"If you always put limit on
everything you do, physical or anything else. It will spread into your work and
into your life. There are no limits. There are only plateaus, and you must not
stay there, you must go beyond them." -Bruce Lee
Bruce Jun Fan Lee was born
in the hour of the Dragon, between 6 and 8 a.m., in the year of the Dragon
on November 27, 1940 at the Jackson Street Hospital in San Francisco’s
Chinatown. Today, a plaque in the hospital’s entry commemorates the place
of his birth. Bruce’s birth, in the hour and the year of the Dragon, is a
powerful symbol in Chinese astrology. It would be a strong omen of the
powerful life that was to be lived by Bruce Lee and the explosive impact
his life would have on countless others.
Bruce was the fourth child
born to Lee Hoi Chuen and his wife Grace Ho. He had two older sisters,
Phoebe and Agnes, an older brother, Peter, and a younger brother, Robert.
Lee Hoi Chuen was, by profession, a comedian in the Chinese opera and an
actor in Cantonese films. At the time Bruce was born, Mr. and Mrs. Lee
were on tour with the opera company in the United States. Thus, it was
fortuitous for Bruce’s future that his birth took place in America, as he
would return 18 years later to claim his birthright of American
citizenship.
Bruce Lee and Parents, the Cantonese Opera Singer Lee Hoi Chuen and His
Wife Grace Lee
Bruce’s parents gave him
the name “Jun Fan.” Since it is Chinese custom to put the surname first,
Bruce’s full name is written Lee Jun Fan. The true meaning of Jun Fan
deserves an explanation as it, too, would foretell the journey of the
newly born Lee son. Literally, JUN means “to arouse to the active state”
or “to make prosperous.” It was a common middle name used by Hong Kong
Chinese boys in those days, understandably because China and the Chinese
people were very vulnerable at that time, and everyone, including Bruce’s
parents, wanted the “sleeping lion of the East” to wake up. The FAN
syllable refers to the Chinese name for San Francisco, but its true
meaning is “fence of a garden” or “bordering subordinate countries of a
big country.” During the period of the Ching Dynasty (1644-1911), many
Chinese immigrated to Hawaii and San Francisco as laborers, and the
implication became that the United States was FAN of the Great Ching
Empire.
Thus the true meaning of
Bruce’s name--JUN FAN--was “to arouse and make FAN (the United States)
prosperous.” The gut feeling of many Chinese at that time, who felt
suppressed by and inferior to foreign powers, was that they wished to
outshine the more superior countries and regain the Golden Age of China.
Bruce’s parents wanted Bruce to have his name shine and shake the foreign
countries, which he certainly succeeded in doing.
The English name, BRUCE,
was given to the baby boy by a nurse in the Jackson Street Hospital
although he was never to use this name until he entered secondary school
and began his study of the English language. The story goes that on the
first day of English class, the students were asked to write down their
English names, and Bruce, not knowing his name, copied the name of the
student next to him. His family almost never used the name Bruce,
especially in his growing up years when his nickname in the family was
“SAI FON,” which literally means Little Peacock. This is a girl’s
nickname, but in being applied to Bruce, it had a serious purpose. The
first-born child of Mr. and Mrs. Lee had been a boy who did not survive
infancy. Their belief was that if the gods did not favor the birth of a
male child, the babe might be taken away. Thus, the name, Little Peacock,
was used as a ruse to fool the gods into thinking that Bruce was a girl.
It was a term of great affection within the family circle.
At the age of three months,
Lee Hoi Chuen, his wife Grace and baby Bruce returned to Hong Kong where
Bruce would be raised until the age of 18. Probably because of the long
ocean voyage and the change in climates, Bruce was not a strong child in
his very early years, a condition that would change when he took up the
study of gung fu at the age of 13. (Bruce always spelled his Chinese
martial art as GUNG FU, which is the Cantonese pronunciation of the more
commonly spelled Kung Fu, a Mandarin pronunciation.) Bruce’s most
prominent memory of his early years was the occupation of Hong Kong by the
Japanese during the World War II years (1941-1945). The residence of the
Lee family was a flat at 218 Nathan Road in Kowloon directly across the
street from the military encampment of the Japanese. Bruce’s mother often
told the story of young Bruce, less than 5 years old, leaning precariously
off the balcony of their home raising his fist to the Japanese Zeros
circling above. Another nickname the family often applied to Bruce was “Mo
Si Ting” which means “never sits still” and aptly described his
personality.
