OR

pulse.lk
08 Jan, 1937
30 Jun, 2025
Liver failure
Ceylonese
Actress
88
Maureen Neliya Hingert was a figure who bridged continents, cultures, and golden eras of cinema. Born in Colombo in 1937, she first captured international attention as Miss Ceylon and Second Runner-Up at Miss Universe in 1955. From that moment, she carried the hopes of Sri Lanka onto the global stage, transitioning into a life in Hollywood under the name Jana Davi, as an actress, dancer, and model. Her journey was one of courage, elegance, and quiet influence—one that transformed a beauty title into a path for representation, artistry, and legacy.
Maureen Hingert was born on January 9, 1937, in Colombo, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), into a family with Dutch-Burgher ancestry. Her parents, Lionel Hingert and Lorna Mabel del Run, shaped an environment rooted in both tradition and opportunity. Her father worked for the Bank of Ceylon and held tea estates, giving Maureen a childhood that balanced stability and exposure to the broader currents of Sri Lankan society.
She was educated at the Holy Family Convent in Bambalapitiya, Colombo, where she completed her schooling up to age eighteen. Those formative years—war years, colonial transitions, and a country finding its post-colonial identity—marked her with both poise and the aspiration to transcend local boundaries. As a teenager, Hingert already showed a confidence and grace that would carry her beyond Sri Lanka’s shores.
After finishing at Holy Family Convent, Maureen pursued higher studies in Los Angeles, California. Moving across the world at a young age—just as she was achieving national recognition—was bold. It placed her in the heart of the entertainment world at a moment when Hollywood still evidenced strong cultural and racial divides. Her time in California would prove pivotal: it opened doors to modelling, to performance, and ultimately to film—opportunities that would have been far harder to access from Sri Lanka alone.
In 1955, at age 18, Maureen was crowned Miss Ceylon. That same year, she represented her country at the Miss Universe pageant, where she placed Second Runner-Up. It was a significant moment—not only for her personally, but for Sri Lanka: she was the first representative from Ceylon to win any award in the Miss Universe competition. Her long black hair, radiant confidence, and warm smile captivated audiences far beyond her homeland. This achievement opened international doors, serving as a de facto ambassadorship for her country’s aspirations and identity.
Following her success in pageantry, Hingert transitioned into film. She was signed by major studios, including Universal International and 20th Century Fox. Among her early screen appearances were uncredited roles—such as in The King and I (1956), Elephant Walk, and Pillars of the Sky. These roles grew into credited appearances in westerns under the stage name Jana Davi, with films like Gun Fever (1958), The Rawhide Trail, Gunmen from Laredo, and others. Her versatility—playing parts that ranged from native characters, to dancing roles, to TV appearances—showed both her artistry and willingness to navigate Hollywood’s limited categories for non-white actors.
She also maintained her identity as a dancer, performing solo at venues such as the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, reflecting her training, discipline, and love for performance beyond just film.
By the early 1960s, Maureen Hingert began to step back from acting. Her decision was partly personal: after marrying Mario Armond Zamparelli in 1958 and having three daughters, she shifted her priorities toward family. Tragedy also visited her: two of her daughters, Andrea (died 2009) and Gina (died 2018), passed away before her. She divorced Zamparelli in 1970 and later married William J. Ballard in 1976, who died in 2012.
Even after stepping away from regular acting, her earlier achievements continued to resonate. Her presence in Hollywood in the 1950s and 1960s provided visibility for South Asian women at a time when very few were seen on international cinema stages. She created a nexus between Sri Lanka and Hollywood, and became a model—literally and metaphorically—for future generations.
Behind the spotlight, Maureen Hingert’s life was grounded in family, loss, and resilience. Her marriage to Mario Armond Zamparelli was creative as well as personal; he was a designer who worked with Howard Hughes. They had three daughters: Gina, Marisa, and Andrea. The marriage ended in 1970. Later, in 1976, she married William J. Ballard, with whom she remained until his passing in 2012.
Her relationship with her children endured both joy and sorrow. The passing of two of her daughters deeply affected her, but she maintained her dignity and quiet strength. In her later years, she lived in Pasadena, California, and, according to her daughter Marisa, passed away peacefully of liver failure on June 29, 2025.
Maureen Hingert’s legacy is multifaceted. She was a pioneer: the first Sri Lankan woman to place in Miss Universe; one of the earliest from her country to move into Hollywood; a model of grace and artistry; and an example of someone who chose both ambition and family, navigating both spheres.
For Sri Lanka, she was a breaking of the mould—she changed what was possible for women from her homeland. For Hollywood, she opened a door, however small, for faces and stories from South Asia. Her roles, though often limited by the era’s constraints, were diverse enough to show that a performer could be more than stereotypes.
Perhaps equally important is how she is remembered: not just for films and titles, but for the human behind them. Her laughter, her losses, her determination—these give her story its deep resonance. She was inspired not by being perfect, but by being courageous and by being willing to shift course when life demanded it.
Maureen Hingert’s life is a story of breaking barriers, of crossing oceans, and of turning early acclaim into a lifelong example. She emerged from Colombo as a young woman with poise, entered the grandeur of pageants, crossed into the demanding world of Hollywood, and carried with her a dual identity: as a Sri Lankan and as an international performer. Though much of her screen presence faded with her steps away from acting, the mark she left did not. She reshaped how the world saw women from her homeland and how they might see themselves. Her legacy shines in every Sri Lankan who dreams of international stages, in every actress who looks to more than what her moment allows. Maureen Hingert will be remembered not just as Miss Ceylon or a Hollywood actress, but as a bridge between cultures, between past and possibility, between dreams and the courage to live them.
Maureen Neliya Ballard
Maureen Hingert
Female
Liver failure
Colombo, Sri Lanka
Pasadena, California, United States
Campaigner: Maureen Hingert was a radiant trailblazer who bridged worlds with her elegance, courage, and inspiring presence.
She was one of the earliest South Asian women to appear in Hollywood westerns.
Her stage name, “Jana Davi,” was given to her by film studios to make her more marketable in the U.S. film industry.
She studied art and dance seriously in Los Angeles before transitioning into acting.
Maureen Hingert achieved international recognition when she was crowned Miss Ceylon 1955 and went on to place as Second Runner-Up at Miss Universe that same year, making her the first Sri Lankan to win an award in the competition.
She later built a career in Hollywood under the stage name Jana Davi, appearing in films such as The King and I and westerns like Gun Fever.
Beyond film, she also pursued dance, performing at prestigious venues including Los Angeles’ Shrine Auditorium, showcasing her versatility as an artist.