Chandralekha Perera
Chandralekha Perera | |
---|---|
Native name | චන්ද්රලේකා පෙරේරා |
Born |
Kurunegala, Sri Lanka | December 1, 1961
Spouse(s) |
Musical career |
Origin | Sri Lanka |
Occupation(s) | Singer |
Associated acts | Rookantha Goonatillake |
Chandralekha Perera (Sinhalese: චන්ද්රලේකා පෙරේරා) (born 1 December 1961), is a popular Sri Lankan pop singer.[1]
Perera was born to a middle-class family in Kurunegala. As a child she often sang at home. At school she frequently sang and successfully took part in inter-school competitions. While studying she sang for the band "Spring Time" in Kurunegala. She met her future husband Rookantha Goonatillake in 1976 when he was a keyboard player for this band.
Without her knowledge, Perera's father submitted his daughter's name to a Sri-Lankan government-sponsored youth organization National Youth Services Council (NYSC). She subsequently attended and had a successful interview. She also appeared on the national television service in Sri Lanka that was a gift from Japan to Sri Lanka and was at that time broadcasting test transmissions.
Perera was noticed by the film director and producer D. B. Nihalsinghe while he was reporting on NYSC. He selected her to act in his new television series Rekha, which made her a star. She was given the award for best television actress in 1986 (for Nadee Geethaya, another series by Nihalsinghe), and the award for best playback singer in the same year (for the film Yali Hamuwennai). She was signed for LUX International by Lever Brothers at that time.
Perera has sung duets with many popular singers and actors. Vijaya Kumaranatunga, the late husband of President Chandrika Kumaratunga, sang more than 15 songs with her.
Perera married Rookantha Goonatillake in 1989, and they have three daughters and a son. In 2000, she and her husband were violently attacked by the Presidential Security Division (PSD) of president Chandrika Kumaratunga and threatened with death if they performed at anti-government events. The attack sparked a protest by Dharmasiri Bandaranayake who thereafter also received death threats. In the wake of these developments, Artists Against Violence (AAV) was founded.[2] Ten officers of the PSD were arrested for the attacks and given jail sentences in 2013, but one year later pardoned by president Mahinda Rajapaksa.[3]
References
- ↑ Shirley's soothing songs The Sunday Times 28 October 2007
- ↑ "Sri Lankan artists speak out against the war". World Socialist Web Site. 28 June 2000. Retrieved 25 August 2010.
- ↑ President pardons jailed PSD officers Colombo Gazette 11 April 2014