They called him the He-Man. Most of his major solo hits – 'Phool Aur Patthar' (to a lesser extent), 'Ankhen', 'Mera Gaon Mera Desh', 'Jugnu', 'Pratigya' – were breathless action yarns. These movies made Dharmendra a star of the masses. Audiences would stand in queues for hours to watch him snarl and scream, “Ek ek ko chun chun kar maroonga.” Dialogues like these became a template repeated over countless movies in a career that spanned nearly six and a half decades. It is, therefore, quite interesting that Bollywood’s action hero also played a range of genteel and refined characters, especially in the first two decades of his career. And one is not referring only to botany professor Parimal Tripathi in Hrishikesh Mukherjee’s 'Chupke Chupke' (1975), or, for that matter, the Sanskrit te

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