The Japanese occupation was
Bruce’s first prescient memory, but Hong Kong had been a British Crown
Colony since the late 1800’s. The English returned to power at the end of
the war. It is not hard to see why young Bruce would have rebellious
feelings toward foreign usurpation of his homeland. In his teenage years
Bruce was exposed to the common practice of unfriendly taunting by English
school boys who appeared to feel superior to the Chinese. It is not
surprising that Bruce and his friends retaliated by returning the taunts
and sometimes getting into fights with the English boys. This atmosphere
laid the background for Bruce to begin his study of martial arts. At the
age of 13, Bruce was introduced to Master Yip Man, a teacher of the Wing
Chun style of gung fu. For five years Bruce studied diligently and became
very proficient. He greatly revered Yip Man as a master teacher and wise
man and frequently visited with him in later years. When he first took up
gung fu, he used his new skills to pummel his adversaries, but it did not
take long for Bruce to learn that the real value of martial arts training
is that the skills of physical combat instill confidence to the point that
one does not feel the constant need to defend one’s honor through
fighting.
Master Yip
Man and Bruce Lee
In high school, Bruce, now
no longer a weak child, was beginning to hone his body through hard
training. One of his accomplishments was winning an interschool Boxing
Championship against an English student in which the Marquis of Queensbury
rules were followed and no kicking was allowed. Given the graceful
movements, which would later be spectacularly displayed in his films, it
is no surprise that Bruce was also a terrific dancer, and in 1958 he won
the Hong Kong Cha Cha Championship. He studied dancing as assiduously as
he did gung fu, keeping a notebook in which he had noted 108 different cha
cha steps. It is easy to see that Bruce possessed the traits of
self-discipline and hard work which would later hold him in good stead,
even though at this stage he was not among the best academic students in
the class.
In addition to his studies,
gung fu and dancing, Bruce had another side interest during his school
years. He was a child actor under the tutelage of his father who must have
known from an early age that Bruce had a streak of showmanship. Bruce’s
very first role was as a babe in arms as he was carried onto the stage. By
the time he was 18, he had appeared in 20 films. In those days movie
making was not particularly glamorous or remunerative in Hong Kong, but
Bruce loved acting. His mother often told stories of how Bruce was
impossible to wake up to go to school, but just a tap on the shoulder at
midnight would rouse him from his bed to go to the film studio. Movies
were most often made at night in Hong Kong in order to minimize the sounds
of the city. (See Filmography)
At the age of 18, Bruce was
looking for new vistas in his life, as were his parents who were
discouraged that Bruce had not made more progress academically. It was
common practice for high school graduates to go overseas to attend
colleges, but that required excellent grades. Bruce’s brother and sister
had come to the United States on student visas for their higher education.
Although Bruce had not formally graduated from high school, and was more
interested in gung fu, dancing and acting, his family decided that it was
time for him to return to the land of his birth and find his future there.
In April of 1959, with $100 in his pocket, Bruce boarded a steamship in
the American Presidents Line and began his voyage to San Francisco. His
passage was in the lower decks of the ship, but it didn’t take long for
Bruce to be invited up to the first class accommodations to teach the
passengers the cha cha. Landing in San Francisco, Bruce was armed with the
knowledge that his dancing abilities might provide him a living, so his
first job was as a dance instructor. One of his first students was Bob
Lee, brother of James Y. Lee, who would become Bruce’s great friend,
colleague in the martial arts, and eventually partner and Assistant
Instructor of the Oakland Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute.
