- D. B. Nihalsinghe
-
Dr. D. B. Nihalsingha is urguably the most versatile person in film and television in Sri Lanka- with a respected reputation in both film and television being one of the most senior Sri Lankan film directors and film industry pioneers with over 40 years of distinguished service to both industries.
No individual in film and television in Sri Lanka has contributed in a hugely varied facets: in film and television artistry; in technical advancement; in training new talent; in administration; in exploring creating new areas(e.g. CinemaCope,video projection, unleashing suppressed demand for national films); discovering and launching new actors in film and television;as a film and television teacher; in documentary, short film and long form in film and television and so much more.
In that regard he was a pioneer of professional color television production in South Asia and Sri Lanka, (as founding CEO of South Asia's first professional color television production house, Tele-Cine Limited, in 1979). He is also a respected film and television administrator ( as the Director of the Ceylon Government Film Unit and founding CEO of the State Film Corporation)and film and television teacher (as Senior Fellow in Film and Television at the University of Kelaniya), with students and trainees in Sri Lanka and Malaysia. His career also includes notable work as a cameraman, editor, producer and director in Sri Lankan film and television. His best known work is Welikathara, Sri Lanka's first feature in Cinemascope.
Contents
Biography
Early life
Nihalsinghe was an accomplished student leader as Head Prefect and as Sargent of the cadet platoon at Ananda college and originally hoped to join the army. By the time he left school he had become more interested in film. As a present for completing the SSC examination, Nihalsinghe's father veteran journalist D.B. Dhanapala presented him with a 16mm Bolex cine camera.[1]
Nihalsingha entered the University of Ceylon at Peradeniya and read for a degree in Economics. While at the University he did the camera work for the first documentary to be made by University students, "Niyanada Rata", directed by a student K.K.L de Silva.
After leaving the University, Nihalsingha got an opportunity to enter the film field when a friend of his father offered him a job as a cameraman for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in Colombo which he took. In 1965 he was offered a post with Hearst Metrotone News on the weekly newsreel, Metro News for the Military Assistance Command in Vietnam.[1]
Film career
On his return to Sri Lanka, Nihalsinghe was asked to be cameraman and editor of Sath Samudura. He brought to the film a fluid newsreel look,( a total departure from the Indian studio style camera work) hand-holding the heavy 35mm Arriflex film camera- a point which was noted by reviewers.[1]
Nihalsingha received the Cardiff Commonwealth Film Festival award for his first film Bakhti. In 1971, he made the groundbreaking Welikathara in cinemascope. Maldeniye Simiyon (1986) won star Anoja Weerasinghe the 'Silver Peacock' as the Best Actress at the 11th Delhi International Film Festival, 1987. Kelimadala (1992) won a dozen awards at the Sarasaviya film festival. Ridi Nimnaya (1982) starred Sanath Gunatileke.[1]
Industry work
After graduating from the University of Ceylon with a degree in Economics, Nihalsingha began his career, winning the Most Promising Filmmaker award for his documentary Bhakthi at the Cardiff International Film Festival in 1965. He then began as a newsreel cameraman for Hearst Metrotone News, the US-based weekly global newsreel, in 1965. He was sent to Vietnam attached to the Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MAC-V) to cover war-related work for the NEWS of the DAY weekly global newsreel. Returning to Sri Lanka, he began a career in film encompassing documentary and feature films beginning as cameraman and editor of Sath Samudura, recognized[by whom?] as a milestone in Sri Lankan cinema. His fluid camera work in this film, originating from his newsreel experience, was widely recognized[by whom?] as fresh in an industry where massive Mitchell Indian-style immobile camera work was the norm.
