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'''ᱭᱚᱥ ᱨᱟᱡᱽ ᱪᱳᱯᱰᱟ''' (᱒᱗ ᱥᱮᱯᱴᱮᱢᱵᱚᱨ ᱑᱙᱓᱒ – ᱒᱑ ᱚᱠᱴᱳᱵᱚᱨ ᱒᱐᱑᱒)<ref name="Zoom The Life and Times of Yash Chopra">{{cite web|title=The Life and Times of Yash Chopra|url=http://zoomtv.indiatimes.com/getphotosdata/Yash-Chopra-King-of-Romance/photoshow/16911861.cms|publisher=India Times|accessdate=28 October 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131029194109/http://zoomtv.indiatimes.com/getphotosdata/Yash-Chopra-King-of-Romance/photoshow/16911861.cms|archive-date=29 October 2013|url-status=dead}}</ref>
Chopra began his career as an assistant director to [[I. S. Johar]] and his elder brother, [[B.R. Chopra]]. He made directorial debut with ''[[Dhool Ka Phool]]'' in 1959, a melodrama about illegitimacy, and followed it with the social drama ''[[Dharmputra]]'' (1961). Chopra rose to prominence after directing the critically and commercially successful drama ''[[Waqt (1965 film)|Waqt]]'' (1965), which pioneered the concept of ensemble casts in Bollywood. In 1971, he founded his own production company, Yash Raj Films, whose first production was ''[[Daag (1973 film)|Daag: A Poem of Love]]'' (1973), a successful melodrama about polygamy. His success continued in the seventies, with some of Indian cinema's most successful and iconic films, including the action thriller ''[[Deewaar]]'' (1975), which established [[Amitabh Bachchan]] as a leading actor in Bollywood; the ensemble romantic drama ''[[Kabhie Kabhie (1976 film)|Kabhie Kabhie]]'' (1976) and the ensemble drama ''[[Trishul (film)|Trishul]]'' (1978). This was followed by a period of professional setback from the late 1970s to 1989.
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