Bruce did not stay long in
San Francisco, but traveled to Seattle where a family friend, Ruby Chow,
had a restaurant and had promised Bruce a job and living quarters above
the restaurant. By now Bruce had left his acting and dancing passions
behind and was intent on furthering his education. He enrolled at Edison
Technical School where he fulfilled the requirements for the equivalent of
high school graduation and then enrolled at the University of Washington.
Typical of his personality traits, he attacked learning colloquial English
as he had his martial arts training. Not content to speak like a
foreigner, he applied himself to learning idiosyncrasies of speech. His
library contained numerous books, underlined and dog-eared on common
English idiomatic phrases. Although he never quite lost the hint of an
English accent when speaking, his ability to turn a phrase or “be cool”
was amazing for one who did not speak a word of the language until the age
of 12. Bruce’s written English skills exceeded his spoken language
abilities at first because he had been well tutored in the King’s proper
English prose in Hong Kong. When his wife-to-be met him at the University
of Washington, he easily edited her English papers for correct grammar and
syntax.
At the university, Bruce
majored in philosophy. His passion for gung fu inspired a desire to delve
into the philosophical underpinnings of the arts. Many of his written
essays during those years would relate philosophical principles to certain
martial arts techniques. For instance, he wrote often about the principles
of yin and yang and how they could translate into hard and soft physical
movements. In this way he was completing his education as a true martial
artist in the time-honored Chinese sense of one whose knowledge
encompasses the physical, mental and spiritual aspects of the arts.
In the three years that
Bruce studied at the university, he supported himself by teaching gung fu,
having by this time given up working in the restaurant, stuffing
newspapers or various other odd jobs. He and a few of his new friends
would meet in parking lots, garages or any open space and play around with
gung fu techniques. In the late ‘50’s and early ‘60’s, “gung fu” was an
unknown term; in fact, the only physical art that might be listed in the
yellow pages was Judo. Even the name “karate” was not a familiar term. The
small group of friends was intrigued by this art called gung fu. One of
the first students in this group was Jesse Glover who continues to teach
some of Bruce’s early techniques to this day. It was during this period
that Bruce and Taky Kimura became friends. Not only would Taky become
Bruce’s gung fu student and the first Assistant Instructor he ever had,
but the friendship forged between the two men was a source of love and
strength for both of them. Taky Kimura has continued to be Bruce’s staunch
supporter, devoting endless hours to preserving his art and philosophy
throughout the 30 years since Bruce’s passing.
The small circle of friends
that Bruce had made encouraged him to open a real school of gung fu and
charge a nominal sum for teaching in order to support himself while
attending school. Renting a small basement room with a half door entry
from 8th Street in Seattle’s Chinatown, Bruce decided to call his school
the Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute. In 1963, having established a dedicated
group of students and having given numerous demonstrations at the
university, Bruce thought he might attract more students by opening a
larger school at 4750 University Way where he also lived in a small room
in the back of the kwoon.
One of his students in 1963
was a freshman at the University of Washington, Linda Emery. Linda knew
who Bruce was from his guest lectures in Chinese philosophy at Garfield
High School, and in the summer after graduating, at the urging of her
Chinese girlfriend, SueAnn Kay, Linda started taking gung fu lessons. It
wasn’t long before the instructor became more interesting than the
lessons. Bruce and Linda were married in 1964. By this time, Bruce had
decided to make a career out of teaching gung fu. His plan involved
opening a number of schools around the country and training assistant
instructors to teach in his absence. Leaving his Seattle school in the
hands of Taky Kimura, Bruce and Linda moved to Oakland where Bruce opened
his second school with James Lee. The two men had formed a friendship over
the years with each traveling frequently between Seattle and Oakland.
James was a gung fu man from way back, but when he saw Bruce’s stuff he
was so impressed that he wanted to join with him in starting a school.
Thus the second branch of the Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute was founded.
