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Bruce Lee (November 27, 1940 — July 20, 1973) was a Chinese American martial artist and martial arts actor who is widely regarded as one of the most influential martial artists of the 20th century. Lee's movies, especially his performance in the Hollywood-produced Enter the Dragon, elevated the traditional Hong Kong martial arts film to a new level of popularity, paving the way for future martial artists and martial arts actors such as Jackie Chan, Jet Li, and Chuck Norris.
Bruce Lee's screen name was Lee Siu Lung in Cantonese or Li Xiao Long in Mandarin which literally means Lee Little Dragon, first named by a director in the 1950 Cantonese movie which Lee performed in.
Bruce Lee was born at the Chinese Hospital[2] in San Francisco to his Chinese father, Lee Hoi-Chuen and mother Grace Lee. He received his early education and Kung Fu training in Hong Kong. Because of his father's fame as a Chinese opera actor, Lee had the opportunity to appear in several Chinese movies as a child. He studied the Wing Chun style of martial arts at a young age and picked up the languages of English, Cantonese, and Mandarin.
In 1959, Bruce Lee went to Seattle, to complete his high school education. He received his diploma from Edison Technical School and enrolled at the University of Washington as a Philosophy major. It was at the University of Washington that he met his future wife, Linda Emery, whom he would marry in 1964. Lee has two children- a daughter, Shannon, and a son, Brandon, who was tragically killed during a film set accident.
Although he made only a handful of films and television shows, Bruce Lee has become an iconic figure as a personification of a Asian man who became the epitome of what many see as the mental and physical perfection in martial arts, fitness, and health.
Due to his father's entertainment industry connections, Bruce Lee was a child actor in several 1950s Hong Kong movies.
After graduation from the University of Washington with a Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy, Bruce Lee headed to San Francisco and then Hollywood. Lee went on to star as Kato in the TV series The Green Hornet, which ran from 1966 to 1967 and afterward opened up his own Jeet Kune Do school.
In 1971, unable to find acting roles and faced with stereotypes regarding Asian actors, Lee returned to Hong Kong with his family. There, he starred in martial arts movies, earning $30,000 for his first two feature films and cementing his fame.
Yuen Wah, a member of the Seven Little Fortunes, and later to become a well known actor in his own right (notably starring in 2005's Kung Fu Hustle), was Lee's stunt double in Lee's last few films.
An important moment happened in the careers of Bruce Lee and Chuck Norris in 1964 at a demonstration in Long Beach, California, Norris met the soon to be famous Bruce Lee. The Karate black belt champion was introduced by Lee, portraying one of Lee's opponents in Return of the Dragon, aka Way of the Dragon. The fight with Chuck Norris in the Colosseum is widely regarded as the best martial arts fight ever filmed.
But while Bruce Lee and Chuck Norris were publicly friendly, contrary to what many, including Norris himself states, they were not close friends. Bruce Lee had repeatedly humiliated Chuck Norris during a mock sparring session in the hotel hallway at the Long Beach International Karate Championships in 1964. And Norris had offended Lee when he publicly claimed to be a better fighter than Lee. When word got back to Lee, he called Norris and openly challenged him, threatening to drive to his martial arts dojo to fight. Norris was teaching his black belt class at that time. According to eye witnesses, Lee made Norris hold the phone receiver up and shout in front of his black belts, "Bruce Lee is a better fighter than me!" Later, Norris wrote an apologetic letter to Lee; the original letter is currently in the care of Lee's student, Dan Inosanto. Yet despite these conflicts, the two managed to set aside any differences in pursuit of their mutual film aspirations and develop a friendly public persona toward one another.
Bruce Lee's revolutionary break from traditional martial arts doctrines is nowadays seen as the first step into the modern style of mixed martial arts.
Bruce Lee began his formal martial arts training at a young age in Wing Chun style of Kung Fu under Hong Kong Wing Chun master Yip Man. Like most martial arts schools at that time, Yip Man's classes were often taught by the highest ranking student. The highest ranked student under Yip Man at the time of Lee's training was Wong Shun Leung.