At the age of 28, Nihalsingha became the youngest person to hold the post of Director of the Ceylon Government Film Unit, succeeding George Wicremasinghe (who was its first Sri Lankan Director). The Government Film Unit is the one institution with continuity whose productions have won the highest number of international awards for its documentaries.[citation needed]
Besides invigorating documentary film production, he was instrumental in introducing 35 mm still film to Sri Lanka to replace 120 film when he as asked to oversee the photographic aspects of the National Identity Card project. Using Practica cameras gifted by the (then) East Germany and amid much opposition of photographers, he managed to win them over and thereby establish 35 mm still film as the staple of Sri Lankan still photography until that was overtaken by digital photography.
Nihalsingha's skill as film administrator was best seen in the work he did as founding CEO and General Manager of the State Film Corporation from 1972 to 1978. To offset foreign domination of Sri Lankan theaters (80 percent), Nihalsingha launched a series of initiatives which unleashed the suppressed demand for domestically produced films. The initiatives resulted in audience surging from 30 million a year in annual attendances in 1971 to an unprecedented 74.4 million by 1979. The domestically film share of screen time went up from 20% in 1971 to 58% in 1979.[1]
This achievement was destroyed by Chairman Anton Wicremasighe, who set in motion unlimited film production by "anyone" in 1979, resulting in a decline of film attendance which has continued to this day.[citation needed] The lack of new Tamil films for screening resulted in a 10 million drop in attendance. The mess created by the absence of Tamil films and the shoddy Sinahal films resulted in a continuing decline up to now (2010).[citation needed] The present attendance was 5.7 million for 2010 and the number of domestically produced films released in 2009 was 15. The number of cinemas Nihalsinghe handed over at the end of his tenure at the SFC was 365: by 2010 August, it had declined to 147.
Awards
Nihalsingha was awarded the Sri Lankan national honor of KalaKeerthi for his lifetime contribution to Sri Lankan film and television while the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers of America (SMPTE) made him a Fellow and later, Life Fellow in 2004 for “achieving outstanding rank among engineers and administrators in motion pictures and television by proficiency and contributions.” He is the only Fellow of the SMPTE in Sri Lanka and South Asia. SMPTE is the oldest film and television body in the world, formed in 1915 in New York. It determines motion picture and television standards.
British Kinematograph, Sound and Television Society also made him a Fellow of the society in recognition of lifetime services to film and television in Sri Lanka and South Asia for “the development of film and television production techniques” which included pioneering professional color television production in South Asia in 1979.
In 1979, Nihalsingha left the SFC and formed the Tele-Cine Limited with the help of Hemasiri Premawarne and Chandra Seneviratne. Tele-Cine Ltd was South Asia's and Sri Lanka's pioneer in professional color television production of television drama, commercials, musicals and documentary. As CEO of Tele-Cine for 16 years, Nihalsingha directed and pioneered the first television drama series in South Asia, Dimuthu Muthu, starring Devika Mihirani and Amarasiri Kanlansooriya.[1] He later went on to directed several tele-drama series, creating the template for tele-drama production which lasts to this day in Sri Lanka.
In 1995, Nihalsingha resigned from TCL in 1994 when he was invited to join Television Broadcast (Overseas) Limited in Hong Kong. He was sent to Malaysia's ASTRO as its General Manager of Film and Television Production. In Kuala Lumpur, Nihalsingha trained several hundred Malaysian young people in all facets of film and television production. In 2003 he was promoted as Executive Director of Production of ASTRO in Kuala Lumpur.[1]
He returned to Sri Lanka in early 2006 and is active in film and television activities
Besides a BA in Economics from the University of Ceylon, Peradeniya, Nihalsingha has an MA in Film Studies from the Norwich University, Vermont, USA and a PhD in Public Enterprises from the University of South Australia in Adelaide.
References
- ^ a b c d e f g "Through his lens of life". The Nation. 2006. http://www.nation.lk/2006/12/17/eyefea5.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-25.[dead link]
"Public Enterprise in Film Development-Success and Failure in Sri Lanka", by Trafford Publishing, British Columbia, Canada.
Categories:- Sri Lankan film directors
- Living people
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