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Rare footage of the iconic Marathi film “Vande Mataram” (1948) – featuring legendary writer and playwright P.L. Deshpande and his wife Sunita in lead roles – was handed over to the National Film Archives of India (NFAI), an official said here on Tuesday.

A VHS cassette with around 35 minutes of footage of the film was donated to NFAI by Deshpande’s nephew Dinesh Thakur and film historian Satish Jakatdar.

Besides the footage cassette, there are two U-Matic tape that has about an hour of rare footage of Deshpande playing harmonium.

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Footage Of 1948 Film ‘Vande Mataram’ Comes To The Archives, NFAI Director Delighted To Get What They Thought Was Lost

“We are delighted to receive the footage of a film that was considered lost. It is a happy coincidence that this footage has been discovered in the birth centenary year of both Deshpande and the film’s music composer Sudhir Phadke,” said NFAI Director Prakash Magdum.

Deshpande was born in South Mumbai’s Girgaum in a chawl on November 8, 1919, while Phadke was in the princely state of Kolhapur on July 25, 1919.

Released a year after India’s Independence, “Vande Mataram” was directed by the renowned filmmaker Ram Gabale, who later assisted in the making of Sir Richard Attenborough’s Oscar-award winner “Gandhi” (1982).