WARNING: Contains graphic descriptions of violence. In 1913, a six year old Frida Kahlo contracted polio disease in Coyoacan, Mexico. The following nine months she spent pent up as a result of the illness would ignite her creativity, and begin an artistic relationship with illness that lasted a lifetime. Written and produced by Lucinda Smyth, sound edited and composed by Tom Chapman, logo by Alice Konstam. (Refs: Hayden Herrera, Frida (1983); David Oshinsky, Polio: An American Story (2005); 'Exploring Frida Kahlo's relationship with her body', Google Arts; Gareth Williams, 'How a virus brought New York to a standstill in the summer of 1916', The Conversation; NPR, How The US Snuffed Out A Killer, 2012; Patrick Cockburn, Diary: the 1956 Polio Epidemic, May 2020, London Review of Books.)