA KAHLO, a new three-part documentary series, strips away the myths to reveal the real Frida – a passionate and brilliant artist living through extraordinary times. The series explores the major events of Kahlo's life, both personal and political, from her lifelong health problems to her complicated relationship with artist Diego Rivera, whom she married not once but twice. Their shared political commitment made both artists controversial figures – from their association with Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky in Mexico to their paradoxical relationships with some of America’s wealthiest figures.

BECOMING FRIDA KAHLO: Preview

Throughout her life Kahlo used her artwork as a way to process her own emotions, producing what are now some of the most valuable–and most widely reproduced– paintings of the twentieth century. Featuring interviews with Frida Kahlo’s great-niece Cristina Kahlo, Diego Rivera’s grandson Juan Coronel Rivera, biographers, art historians and more.

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Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo at lunch in Coyoacán, Mexico. (Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution)
Courtesy of Peter A. Juley & Son / Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution
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Rogan Productions/Archives of Am
Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo at lunch in Coyoacán, Mexico. (Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution)

EPISODE GUIDE:

Episode 1: “The Making and Breaking” Premieres Tuesday, Sept. 19 at 9 p.m. on KPBS TV - The series premiere tells the story of the young Frida growing up in a time of revolution, from her rebellious school days to an encounter with the man who would change her life: Diego Rivera, then one of the world’s most famous artists. When a tragic accident thwarts Frida’s ambition of becoming a doctor, young Frida spends many lonely months recuperating and discovers a new passion: Painting.

BECOMING FRIDA KAHLO: Frida Kahlo, A Rule Breaker

When she finally ventures out again into Mexico City, it has become a thriving hub for artists and intellectuals from all over the world. The ambitious young Frida tracks down the renowned Rivera, and his response sets her on a new path as an artist. Becoming entranced by the politically radical and sexually liberated photographer and former Hollywood actress, Tina Modotti, Frida sees Rivera again at one of her parties and marries him six months later. Although very much in love, she soon discovers that life with Diego, 20 years her senior, isn’t all wedded bliss; there are many other women in his life, and his work always comes first.

Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo and other intellectuals march on Labor Day in Mexico, May 1, 1929. From episode 1, “The Making and Breaking.” (Secretaria De Cultura/INAH)
Courtesy of Secretaría de Cultura / INAH
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Rogan Productions/Secretaria De
Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo and other intellectuals march on Labor Day in Mexico, May 1, 1929. From episode 1, “The Making and Breaking.” (Secretaria De Cultura/INAH)

Episode 2: “Love and Loss” Premieres Tuesday, Sept. 26 at 9 p.m. on KPBS TV - San Francisco is abuzz with excitement at the arrival of Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera, and Frida’s ultra-Mexican style catches the attention of celebrities and photographers. With Diego constantly working and determined to succeed in her own right and in the face of his many affairs, she paints a powerful marriage portrait, “Frida and Diego Rivera,” which is selected for exhibition.

BECOMING FRIDA KAHLO: Episode 2 Preview

In Depression-era New York, she meets fellow artist Georgia O’Keeffe who deeply inspires her, and they kindle a romantic relationship. Later in Detroit due to a commission Diego receives, Frida learns she’s pregnant and her worst fears are confirmed when she loses her child. She spends 13 days in the hospital with her close friend Lucienne Bloch by her side and turns once more to her art and paints “Henry Ford Hospital,” a devastating portrait of her miscarriage and loss. Tragedy continues when she learns her mother has fallen ill and later dies, leading her to create one of her most powerful paintings: “My Birth.”

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Diego Rivera at work on "Allegory of California," San Francisco Stock Exchange Luncheon Club, 1931 (Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution)
Courtesy of Emmy Lou Packard / Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution
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Rogan Productions/Archives of Am
Diego Rivera at work on "Allegory of California," San Francisco Stock Exchange Luncheon Club, 1931 (Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution)

Meanwhile, in New York City, Diego takes another controversial commission at the newly built Rockefeller Center. Pushing the boundary too far for his American patrons, he paints Vladimir Lenin into the new mural. This original mural is hacked off the walls by order of the Rockefellers, with images of it only surviving through Frida’s own photographs. Upon their return to Mexico, Diego begins an affair with Frida’s sister, Cristina.

BECOMING FRIDA KAHLO: Frida and Cristina

Episode 3: “A Star Is Born” Premieres Tuesday, Oct. 3 at 9 p.m. on KPBS TV - On the run from Stalin, Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky arrives in Mexico, and Frida begins a short-lived affair with him. Meeting the influential leader of the Surrealist movement, André Breton, Frida impresses him and ventures to Paris to find Europe on the brink of war and that the exhibition Breton had promised her was not what she had expected it to be. Disappointed with Breton, Frida finds solace in a relationship with his wife, Jacqueline.

BECOMING FRIDA KAHLO: Episode 3 Preview

Finally returning to Mexico after months away, Frida discovers Diego’s shocking affair with her sister, and he asks for a divorce. Once more, she pours her pain into her work, and creates a masterpiece, “The Two Fridas.” When Diego is implicated in an attempt to take Trotsky’s life, he flees to San Francisco, leaving Frida in Mexico City where she’s eventually arrested.

Picture shows: Frida Kahlo and "Two Frida's," 1939
Bettmann/Getty Images
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Rogan Productions/Bettmann/Getty
Picture shows: Frida Kahlo and "Two Frida's," 1939

When Diego realizes that Frida’s health is failing, he begs her to join him, and the pair reconcile and remarry. Frida’s health continues to deteriorate, and she spends her last years of life in excruciating pain, often confined to bed in a steel corset. She continues to paint and produces works that speak to her trauma, pain and artistic genius. She dies in 1954 at the age of 47, leaving an extraordinary legacy of a woman defying expectations, experiencing extremes of love and loss, and creating some of the most enduring art of the 20th century.

BECOMING FRIDA KAHLO: A Modern Mexican Artist in New York

Credits:

A production of Rogan Scotland for BBC. Louise Lockwood is director. Becky Marshall is producer. Mexico producer is Maria Teresa Scotti. Esther Gimenez is series editor. Executive producers are Mark Hedgecoe, Nancy Bornat, James Rogan and Soleta Rogan. For The WNET Group, Laura Metzger Lynch is senior producer. Jayne Jun is supervising producer. Matthew Clark is production general counsel. Jane Buckwalter is programming services and distribution. Stephen Segaller is executive in charge. BBC Studios is handling global distribution.

Frida Kahlo with Crystal Sphere, Coyoacán, c.1938, Coyoacán, Mexico. (Manuel Álvarez Bravo Archive)
Courtesy of Manuel Álvarez Bravo Archive
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Rogan Productions/Manuel Álvare
Frida Kahlo with Crystal Sphere, Coyoacán, c.1938, Coyoacán, Mexico. (Manuel Álvarez Bravo Archive)