Tag: Bruce Lee

  • ‘Be water, my friend’: Bruce Lee fans fondly remember his life philosophy 50 years after his death 

    By Associated Press

    HONG KONG: Fans of late martial arts legend Bruce Lee, who broke negative stereotypes around Asian men in films, gathered in Hong Kong this week to commemorate their idol’s death half a century ago, remembering his legacy and his life philosophy on persistence.

    Lee, who was born in San Francisco but raised in the Asian financial hub, was famous for his martial arts talent and his fight against racist portrayals of Asians on big and small screens in the 1960s and 70s.

    He died at the height of his fame due to an allergic reaction to painkillers when he was 32.

    The 50th anniversary of Lee’s death on Thursday drew fans to exhibitions in Hong Kong on his life and career.

    They also laid flowers at his statue at the Avenue of Stars, a tourist attraction modelled on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on the Kowloon shore of Victoria Harbour.

    A government-run museum organized a camp for students to learn about Lee’s legacy by introducing them to Jeet Kune Do, the martial arts style that Lee invented and practised.

    The museum also screened his films.

    Many of Lee’s supporters said his philosophy inspired them since they were young, even though many only learned about him and his works after his death.

    Sophie Uekawa, a translator, said she was initially attracted to Lee’s muscular body and smooth moves on TV.

    But she was later impressed by his words, including about how unhappy circumstances eventually pass.

    When Uekawa was bullied by schoolmates in secondary school, Lee’s quotes helped her endure feelings of helplessness.

    “It can be said that he is my saviour,” Uekawa said.

    Lee began his career as a child actor in the 1940s and started learning Chinese kung fu when he was 13.

    He moved back to the US in 1959 and studied philosophy at the University of Washington.

    The superstar fought hard against racist stereotypes in the US entertainment industry where Asian men were often portrayed as servants, unskilled workers or evil geniuses in Hollywood.

    Lee eventually went back to Hong Kong and made hits like “The Big Boss” and “Fist of Fury.”

    His last film, “Enter the Dragon”, was released six days after his death and became his most popular movie.

    He was one of the first Asian actors to attain Hollywood megastardom and fanned a kung fu craze that swept the world.

    W Wong, the chairperson of a Bruce Lee fan club established nearly three decades ago in Hong Kong, said the group’s demographics are changing as members grow older and that it has only one member in his 20s.

    “We face problems in passing on our work,” Wong said, although the group still has some 600 members.

    An instructor at a martial arts institute in Hong Kong’s Jordan district says more than half of the studio’s Jeet Kune Do students came to learn the martial arts style because of Lee.

    Teacher Ricky Fong said adaptability is important in Jeet Kune Do and life and pointed to one of Lee’s most famous sayings: “Be water, my friend.”

    The phrase was frequently used by protesters in Hong Kong’s 2019 pro-democracy movement to describe their guerrilla strategy of moving fluidly across the city.

    One of Fong’s students, Adrian Li, said he admired Lee’s martial arts skills and philosophy.

    He added that Lee’s eagerness to keep learning has influenced him deeply.

    “Not be bounded by anything. One can learn a lot,” he said.

    HONG KONG: Fans of late martial arts legend Bruce Lee, who broke negative stereotypes around Asian men in films, gathered in Hong Kong this week to commemorate their idol’s death half a century ago, remembering his legacy and his life philosophy on persistence.

    Lee, who was born in San Francisco but raised in the Asian financial hub, was famous for his martial arts talent and his fight against racist portrayals of Asians on big and small screens in the 1960s and 70s.

    He died at the height of his fame due to an allergic reaction to painkillers when he was 32.googletag.cmd.push(function() {googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-8052921-2’); });

    The 50th anniversary of Lee’s death on Thursday drew fans to exhibitions in Hong Kong on his life and career.

    They also laid flowers at his statue at the Avenue of Stars, a tourist attraction modelled on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on the Kowloon shore of Victoria Harbour.

    A government-run museum organized a camp for students to learn about Lee’s legacy by introducing them to Jeet Kune Do, the martial arts style that Lee invented and practised.

    The museum also screened his films.

    Many of Lee’s supporters said his philosophy inspired them since they were young, even though many only learned about him and his works after his death.

