V. Shantaram Award

The V. Shantaram Award is the highest award in Marathi cinema, established by the Government of Maharashtra, India. It is presented annually by the Department of Cultural Affairs, Maharashtra. Award instituted in 1994 to recognises individual for their "Lifetime Achievement to Marathi Cinema".

V. Shantaram Award
The 2022 recipient: Usha Naik
Awarded forLifetime achievement
LocationMaharashtra
CountryIndia
Presented byGovernment of Maharashtra
First awarded1994
Last awarded2022
Recent winnerUsha Naik
Highlights
Total awarded27
First winnerChandrakant Mandare

The Government of Maharashtra created the award to commemorate the contribution of Indian filmmaker V. Shantaram.

Recipients

List of award recipients
Year Image Recipient Field of work Ref.
1994 Chandrakant Mandare Actor [1]
1995   Sudhir Phadke Music composer [2]
1996 Lalita Pawar Actress [3]
1997 Sulochana Latkar [4]
1998   Dinkar D. Patil Director, writer [5]
1999   Sumati Joglekar Actress
2000   Vasant Painter Director
2001   Ram Gabale Director
2002 Chandrakant Gokhale Actor [6]
2003 Jayshree Gadkar Actress [7]
2004 Vanamala
2005   Annasaheb Deulgaonkar Screenwriter, producer [8]
2006 Ashok Saraf Actor [9]
2007 Rajdutt Director
2008 Ramesh Deo Actor [10]
Seema Deo Actress
2009   Jagdish Khebudkar Writer, lyricist [11]
2010   Asha Kale Actress
2011 Jabbar Patel Director [12]
2012   Leela Gandhi Actress
2013   Pandharinath Jukar Make-up artist
2014   Suryakant Lavande Cinematographer [13]
2015   V.N Mayekar Editor
2016 Vikram Gokhale Actor [14]
2017   Vijay Chavan
2018   Sushma Shiromani Actress
2019 Not awarded
2020   Ravindra Mahajani Actor
2021   Usha Chavan Actress
2022

Usha Naik Actor

See also

References

  1. "Chandrakant Mandare".
  2. "11th National Film Awards".
  3. "Rediff On The NeT: Lalitha, an actress and a gentlewoman". m.rediff.com.
  4. "'हा तर माझ्या घरचा आहेर!'". Maharashtra Times (in Marathi).
  5. Narwekar, Sanjit (1994). Directory of Indian Film-makers and Films. Flicks Books. ISBN 978-0-948911-40-8.
  6. Indian Films. B. V. Dharap. 1977.
  7. Jayshree, Gadkar (1986). Ashi Me Jayshree. Rohan, Pune.
  8. "Ti Peedhi Vegli Hoti - Annasaheb Deulgaonkar". Loksatta (in Marathi). 11 October 2020.
  9. "Ashok Samrat". Archived from the original on 6 June 2014.
  10. "The legend from Kolhapur". The Indian Express. 22 July 2011. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
  11. "Marathi Cinema Will Miss Jagdish Khebudkar".
  12. "Jabbar Patel".
  13. "Maharashtra announces awards for film legends". The Hindu. 27 April 2015. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 11 February 2024.
  14. "Vikram Gokhale gets lifetime achievement award". The Times of India. 23 April 2017. ISSN 0971-8257.
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