Bruce Lee and his wife Linda
Having now been in the
United States for five years, Bruce had left behind any thought of acting
as a career, and devoted himself completely to his choice of martial arts
as a profession. Up to this time Bruce’s gung fu consisted mostly of wing
chun techniques and theory he had learned from Yip Man. Gradually though,
because of his burgeoning interest in the philosophy of martial arts and
his desire for self improvement, he was expanding his repertoire. A
particular incident accelerated his process of self-exploration. In 1964
Bruce was challenged by some gung fu men from San Francisco who objected
to his teaching of non-Chinese students. Bruce accepted the challenge and
the men arrived at the kwoon in Oakland on the appointed day for the face
off. The terms were that if Bruce were defeated he would stop teaching the
non Chinese. It was a short fight with the gung fu man from The City
giving up when Bruce had him pinned to the floor after about three
minutes. The significance of this fight was that Bruce was extremely
disappointed in his own performance. Even though he had won, he was winded
and discouraged about his inability to put the man away in under three
minutes. This marked a turning point for Bruce in his exploration of his
martial art and the enhancement of his physical fitness. Thus began the
evolution of Jeet Kune Do.
Just as Bruce was cementing
his plans to expand his martial arts schools, fate stepped in to move his
life in another direction. In the preceding years Bruce had made the
acquaintance of Ed Parker, widely regarded as the father of American
Kenpo. In August of 1964, Ed invited Bruce to Long Beach, CA to give a
demonstration at his First International Karate Tournament. Bruce’s
exhibition was spectacular. He used Taky as his partner and demonstrated
his blindfolded chi sao techniques. At one point he used a member of the
audience to show the power of his one-inch punch. Such was Bruce’s
charisma that he spoke conversationally, injecting humor into his comments
while at the same time emphatically demonstrating his power, precision and
speed.
A member of the audience
was Jay Sebring, a well-known hair stylist to the stars. As fate would
have it, the following week, Jay was styling the hair of William Dozier,
an established producer. Mr. Dozier mentioned to Jay that he was looking
for an actor to play the part of Charlie Chan’s son in a series to be
entitled, “Number One Son.” Jay told the producer about having seen this
spectacular young Chinese man giving a gung fu demonstration just a few
nights before. Mr. Dozier obtained a copy of the film that was taken at Ed
Parker’s tournament. The next week he called Bruce at home in Oakland and
invited him to come to Los Angeles for a screen test.
Bruce’s screen test was
impressive, but in the meantime plans for “Number One Son” had been
scuttled. Mr. Dozier was now immersed in the production of the “Batman” TV
series, but still he wanted to hang onto Bruce. The plan was that if
Batman was successful for more than one season, then Dozier wanted to
capitalize on the popularity of another comic book character, “The Green
Hornet” with Bruce playing the part of Kato. To keep Bruce from signing
with someone else, Mr. Dozier paid him an $1,800 option for one year.
About this time things were
changing in Bruce’s personal life as well. His own number one son, Brandon
Bruce Lee, was born February 1, 1965. One week later Bruce’s father, Lee
Hoi Chuen, died in Hong Kong. Bruce was pleased that his father had known
about the birth of the first grandchild in the Lee family. Given these
events and the arrival of the lump sum option money, Bruce decided it was
time to make a trip to Hong Kong to visit his mother and introduce the
family to both Linda and Brandon. They stayed in the family flat on Nathan
Road for four months. While there Bruce was able to “play gung fu” with
Master Yip Man and the students of the wing chun school.
Upon leaving Hong Kong,
Bruce and his family traveled to Seattle where they stayed with Linda’s
family for another four months. During this time Bruce spent a great deal
of time with Taky and the students at the Seattle school. After Seattle,
the family moved back to James Lee’s house in Oakland for several months
before making the move to Los Angeles. In Los Angeles, he got better
acquainted with Dan Inosanto whom he had known through Ed Parker. It was
not long before Bruce opened his third gung fu school with Dan as his
assistant instructor
During this entire year of
traveling and working closely with his best gung fu colleagues, Bruce was
going through a period of intense self-exploration. Bruce was always a
goal setter. However, he was never obstinate about his goals and if the
wind changed, he could steer his life on a different course. He was in a
period of transition at this time, deciding whether to make acting his
career or continue on the path of opening nationwide schools of gung fu.
