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Sumedha Raikar-Mhatre: The politics of revival

Why Marathi theatre isn’t excited about the resurrection of Pula Deshpande’s Tee Phulrani

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Hemangi Kavi and Dr Oak take on the roles of Manjula and Ashok Jahagirdar, previously enacted by Bhakti Barve and Satish Dubhashi respectively in Purushottam Lakshman Deshpande’s Tee Phulrani, which ran to 802 shows after opening in 1975
Hemangi Kavi and Dr Oak take on the roles of Manjula and Ashok Jahagirdar, previously enacted by Bhakti Barve and Satish Dubhashi respectively in Purushottam Lakshman Deshpande’s Tee Phulrani, which ran to 802 shows after opening in 1975

On the afternoon of January 29, 1975, when Indian National Theatre’s production Tee Phulrani opened to an 800-plus audience at Mumbai’s Ravindra Natya Mandir, playwright-director Purushottam Lakshman Deshpande (Pula) did not smile. He was expecting more — a ‘houseful’ sign at the booking counter. It was the least he expected for a play whose cultural rendering (from Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion which influenced the Gujarati version Santu Rangili) had occupied him for three years. He had relocated himself from Pune to a small Worli tenement to audition each artiste; not to forget the four-month long 7 am rehearsals, considering the day jobs of artists like Bhakti Barve, Satish Dubhashi and Arvind Deshpande.

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