    Sophie Uekawa, a translator, said she was initially attracted to Lee’s muscular body and smooth moves on TV.

    But she was later impressed by his words, including about how unhappy circumstances eventually pass.

    When Uekawa was bullied by schoolmates in secondary school, Lee’s quotes helped her endure feelings of helplessness.

    “It can be said that he is my saviour,” Uekawa said.

    Lee began his career as a child actor in the 1940s and started learning Chinese kung fu when he was 13.

    He moved back to the US in 1959 and studied philosophy at the University of Washington.

    The superstar fought hard against racist stereotypes in the US entertainment industry where Asian men were often portrayed as servants, unskilled workers or evil geniuses in Hollywood.

    Lee eventually went back to Hong Kong and made hits like “The Big Boss” and “Fist of Fury.”

    His last film, “Enter the Dragon”, was released six days after his death and became his most popular movie.

    He was one of the first Asian actors to attain Hollywood megastardom and fanned a kung fu craze that swept the world.

    W Wong, the chairperson of a Bruce Lee fan club established nearly three decades ago in Hong Kong, said the group’s demographics are changing as members grow older and that it has only one member in his 20s.

    “We face problems in passing on our work,” Wong said, although the group still has some 600 members.

    An instructor at a martial arts institute in Hong Kong’s Jordan district says more than half of the studio’s Jeet Kune Do students came to learn the martial arts style because of Lee.

    Teacher Ricky Fong said adaptability is important in Jeet Kune Do and life and pointed to one of Lee’s most famous sayings: “Be water, my friend.”

    The phrase was frequently used by protesters in Hong Kong’s 2019 pro-democracy movement to describe their guerrilla strategy of moving fluidly across the city.

    One of Fong’s students, Adrian Li, said he admired Lee’s martial arts skills and philosophy.

    He added that Lee’s eagerness to keep learning has influenced him deeply.

    “Not be bounded by anything. One can learn a lot,” he said.

  • Bruce Lee’s daughter slams Tarantino, says she’s tired of ‘white men’ calling her father ‘arrogant’

    By PTI
    LOS ANGELES: Bruce Lee’s daughter Shannon Lee has slammed filmmaker Quentin Tarantino after he dismissed the criticism of his depiction of the martial arts legend in his movie “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”.

    Tarantino’s impression of Bruce Lee was condemned by Shannon Lee and fans across the globe for showing the late actor as an arrogant figure who loses a fight against the ageing stuntman Cliff Booth, played by Brad Pitt, in the 2019 film. American-Korean actor Mike Moh essayed the role of Bruce Lee in “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”.

    During a recent appearance on “The Joe Rogan Experience” podcast, Tarantino once again defended his interpretation of Bruce Lee, saying while he understands Shannon Lee’s previous criticism, he doesn’t care about others.

    Following his remarks, in a guest column for The Hollywood Reporter, Shannon Lee urged Tarantino to “take a pass on commenting further” about her father and expressed frustration with “white men in Hollywood trying to tell me who Bruce Lee was.”

    “I’m tired of hearing from white men in Hollywood that he was arrogant and an a*****. When they have no idea and cannot fathom what it might have taken to get work in 1960s and ’70s Hollywood as a Chinese man with (God forbid) an accent, or to try to express an opinion on a set as a perceived foreigner and person of color.  I’m tired of white men in Hollywood mistaking his confidence, passion, and skill for hubris and therefore finding it necessary to marginalize him and his contributions. I’m tired of white men in Hollywood finding it too challenging to believe that Bruce Lee might have really been good at what he did and maybe even knew how to do it better than them,” she wrote.

    In his interview with Rogan, Tarantino also claimed that Bruce Lee had “nothing but disrespect for stuntmen”.

    “He was always hitting them with his feet, he was always tagging- it’s called tagging when you hit a stuntman for real,” said the director.

    “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood”, also featured actors Leonardo DiCaprio and Margot Robbie.

    The film was nominated in 10 categories at the 92nd Academy Award and led to Pitt winning his first Oscar trophy in best supporting actor category.

    The movie, billed as a love letter to the golden age of Hollywood, also bagged an Oscar for best production design.