His decision was to focus on acting and see if he could turn it into a
productive career. He often said his passion was pursuit of the martial
arts, but his career choice was filmmaking.
The chief reason that Bruce
turned his attention to acting was that he had lost interest in spreading
his way of martial arts in a wide scale manner. He had begun to see that
if his schools became more numerous, he would lose control of the quality
of the teaching. Bruce loved to teach gung fu, and he loved his students.
Countless hours were spent in his backyard or in the kwoon, one on one
with students. They were like members of the family. His love for his
martial arts was not something he wanted to turn into a business.
In 1966, production started
on “The Green Hornet.” The filming lasted for six months, the series for
one season, and that was the end of it. Bruce’s take home pay was $313 a
week, which seemed like a lot of money at the time. When they first
started filming, the cameras were not able to record the fight scenes
clearly because of Bruce’s speed.
They asked him to slow
down to capture the action. Bruce’s gung fu moves thrilled audiences, and
the series became a sought-after collector item in later years. Bruce
maintained a friendship with Van Williams who played the part of Britt
Reid.
The years between 1967 and
1971 were lean years for the Lee family. Bruce worked hard at furthering
his acting career and did get some roles in a few TV series and films. To
support the family, Bruce taught private lessons in Jeet Kune Do, often to
people in the entertainment industry. Some of his clients included Steve
McQueen, James Coburn, Stirling Silliphant, Sy Weintraub, Ted Ashley, Joe
Hyams, James Garner and others.
A great blessing was the
arrival of a daughter, Shannon Emery Lee, on April 19, 1969. She brought
great joy into the Lee household and soon had her daddy around her little
finger.
Bruce,
Brandon, Linda and Shannon Lee
During this time Bruce
continued the process he had started in Oakland in 1964, the evolution of
his way of martial arts, which he called Jeet Kune Do, “The Way of The
Intercepting Fist.” He read and wrote extensively his thoughts about
physical combat, the psychology of fighting, the philosophical roots of
martial arts, and about motivation, self-actualization and liberation of
the individual. Thanks to this period in his life, which was at times
frustrating, we know more about the mind of Bruce Lee through his
writings.
Bruce was devoted to
physical culture and trained devotedly. In addition to actual sparring
with his students, he believed in strenuous aerobic workouts and weight
training. His abdominal and forearm workouts were particularly intense.
There was rarely a time when Bruce was doing nothing—in fact, he was often
seen reading a book, doing forearm curls and watching a boxing film at the
same time. He also paid strict attention to his food consumption and took
vitamins and Chinese herbs at times. It was actually his zealousness that
led to an injury that was to become a chronic source of pain for the rest
of his life. On a day in 1970, without warming up, something he always
did, Bruce picked up a 125-pound barbell and did a “good morning”
exercise. That consists of resting the barbell on one’s shoulders and
bending straight over at the waist. After much pain and many tests, it was
determined that he had sustained an injury to the fourth sacral nerve. He
was ordered to complete bed rest and told that undoubtedly he would never
do gung fu again. For the next six months, Bruce stayed in bed. It was an
extremely frustrating, depressing and painful time, and a time to redefine
goals. It was also during this time that he did a great deal of the
writing that has been preserved. After several months, Bruce instituted
his own recovery program and began walking, gingerly at first, and
gradually built up his strength. He was determined that he would do his
beloved gung fu again. As can be seen by his later films, he did recover
full use of his body, but he constantly had to take measures like icing,
massage and rest to take care of his back.
