Waman Bhonsle
Waman P. Bhonsle (19 February 1932 – 26 April 2021[1]) was an Indian film editor, who worked in Hindi cinema from 1960s to 1990s. At the 25th National Film Awards, he won the Best Editing Award for Inkaar.[2] BiographyHe was born in a small village in Goa called Pomburpa on 19 February 1932. He was the third son born to Pandhary and Krishnabai Bhonsle. He did his early schooling in Goa and came to Mumbai in the year 1952 to complete his primary education. CareerThat year on Bhonsle adopted the city of Mumbai as the land of his destiny. He started his tutorship under the trained eyes of Editor D.N.Pai at Bombay Talkies in 1952. After working as an apprentice with Pai for 6 months, he was asked to work at Filmistan as an assistant editor. Bhonsle honed his skills for 12 years at Filmistan and landed his first big assignment as an Independent Editor for Raj Khosla’s film Do Raaste in 1967. He received critical acclaim for his editing technique in this film and built on this success. In his career he worked with many important film makers of his times: Raj Khosla, Gulzaar, Subhash Ghai, Shekar Kapur, Ravi Tandon, Mahesh Bhat, Raj Sippy, Anil Ganguly, Sunil Dutt, Vikram Bhat, Ashok Gaikwad, K. Viswanath. In association with these film makers he edited some blockbuster movies like Do Raaste, Mera Gaon Mera Desh, Parichay, Mausam, Aandhi, Kalicharan, Inkaar, Dostana, Karz, Hero, Saaheb, Ram Lakhan, Agneepath, Saudagar, Ghulam, etc. During the course of his more than 4 decades in the Indian film industry he helped his assistants progress in their careers. The several awards won over the years stand testimony to his craft, his commitment, his focus on mentoring his people and his unwavering belief in advancing Indian Cinema through innovative editing techniques (e.g., The train sequence in Ghulam).[3] Bhonsle retired in 2002. Awards and recognition
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