Bruce Lee's first formal, organized bout came as a teenager at his Catholic school in Hong Kong. He was to fight a young British boxer, a reigning two-time boxing champion. Bruce knocked his opponent out with repeated strikes, using the Wing Chun jik chung chuy.
It would not be until his arrival in the United States, however, that Lee began the process of creating his own style, which he would later teach at the martial arts schools he opened first in Seattle starting with judo practitioner Jesse Glover as his first student who later became his first assistant instructor, and the first person authorized by Lee to teach aspects of Bruce Lee's gung-fu, and then in Oakland and Los Angeles, California (named the Lee Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute). After becoming dissatisfied with existing schools of martial arts, he later modified his martial arts style, which consisted mostly of elements of Wing Chun, with elements of Western Boxing, Fencing, and other martial arts and named it Jun Fan Gung Fu. Lee expanded this style over time, including elements from Muay Thai, Indo-Malay Silat, Panantukan, Sikaran, Bando, Catch Wrestling, Karate, Judo, Jujitsu, Aikido, and other martial arts styles. It would be much later that he would come to describe his style as Jeet Kune Do or the Way of the Intercepting Fist, a term he would later regret because Jeet Kune Do implied a style.
The reason why Bruce Lee later regretted giving a name to his fighting style, Jeet Kune Do was because Lee believed it made it a single "martial art style" and therefore had limitations. Instead Bruce Lee calls his fighting style, the style of no style, or the art of fighting without fighting which implies no limitations. Lee saw loyalty to a particular martial arts style as having limitations. This and Lee's other ideas about martial arts and his teaching of Chinese martial arts to non-Asian students gave Lee many enemies in the martial arts community, culminating in many challenges by other martial artists which Bruce Lee poignantly answered.
It took a violent confrontation to start Bruce Lee's adaptation of his art. Bruce Lee was issued a challenge by Chinese elders in the region in response to his teaching Chinese "secret" martial art techniques to westerners.
A contest was scheduled between him and another popular martial artist in the area to settle the dispute. The popular take on that fight was that the fight lasted a total of three rounds, most of which consisted of Lee chasing the man around the room until finally submitting him.
The instructor who fought Bruce was Wong Jack Man and he didn't want to be in the fight but was unable to get out of it without losing face. According Michael Dorgan, writing in Official Karate, in the July 1980 issue, the numbers of people who attended the fight ranged from 8 to 13. Wong remembered the fight as being more than 20 minutes and he was on the defensive and Bruce Lee was the aggressor. Most accounts of the fight have Lee being the better fighter that day.
Although he won, Bruce was forlorn, thinking that the fight had taken too long and that he had failed to live up to himself. At this point he decided to start training hard: weights for strength, running for endurance, stretching for flexibility, plus many other methods of training, which he constantly adapted as he grew as a martial artist.
During this time Lee developed his own combat techniques as well as the famous one inch punch, which comes from Wing Chun, which he demonstrated during a Karate tournament at Long Beach.
Prior to his death, Lee told his then only two living instructors, Dan Inosanto and Taky Kimura (James Yimm Lee had passed away in 1972), to dismantle his schools. He no longer wished to call his art Jeet Kune Do or have his students associate what they were learning as Bruce Lee's style. His last wish was that Dan Inosanto never use the name JKD or Jeet Kune Do again. Though there are many who claim to teach Jeet Kune Do around the globe, Inosanto, following Lee's request, still refers to the Bruce Lee curriculum taught at his school as Jun Fan Gung Fu.
Perhaps a reason for Lee himself later regretting even giving a name to his philosophy/fighting style was that it became just another "martial art style." Lee saw loyalty to a particular martial arts style as having limitations. This and Lee's other ideas about teaching martial arts made him many enemies in the martial arts community of the 1960s/70s.
