Dharmasiri Gamage Explained

Dharmasiri Gamage
Birth Date:1939 10, df=yes
Birth Place:Katamburawa, Ceylon
Death Place:Dambulla, Sri Lanka
Citizenship:Sri Lankan
Occupation:Journalist, Film Director, Script Writer, lyricist
Employer:Associated Newspapers of Ceylon Limited (Lake House, Colombo)
Notable Works:Directing Puja Sinhala Film - 1986

Dharmasiri Gamage (Sinhala; Sinhalese: ධර්මසිරි ගමගේ) (4 October 1939 - 19 September 2004) was a journalist, poet, writer and film director.[1]

Biography

Dharmasiri Gamage was born on 4 October 1939,[2] [3] the only son to Maththaka Gamage Peter Appuhamy and Kalegana Arachchige Chandrawathi and the eldest brother to three sisters.[4]

Journalism

Gamage's journalism career was helped by U.A.A. Perera (Siri Aiya).[5] [6] Growing up, Gamage was interested in arts and literature and wanted to learn and practice journalism. For him, Maligakanda Maha Bodhi Mandiraya[7] was an oasis and influence of Siri Aiya was a lamp-post that guided his future life.[8]

Gamage became a journalist joining Lankadeepa as a sub-editor in 1959 on the invitation of K. M. Sirisena, who was the deputy editor of the Sinhala daily The Lankadeepa (then owned by the Times, Sri Lanka).[9]

He joined Lake House in 1977 and worked for Dinamina, Janatha and Silumina.[10] Gamage's Pahan Weta, which was compiled weekly on Yovun Janatha,[11] was a publication of Lake House. It became famous as an early youth forum.[12]

Music career

Gamage wrote his first lyrics "Ho Mage Prema Matha" in 1955 for Kala Suri G.S.B. Rani Perera, who was a veteran singer in Sri Lanka and a program producer of the Radio Ceylon (Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation) when he was just 16 years old.[13] Gamage has written more than 200 lyrics for Sinhala songs with music composed by music directors like Pandith W.D. Amaradeva, Premasiri Khemadasa and Rohana Weerasinghe and performed by various artists like Kala Suri G.S.B. Rani Perera, Pandith W.D. Amaradeva and Isharada Nanda Malini, and Haroon Lanthra.[14]

Cinema

Gamage was a film director for the Sinhala film Puja in 1986[15] [16] Award winners Joe Abeywickrama and Amarasiri Kalansuriya[17] contributed to it in action.[18] Gamage wrote scripts to Dharmasena Pathiraja's Eya Dan Loku Lamayek (1977), Amaranath Jayathilake's[19] Siripala Saha Ranmenika (1977) and Sunil Ariyaratne's Sarungale (1980).[20] He wrote "Sansara Gamane Thanha Asha" music composed by Premasiri Khemadasa and sung by Pandith W.D. Amaradva for the film Sanasuma Kothanada[21] [22] in 1963.

Later years

After his retirement from Lake House, he became a traveller and published his experiences.[23] Gamage was well known as an environment-lover and was honoured for his writings in 1999 as the Best Travel Writer and in 2002 received an award by the Sri Lanka Environmental Journalist Forum for the Best Travel Writer.[24]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Dharmasiri honoured at Jothi commemoration.
  2. Web site: Dharmasiri Gamage dies suddenly while travelling. Jayawardhana. Walter. LankaWeb.com.
  3. Web site: Dharmasiri Gamage Memories of a father and hero.
  4. Web site: Dharmasiri Gamage dies at 65.
  5. Web site: Artistes of Ananda - Poet monks and student writers.
  6. Web site: Composer, musician Chandrasena.
  7. Web site: Col. Olcott started the Sinhalese National Educational Buddhist Fund in 1881. The T.S. appropriated the Found in 1885. I promise that the Maha-Bodhi Mandira, Maligakanda, be converted into a high-grade Girls' School.
  8. Web site: meeting Siri Aiya was a turning point in his life.
  9. News: Five veteran journalists honoured.
  10. Web site: Appreciations.
  11. Web site: Yovun Janatha.
  12. Web site: Unfading star of the silver screen.
  13. Web site: SPOTLIGHT.
  14. Web site: Powerful songs apowerless. 21 January 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150122003049/http://www.nation.lk/edition/fine/item/22952-powerful-songs-apowerless.html. 22 January 2015. dead.
  15. Web site: Puja.
  16. Web site: films list.
  17. Web site: Amarasiri Kalansuriya.
  18. Web site: Amarasiri Kalansuriya.
  19. Web site: Amaranath Jayathilake passes away. 3 January 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150103220437/http://www.nation.lk/edition/fine/item/21385-amaranath-jayathilake-passes-away.html. 3 January 2015. dead.
  20. Web site: Professor Sunil Ariyaratne will deliver the commemorative oration.
  21. Web site: He directed the film' Sanasuma Kothanada 'for Mr.Somasiri Perera which won him the 'Sarasaviya' award for the best film of the year.
  22. Web site: The indefatigable master film-maker.
  23. Web site: Traveller's tales from a veteran and b'day greetings to cinema's doyen.
  24. Web site: the Sri Lanka Environmental Journalists Forum (SLEJF) recently nominated veteran journalist Dharmasiri Gamage as the Best Travel Writer for the year 2002..