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Celebrating
Malini by Dr. Carlo Fonseka
As
adolescents, Rukmani Devi, the unsurpassed embodiment of
dramatic talent this country has ever known, was the
irresistible dream girl and enchanting talent this country
has ever known, was the irresistible dream girl and
enchanting nightingale we fantasised about. That must be why
I cannot see Malini Fonseka without seeing behind her the
shadow of Rukmani Devi. Let me come straight out and declare
it: for many of my generation, Malini is the next best thing
to Rukmani.
Question
Lest
you think that senility is loosening my inhibitions, let me
pose the question why millions of ordinary people are
enamoured of filmstars. In 1926 when Rudolf Valentino the
original heart-throb of the film world died at age 31,
thousands of women nearly rioted at his funeral.
The
most plausible answer known to me comes from Dr. Desmond
Morris, the famous author of the million-copy bestseller
called 'The Naked Ape'. His theory is that the human animal
is by nature pair-bonding but polyerotic. In plain English
what this means is that although humans set up families in
pairs, they are sexually aroused by many. This makes
biological sense.
By
keeping father and mother together pair-bonding serves the
best interests of human offspring who have a very long
period of dependency on parents. (About a quarter of a
century if the offspring take up Medicine as a career!) The
polyerotic nature of humans promotes optimal natural
selection of mating partners.
These
behavioural traits did not create any serious problems
during the long long, tribal hunting stage of human social
evolution. Why not? Because - so the explanation goes - in
those days the adult fertile females of a given tribe were
all more or less in a constant state of pregnancy and all
the adult males went hunting together. The tribe was so
small that everybody knew everybody else. They were so
united that the question of unethical behaviour hardly
arose. Moreover, the bugbear of private property was a thing
of the future.
Malini
Fonseka's memorable performance as the guileless sacrificial
lamb in Lester James Peiris's masterpiece Nidhanaya -
acclaimed as one of the best 100 motion pictures of all time
- immortalized her.
Beauty
and Cinema
Cinema
is quintessentially a visual medium. It exerts its hold on
us by parading beauty which is nothing but the promise of
biological happiness. From a biological point of view,
beauty serves but one purpose: it promotes the perpetuation
of the human race. Long years ago Havelock Ellis, who
wrote extensively on the psychology of sex, published an
essay titled "What Makes a Woman Beautiful?" In it
he quotes the 14th century English poet Geoffry Chaucer's
view that a beautiful woman is one "with buttocks broad
and breasts rounded and high."
Ellis
points out that a woman with those physical attributes is
ideal for bearing children and suckling them. Biologically
speaking, physical beauty is a sign of health, fertility and
genetic quality. Young women with large eyes, full red lips,
smooth, moist taut skin and firm breasts have been rated as
the ones who will give a man the best chance of leaving
behind many offspring.
Tushara
Use
that checklist, if you will, and judge any actress (or other
woman) you care to evaluate. In my judgment, Malini Fonseka
passes the test with flying colours. Her beauty predicates
motherhood and that accounts for her enduring appeal in our
culture.
She is not just a fleeting sex kitten for us to gape and
talk about - and forget. After his first look at
Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton said: "Her breasts
will topple empires before they withered......she was the
most beautiful woman I had ever seen". In our world of
cinema in the film Thushara (1973) Malini Fonseka co-starred
with Vijaya Kumaratunga at a time when they were lovers in
real life.
No
wonder Thushara became the most popular film of our times.
In Bambaru Avith (1978) again playing opposite Vijaya
Kumaratunga, she depicts raw, calculating, female carnality
dressed up as innocence.
The
performance won her the award for the Best Actress of the
Year and Malini Fonseka became a movie superstar. From 1980
through 1985, year after year, for six years, tens of
thousands of fans voted her as their most popular actress.
Even today, after nearly four decades on the silver screen,
Malini Fonseka's ripe, lustrous beauty visibly launches any
number of picture spreads.
Visual
Medium
You
may wonder whether this sharp focus on the persona of Malini
Fonseka is the academically correct approach to a valid
appraisal of Malini Fonseka the artist. If you think it is
not the correct approach please realise that cinema is
first, last and always a visual medium. So its superstars
have been and have to be beautiful people. Studies have
shown that even three month old infants prefer to look at
pretty faces! Like all great stars, however, Malini is not
just a good looker. She is a bright and articulate woman
with a mind of her own. She can intelligently discuss a
range of subjects. She has acquired coping skills and has
cultivated inner serenity. But, above all, she can truly
act.
To-date
she has starred in 142 films and has been adjudged 'Best
Actress' 13 times. She has been chosen to play major roles
by almost all our best film makers - Lester James Peries,
Dharmasena Pathiraja, Vasantha Obeysekera, Amaranath
Jayatilleka, Sunil Ariyaratne, Vijaya Dharmasiri, Parakrama
Nirilla, Sugathapala Senerath Yapa and Tissa Abeysekera.
Malini
Fonseka has also won international acclaim. In fact she
happens to be the first filmstar from our country to have
won an international award. That was at the 9th
International Moscow Film Festival held in 1977, where she
won the award reserved for the Best Actress from the Asian
region.
She
achieved another first in 1979 when she was contracted to
play opposite Sivaji Ganeshan in the Tamil film titled Pilot
Premnath. The film called Sthree saw Malini Fonseka emerging
as a filmmaker in her own right. She also played the keyrole
in it - the role of a woman who takes arms against a
fiercely patriarchal society. The film unfolds a gripping
drama with a social moral: if women are to win their rights
in this society they have to learn to fight for them.
Television
Having
glittered on the theatrical stage and shone brilliantly on
the silver screen for decades, in 1984 Malini Fonseka
alighted on television, the reigning medium of mass
entertainment. She has played major roles in 17 teledramas,
eight of which she has also directed. Perhaps her most
memorable role was in Tissa Abeysekera's Pitagankarayo for
which she won a Best Actress Award.
Malini
Fonseka is a self-taught artist. She has learned the truths
of life in the School of Life. Being the third child and
first-born girl in a closely-knit family of 11 children, she
blossomed into a charismatic personality. She has learned to
enjoy more the pleasures of her life than to suffer from its
pains.
Her
family has turned to her and received in full measure
sustenance, guidance and inspiration. In 1992 she played an
impressive role in a film called Umayangana which figured
several Fonsekas. I was requested to review it and I went so
far as to say: "When an innocent Fonseka as lovely as
Malini is brutally murdered...even on the screen, my blood
cries for vengeance. And Ananda Fonseka directs Malini
Fonseka acting through Damayanthi Fonseka to give the
murderers hell". It may be asked why I wished to avenge
the screen death of this particular Fonseka. Is Malini
Fonseka my own flesh and blood? The answer is
"no", but it was by the skin of her teeth that she
escaped becoming part of my kith-in-law. That, however, is
another story.
Great
actress
Malini
Fonseka must surely be the most photographed woman in the
history of our country. She attracts cameras in the way that
a magnet attracts iron filings. At the Sarasavi festival
held at the BMICH last year I had been allotted a seat
directly behind the one in which Malini Fonseka sat. As a
spin-off I received my longest and most widely viewed
exposure on television to-date. The cliché about the
inevitable woman behind every great man is still valid. For
my part, I now know what a great advantage it can be for a
man to sit behind a great actress! |