Bruce was always imagining
story ideas. One of the projects he had been working on was the idea of a
television series set in the Old West, featuring an Eastern monk who
roamed the countryside solving problems. He pitched the idea at Warner
Bros. and it was enthusiastically received. The producers talked at great
length to Bruce about the proposed series always with the intent that
Bruce would play the role of the Eastern wise man. In the end, the role
was not offered to Bruce; instead it went to David Carradine. The series
was “Kung Fu.” The studio claimed that a Chinese man was not a bankable
star at that time. Hugely disappointed, Bruce sought other ways to break
down the studio doors.
Along with two of his
students, Stirling Silliphant, the famed writer, and actor, James Coburn,
Bruce collaborated on a script for which he wrote the original story line.
The three of them met weekly to refine the script. It was to be called
“The Silent Flute.” Again, Warner Bros. was interested and sent the three
to India to look for locations. Unfortunately the right locations could
not be found, the studio backed off, and the project was put on the back
burner. Thwarted again in his effort to make a go of his acting career,
Bruce devised a new approach to his goal.
In 1970, when Bruce was
getting his strength back from his back injury, he took a trip to Hong
Kong with son Brandon, age five. He was surprised when he was greeted as
“Kato,” the local boy who had been on American TV. He was asked to appear
on TV talk shows. He was not aware that Hong Kong film producers were
viewing him with interest. In 1971, about the time that “The Silent Flute”
failed to materialize, Hong Kong producer Raymond Chow contacted Bruce to
interest him in doing two films for Golden Harvest. Bruce decided to do
it, reasoning that if he couldn’t enter the front door of the American
studios, he would go to Hong Kong, establish himself there and come back
in through the side door.
In the summer of 1971,
Bruce left Los Angeles to fly to Hong Kong, then on to Thailand for the
making of “The Big Boss,” later called “Fists of Fury.” Between Hong Kong
and Thailand, producer Run Run Shaw attempted to intercede and woo Bruce
away from Golden Harvest. But Bruce had signed a deal so he stayed with
Raymond Chow. Bruce’s family did not accompany him on this trip because
the village where the film was made was not suitable for small children.
It was also felt that if this film was not a hit, Bruce might be back in
L.A. sooner than expected. Although the working conditions were difficult,
and the production quality substandard to what Bruce was accustomed, “The
Big Boss” was a huge success. The premier took place at midnight, as was
Hong Kong custom. Chinese audiences are infamous for expressing their
emotions during films—both positive and negative. The entire cast and
production team were very nervous, no one more so than Bruce. At the end
of the showing, the entire audience was silent for a moment, then erupted
in cheers and hailed their new hero who was viewing from the back of the
theater.
In September of 1971, with
filming set to commence on the second of the contractual films, Bruce
moved his family over to Hong Kong and prepared to sell their Los Angeles
home. “Fist of Fury,” also called “Chinese Connection” was an even bigger
success than the first film breaking all-time box office records. Now that
Bruce had completed his contract with Golden Harvest, and had become a
bankable commodity, he could begin to have more input into the quality of
his films. For the third film, he formed a partnership with Raymond Chow,
called Concord Productions. Not only did Bruce write “The Way of the
Dragon,” also called “Return of the Dragon,” but he directed and produced
it as well. Once again, the film broke records and now, Hollywood was
listening.
In the fall of 1972, Bruce
began filming “The Game of Death,” a story he once again envisioned. The
filming was interrupted by the culmination of a deal with Warner Bros. to
make the first ever Hong Kong-American co-production. The deal was
facilitated mainly by Bruce’s personal relationship with Warner Bros.
president, Ted Ashley and by Bruce’s successes in Hong Kong. It was an
exciting moment and a turning point in Hong Kong’s film industry. “The
Game of Death” was put on hold to make way for the filming of “Enter the
Dragon.”
Filming “Enter the Dragon”
was not an easy undertaking. The American cast and crew and their Chinese
counterparts experienced language problems and production difficulties. It
was a stressful time for Bruce too as he wanted the film to be especially
good and well accepted by Western audiences.
“Enter the Dragon” was due
to premier at Hollywood’s Chinese theater in August of 1973.