There were three certified instructors: Dan Inosanto received the highest certification in Lee's art (a notable exception is Taky Kimura, senior most instructor in Jun Fan Gung Fu) and is widely regarded as the most senior JKD instructor. All other instructors (again except Taky Kimura and the late James Yimm Lee [no relation to Bruce Lee]) are certified under Inosanto, even Bruce's other original students. Kimura, to date, has certified only one person in Jun Fan Gung Fu, his son and heir, Andy Kimura. James Yimm Lee, a close friend of Lee's, never certified anyone before his untimely death. Inosanto often serves not only as the leading instructor and historian of Jeet Kune Do Concepts; he also teaches and practices other styles such as Kali, Silat, Muay Thai, and Brazilian Jujitsu, some of which were already incorporated into the Jun Fan Gung Fu system.
Bruce Lee cared deeply about his physical fitness and tracked the evolution of his training in personal notes and diary, which have been recollected and published in The Bruce Lee Library by John Little, a "martial arts historian" from The Bruce Lee Estate. Bruce Lee used every known technique and resource in aiding his physical fitness. One of the techniques he used was electric current as an aid to strength training, because of the leanness the muscles gained in working against themselves. However, this muscle stimulator was only one of many pieces of equipment and exercise routines Lee used to achieve his on-screen physical appearance.
Of all the muscles Bruce Lee developed, his abdominal muscles were among the strongest: rock solid, deeply cut, and highly defined. Lee believed the abdominals muscles were one of the most important muscle groups for a martial artist since virtually every movement requires some degree of abdominal work. Perhaps more importantly, the "abs" are like a shell, protecting your ribs and vital organs.
Bruce Lee felt many martial artists of his day lacked the necessary physical fitness to back up their skill. In his book Tao of Jeet Kune Do, he wrote "Training is one of the most neglected phases of athletics. Too much time is given to the development of skill and too little to the development of the individual for participation."
Bruce Lee's washboard abs did not come from mere abdominal training; he was also a proponent of cardiovascular conditioning and would regularly run, jump rope and ride a stationary bicycle. A typical excercise Lee would perform would be to run covered a distance of two to six miles in 15 to 45 minutes.
Lee's student, Herb Jackson, remembers another, more unorthodox method Lee used to increase his muscle definition. According to Jackson, Lee would wear a type of sauna belt when riding his stationary bicycle because he believed the belt focused heat on his abdominal muscles and helped reduce fat.
Another element in Lee's quest for abdominal definition was nutrition. According to Linda Lee, soon after he moved to the United States, Bruce Lee started to take nutrition seriously and developed an interest in health foods and high-protein drinks. "Several times a day, he took a high-protein drink made up of powdered milk, ice water, eggs, eggshells, bananas, vegetable oil, peanut flour and chocolate ice cream," who claims Bruce's waist fluctuated between 26 and 28 inches. "He also drank his own juice concoctions made from vegetables and fruits apples, celery, carrots and so on, prepared in an electric blender."
Bruce Lee ate lean meat sparingly and consumed large amounts of fruits and vegetables. In later years, he became very knowledgeable about vitamin supplements, and each day apportioned himself exactly the right quota of vitamins A, B, C, D, and E.
In the same Long Beach event he also performed the "one inch punch", the description of which is as follows: Lee stood upright, his right foot forward with knees bent slightly, in front of a standing, stationary partner. Lee's right arm was partly extended and his right fist approximately an inch away from the partner's chest. Without retracting his right arm, Lee then forcibly delivered the punch to his partner while largely maintaining his posture, sending the partner backwards and falling into a chair placed behind the partner to prevent injury.
Bruce Lee's death was officially attributed to cerebral edema.
On July 20, 1973, Lee was in Hong Kong, due to have dinner with former James Bond star George Lazenby, with whom he intended to make a film. According to Lee's wife, Linda, Bruce met producer Raymond Chow at 2 pm at home to discuss the making of the movie Game of Death. They worked until 4 pm, and then drove together to the home of Betty Ting Pei, a Taiwanese actress who was to also have a leading role in the film. The three went over the script at her home, and then Chow left to attend a dinner meeting.
