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Appreciations
Malini
Fonseka A Tribute
By
Dr Lester James Peiris
The
year was 1977, the venue, the international Film Festival in
Delhi, India. Sri Lankans entry in the competition was
Amaranath Jayatileke’s “Siripala and Ranmenika”.
Playing the title role of the outlaw’s wife was Malani
Fonseka, looking every inch the glamorous film star. The
scene now shifts to grand dining hall of the Ashok Hotel.
where official guests and the members of the jury were
lodged. Chairman of the jury was great the Indian Director
Sathyajith Ray. Seated alone in splendid isolation with that
combination of grandeur, awe and elegance, rather like an
Indian Prince was Ray, nibbling at his lunch, a far away,
distractive look on his face. Seeing me enter the hall, he
called me over to table, as it turned out to be, to divulge
a Jury secret. That
morning they had seen the Sri Lankan film.
He
had been enormously impressed by Malini’s performance.
Keep this to yourself” he said stretching his 6ft 5 inc
frame over the table-‘I must get this girl an award, some
award –its unfortunate the film’s been scheduled so
late. The Jury has decided on the best actress award and its
too late to upset the Jury’s verdict. At least I’ll get
her a special Diploma. What surprises me is the actress
I’ve seen around here and the character on the screen is
one and the same person. I
can tell you this. “No Bengali actress, however good she
may be will ever allow herself to be so distorted as Malini
is in the sri lankan film –no, “not even in a film of
mine”. What Ray found difficult to reconcile are the two
images – one the glamorous film star physically present at
the festival and the disfigured face of Ranmenika in the
film.
As
sumithra and I had to leave the festival before it ended I
thought I should at least confide in Malini that she might
win something, though I tried to be as vague as possible. It
was a bitter –sweet triumph in that there was apparently
no time to have the special Diploma of honour ready at the
award winning ceremony
which brings the curtain down at the end of the
festival. Malini had to be content with a special reception
at the Indian High Commission in Colombo a few weeks later.
However
to have made such and impact on one of the world’s
greatest directors, particularly one who has excelled in
molding great performances from actresses in his native
Bengal viz. Madhabhi Mukherjee, Sharmilla Tagore, Mamata
Shankar,Karuna Bannerjee etc…. I should think is reward
enough.
Malini
has acted in five major films of mine. In 03 of them
“Nidhanaya” “Baddegama” and “Wekanda Walauwa”
she creates 03 unforgettable characters – the virginal,
sacrificial Victim in “Nidhanaya”, the young village
lass who turns into an old hag waiting for death in wolf’s
classic “Baddegama”, and the aging widow, her private
grief etched on her wrinkled face as gradually she loses her
son, her husband, her mansion, her dignity in the longest
performance of her career.
Cast
for her skill in portraying divers characters,
driven to the brink by private tragedies, she has
never failed, at least in the estimation either of the
director or the critics, both local and foreign. I have
never cast her because of her popularity but almost as a
challenge to her popular image in the numerous commercial
films which she has been acting in. To
play the old hag, to look plain, unattractive, if the
characters in Dharmasena Pathiraja’s films, driven by
narrative complexities and social and political imperatives
of a “New Cinema” she has never faltered.
It
has been so with many other directors. What is quite
remarkable is also her personal popularity with the masses.
Not since Rukmani Devi has an actress been so beloved of the
people and by the people.
To
have acted in well over a hundred films is in itself an
achievement particularly in the context of an industry,
notoriously unstable, a heless vitim of conflicting
Government policies, regarded as commercially non-viable
despite the Government’s 100% Tax Exemption Scheme for
investment on films.
It
may be pointed by some that most of her films are commercial
and therefore unworthy of serious attention, but these are
the very films that the masses remember her by. Some of us
tend to forget that switching over firm the acting style
demanded by the commercial formula film to the more serious
film depends on a change of technique of sensibility, which
by it’s very nature is a creative process-and it is in
making this Malini has triumphantly succeeded.
In
this brief tribute it would be difficult to discuss her work
as a director in her own right and her contribution to the
small screen, both as actress and director-though mention
must be made of her extraordinary performance in Tissa
Abeysekara’s epic TV series “Pitagamkarayo”. Suffice
it to say that on the occasion of a special homage to Malini
Fonseka , all of us who have worked in the Sri Lankan Cinema
will wish her many more years in a medium that has been
enriched by her outstanding talents. |
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Dr.
Lester James Peiris |
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Malini
with Dr. Lester James Peiris & Mrs Sumitra Peiris |
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"Nidhanaya" |
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"Beddegama" |
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"Wekanda
Waluwwa" |
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"Nidhanaya" |
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