By Sanjaya Jayasekera
The demise of actress Malini Fonseka on May 24, 2025, marks the end of a cinematic epoch. She is undoubtedly the “Queen of Sinhala Cinema,” as she has been often referred to by millions of her fans, aged and young. Nearly six-decade of her career was not a simple arc of celebrity, but a deep and continuous cinematic identification with the lives of ordinary people, especially women, under the weight of history, patriarchy, backwardness and class oppression. In a country where cinema often struggles between the tides of commercialism, populism, nationalism and repression, Fonseka remained a moral and aesthetic lodestar, truthfully imbuing her characters with emotion, quiet resistance, and tragic insight.
To merely describe Fonseka as a beloved actress is to evade the seriousness of her contribution. She was an artist of social consciousness—her performances bore the weight of Sri Lanka’s post-independence traumas, its unfulfilled democratic promises, and the contradictions of a backward capitalist society pressing in from every side.
In Lester James Peries’ Nidhanaya (1972), one of the greatest Sri Lankan films ever made, Fonseka plays the innocent, ill-fated woman preyed upon by a man whose wealth and obsession lead to murder. Her character is not merely a victim but a mirror held up to a crumbling feudal order. Fonseka conveys, through silence and subtle gestures, a person slowly awakening to the forces arrayed against her. Her sacrifice is not just personal—it is metaphorically the death of innocence in a society entrapped by its own past.
In Beddegama (1980), based on Leonard Woolf’s The Village in the Jungle, Fonseka as Punchi Menika inhabits a world of colonial exploitation and rural destitution. This is not melodrama but precise, economical realism. Fonseka does not “perform” poverty and female endurance—she lives it. Her face, increasingly lined by anxiety and despair, communicates the pain of a society ground down by injustice, hunger and disease, made worse by the cruelty of an indifferent state.
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Beddegama. Malani Fonseka, Vijaya Kumaranatunga, Joe Abeywickrema |
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Bambaru Avith. Malani, Vijaya. |
Like several other leading actors of her generation, Fonseka was a significant historical product of her time. By the 1970s, Bollywood’s musical and melodramatic cinema exerted a powerful influence over Sri Lankan audiences, who flocked to theaters largely drawn by star appeal. Sinhala cinema, still emerging as a serious artistic medium, had to contend with the commercial dominance of Indian films. Fonseka’s rise to stardom was not merely a matter of charishma; her compelling screen presence, combined with the emotional depth and authenticity she brought to nearly every role, enabled her to capture the imagination of a broad audience. In doing so, she played a crucial role in affirming the cultural legitimacy and artistic potential of Sinhala cinema.
Fonseka’s popularity, unmatched for decades, was not simply built on glamour but on the deep compassion she earned. For the oppressed, she did not offer escapism; she offered recognition and fight. Her status as “queen” is a title she earned from the sincere presentation of the struggles of those who loved her.
Her art reminds us of what cinema can be: a site of conscience, a record of the oppressed, and a spark of rebellion. She belongs to that rare tradition of film actors—like Smita Patil, Giulietta Masina, and Liv Ullmann—who made of their bodies and voices a battlefield of history.
In the later years of her life, Fonseka became associated with the bourgeois nationalist establishment, serving as a Member of Parliament from 2010 to 2015 under the government of then-President Mahinda Rajapaksa. While no political concessions can be made to her alignment with Sinhala nationalist politics, her profound contributions to cinema—rooted in social realism and the depiction of the oppressed—remain of enduring artistic and historical value. Her body of work deserves to be critically appreciated and preserved as a significant part of both Sri Lankan and world cinema.
Malini Fonseka will be remembered not merely as a great actress, but as an artist of the oppressed masses. Her characters will continue to live, as all genuine art does, not only in memory but in the continuing struggles of those they represented.
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