Martial Arts - BREAKING THE MOLD
by Clifford Sawhney
Until Bruce Lee burst on the scene like a fiery meteorite, martial
arts masters rarely taught the art to the non-Chinese. And most practitioners
learnt only one style. An inveterate iconoclast, Bruce Lee first took
up wing chun—a branch of kung fu—then learnt karate,
taekwondo and other martial arts before amalgamating the best of
these into jeet kune do (JKD).
Bruce Lee was always receptive to new techniques. When Jhoon Rhee, a taekwondo
expert, taught Lee the sidekick, he quickly mastered it, including this
in his JKD repertoire. Before, he used only low kicks to the legs, since
wing chun has no high kicks. But after meeting Chuck Norris, he
included high kicks too!
Born Lee
Hsiao Lung in San Francisco in 1940, Bruce Lee was the son of a famous
Chinese opera singer. He later moved to Hong Kong and became a child
star in films. A loner, he constantly got into fights and turned to
kung fu for discipline. He trained in traditional wing chun
kung fu under Hong Kong's legendary Grandmaster Yip Man.
In 1959,
he moved back to the USA. His independent streak flowered, resulting
in jeet kune do, which is called 'the formless form' because
one of its main principals is to use whatever works and be bound by
nothing. Literally, 'jeet kune do' means 'the way of the intercepting
fist'. It uses some of the same principals as wing chun and borrows
from Western boxing, fencing and other arts.
Bruce Lee
was famed for his mastery of the one-inch punch. An untrained person
punches with just 20 per cent of body weight. Lee put much more body
weight into a punch very quickly from a short distance. He regularly
gave martial arts displays at exhibitions and his prowess won him small
roles in Hollywood films and had major stars like James Coburn, Steve
McQueen and Lee Marvin vying to train under him. Spotted by a TV producer,
he bagged The Green Hornet series—popular in the US and
a rage in Hong Kong. Producer Raymond Chow from Golden Harvest then
signed him for the martial arts flick, The Big Boss.
The cult
of the Dragon was born. It peaked in 1973 when Enter the Dragon
was released. Bruce Lee was catapulted to super-stardom and martial
arts became a global phenomenon, spawning a spate of martial arts movies
and Bruce Lee wannabes like Jackie Chan. A few more Dragon films—Return
of the Dragon, Fists of Fury, Game of Death—saw
a flurry of martial arts schools opening around the world.
At the
peak of fame in 1973, Bruce Lee confessed to Fighting Stars magazine:
''I want to be the best martial artist. Not just for the sake of the
movies, but because this is my interest. To be good I have to spend
a lot of time practicing. My minimum daily training is two hours. This
includes running three miles, special weight training, kicking and hitting
the light and heavy bags. I really dig exercise.'' It was this single-minded
pursuit that had many masters—including Mumbai-based Sensei Pervez
Mistry of the All-India Karate-do Federation—admitting that Bruce
Lee was one of the greatest martial artists of all time.
His last
film, Game of Death, was never completed. In late July 1973,
Lee was at a costar's residence and complained of a headache. The actress
gave him a tablet of equagesic. Some time later, Bruce Lee went into
a coma, apparently induced by an allergic reaction. He was just 32 when
he bid an abrupt adieu.
Though of
a lean frame, just 5 ft 7 in and 135 pounds, Bruce Lee's achievements
were towering.
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Reader's Comments
Subject: bruce lee - 25 December 2011
contact me at dcurl28@yahoo.com
by: dave curl
Subject: bruce the master - 25 December 2011
let it be know to all martial artist that no matter of the martial arts you study all was train by masters, to this day ive study the martials for 10 plus years and was taught by people who thought they were masters during my trainning ive suffer injuries myself doctors, but only one person made More...
by: dave curl
Pages: 1