A short time later, Lee complained of a headache, and Ting Pei gave him a tablet of analgesic. At around 7:30 pm, he laid down for a nap. After Lee didn't turn up for the dinner, Chow came to the apartment but could not wake Lee up. A doctor was summoned, who spent 10 minutes attempting to revive him before sending him by ambulance to Queen Elizabeth Hospital. However, Lee was dead by the time he reached the hospital. There was no visible external injury; however, his brain had swollen considerably, from 1,400 to 1,575 grams. Lee was 32 years old. On October 15, 2005, Chow stated in an interview that Lee was allergic to equigesic, one of the three ingredients in the pain-killing medication, whose generic name is Flunixin Meglumine. When the doctors announced Bruce Lee's death officially, it was coined as "Death by Misadventure".
Although he made only a handful of films and television appearances in his adulthood, Bruce Lee has become an iconic figure as an Asian man who became the epitome of what many see as the mental and physical perfection in martial arts.
Bruce Lee sparked the first major surge of interest in Chinese martial arts in the West. The direction and tone of Bruce Lee's movies have forever changed and influenced martial arts and martial arts films in Hong Kong, China, and the rest of the world.
Due to Bruce Lee's iconic status, many fans developed theories of what resulted in his death. A few theories are listed below (These are the most popular):
Bruce had refused to pay the triads or Chinese gangsters protection money, and was killed upon his countless refusals (Which many believe incorporated to the storyline of his final film, Game of Death. This theory is also used as an explanation for his son's untimely death. See Brandon Lee)
Some believe there is actually a Lee family curse (commonly reffered to as "Curse of the Dragon") in which a jealous demon of sorts kills the successful (as far as stars) males in the Lee family. In this case, Lee's father (Lee Hoi Chen), himself, and his son. (The curse theory has several variations)
-Note: The movie Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story plays off on this theory, in a dreamlike sequence near the end of the movie pits the demon against Bruce in battle. Bruce eventually defeats it using his Nunchaku, thus saving his son from the curse. Ironically, Brandon died in a horrible accident the year of the movie's release.
-Note: Many claim that the demon in the movie was actually a Japanese Oni due to its Samurai-clad appearence. However, it has been brought to attention that in the old days, the Chinese had uniforms similar in appearence.
-Note: "Curse of the Dragon" is also the title of a Bruce Lee documentary.
Another rumor is that Bruce didn't die at all but instead he faked his death. For example, he left to escape the publicity or he embarked on a quest of some sort. Reasonings vary, but all end in the same fashion that he will return one day. (One in particular stated he would return in 20 years, but this theory has obviously been refuted as it has been over 35 years since his "dissapearence")
Bruce was slain in combat against another Martial Artist- one in particular involving a "Dim mak" or "death-touch".
Bruce was killed in a street-fight by common thugs.
He strained himself in training, exhausted himself and died.
Although he is best known as a martial artist and actor, Lee majored in philosophy at the University of Washington. His philosophy often mirrored his fighting beliefs, though he was quick to claim that his martial arts were solely a metaphor for such teachings. His influences include Taoism and Buddhism.
See Wikiquotes for quotes by Lee.
Lee starred in a leading role in a total of five major films, two of which (Enter the Dragon, Game of Death) premiered after his death.
| Released | # | Chinese and English title of original release | U.S. title | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1971 | 1 | The Big Boss | Fists of Fury | Plays Chen, fights druglord "The Big Boss" in Thailand. |
| 1972 | 2 | Fist of Fury | The Chinese Connection | Plays the character Chen, (not relevant to "The Big Boss"). Fights against Japanese tyrants in Shanghai. |
| 1972 | 3 | Way of the Dragon | Return of the Dragon | Fought crime in Rome, Italy. Released after Enter the Dragon in the U.S. hence the title. |
| 1973 | 4 | Enter the Dragon | same | Fought a drug lord in Hong Kong to avenge his sister. |
| 1979 | 5 | Game of Death | same | Pieced together [10]. He was only in the film for about 11 min, the rest is pieced together after his death. |
Note: The U.S. titles for the first two films were swapped by the U.S. distributor. The title The Chinese Connection (a play on the then-recently-released The French Connection) was originally intended for The Big Boss due to the drugs theme of the story.