Unfortunately, Bruce would not live to see the opening of his film, nor
would he experience the accumulated success of more than thirty years of
all his films’ popularity.
On July 20, 1973, Bruce had
a minor headache. He was offered a prescription painkiller called
Equagesic. After taking the pill, he went to lie down and lapsed into a
coma. He was unable to be revived. Extensive forensic pathology was done
to determine the cause of his death, which was not immediately apparent. A
nine-day coroner’s inquest was held with testimony given by renowned
pathologists flown in from around the world. The determination was that
Bruce had a hypersensitive reaction to an ingredient in the pain
medication that caused a swelling of the fluid on the brain, resulting in
a coma and death.
The world lost a brilliant
star and an evolved human being that day. His spirit remains an
inspiration to untold numbers of people around the world
Bruce Lee Quotes
“Boards don’t hit back.”
“A wise man can learn
more from a foolish question than a fool can learn from a wise answer.”
“A quick temper will make
a fool of you soon enough.”
“A goal is not always
meant to be reached, it often serves simply as something to aim at.”
“Always be yourself,
express yourself, have faith in yourself; do not go out and look for a
successful personality and duplicate it.”
“As you think, so shall
you become.”
“By adopting a certain
physical posture, a resonant chord is struck in spirit.”
“I fear not the man who
has practiced 10,000 kicks once, but I fear the man who has practiced
one kick 10,000 times.”
“If I tell you I’m good,
you would probably think I’m boasting. If I tell you I’m no good, you
know I’m lying.”
“If there is a God, he is
within. You don’t ask God to give you things, you depend on God for your
inner theme.”
“If you don’t want to
slip up tomorrow, speak the truth today.”
“If you love life, don’t
waste time, for time is what life is made up of.”
“If you make an ass out
of yourself, there will always be someone to ride you.”
“If you think a thing is
impossible, you’ll make it impossible.”
“If you want to do your
duty properly, you should do just a little more than that.”
“If you want to learn to
swim, jump into the water. On dry land, no frame of mind is ever going
to help you.”
“In combat, spontaneity
rules; rote performance of technique perishes.”
“In the middle of
difficulty lies opportunity.”
“It’s not what you give,
it’s the way you give it.”
“Mistakes are always
forgivable, if one has the courage to admit them.”
“Out of chaos, find
simplicity, From discord, find harmony.”
“Real living is living
for others.”
“Showing off is the
fool’s idea of glory.”
“The less effort, the
faster and more powerful you will be.”
“The mind is like a
fertile garden in which anything that is planted, flowers or weeds, will
grow.”
“Use only that which
works, and take it from any place you find it.”
“Using no way as way,
having no limitation as limitation.”
Filmography
1941Golden Gate Girl
1948Wealth Is Like A Dream
1949Sai See in the Dream
The Story of Fan Lei-fa
1950Blooms and Butterflies
The Kid
a.k.a.
My Son A-Chang
1951 Infancy
1953A Son Is Born
a.k.a.
The Guiding Light
A Mother Remembers
a.k.a.
A Mother’s Tears
Blame it on Father
A
Myriad Homes
In the Face of Demolition
1955Love (Part1)
Love (Part 2)
An
Orphan’s Tragedy
The Faithful Wife
Orphan’s Song
The More the Merrier
a.k.a.
We Owe It to Our Children
1956TheWise Guys Who Fool Around
Too Late for Divorce
1957The Thunderstorm
Darling Girl
1960The Orphan
1966The Green Hornet
(Kato)
1967Ironside
(guest star)
1968The Wrecking Crew
(technical director)
Marlowe
(supporting)
Blondie
(guest star)
1971Longstreet
(guest star)
The Big Boss a.k.a.
Fists of Fury
1972Fist of Fury
a.k.a. The Chinese Connection
The Way of the Dragon
a.k.a. Return of the Dragon
The Game of Death
(unfinished)
1973Enter the Dragon
1978The Game of Death
(completed posthumously by Golden Harvest)