I recall an article about Hawkins Cheung and Bruce Lee, where Bruce Lee writes in a letter,“There are people here(in NYC Chinatown) waiting on tables that have greater skill than, dare I say it, Sifu himself!” or, something like that.
It is well-known that BL did in fact hook up with the SPM folks, and even met Lam Sang, and Gin Foon Mark.
On the other thread, there is a discussion about some pics of BL, one of which was distinctly SPM., and I’ve seen other poses by him doing SPM as well. I have heard that he was influenced by his experiences with the SPM guys.
Any info on this?
I don’t think he ever took formal lessons but what BL did have that many seem to over look, was this “gift” of being able to pick things up quick and understand how they work.
Chuck Norris once made a comment that BL had very little kicking skill when they met and that He ( Chuck) as a far better kicker, but the he taught him a few kicks and in no time at all BL has surpassed him in kicking skill.
Here is a video of Bruce doing a lot of trapping and chi sao work in his early years. From what I’ve been told by others is that you can see a combination of both Wing Chun and SPM.
Some of this has been modified and his still used in JKD trapping.
There is an entire article about Bruce Lee learning from Gin Foon Mark and the SPM connection in the March 1999 issue of Kung Fu Qigong magazine available here on Gene’s website. I read it and it is very informative.
I thought Bruce Lee learned Southern Mantis from Yueng Fook plus some Red Boat Wing Chun back in Seattle back in 1959 when he first came to America he also had a Southern Mantis book that he got from some Vancuver China town bookstore ? I had a DVD of Yueng Fook doing his Southern Mantis and Wing Chun at one time but i gave it to the Ving Tsun Museum Yueng Fook new alot of Kung Fu Systems as he trained in The Red boat Opera his system is still taught by his students in Seattle.
In the article I mentioned above, Gin Foon Mark says that Bruce came to him in the late 1950’s when bruce was 18 years old. Bruce was out in NY visiting his father who was performing in a chinese theatre. A mutual friend of Bruce’s father recommended for Bruce to meet Gin Foon Mark, who showed him the basics of SPM and trained Bruce for about a month before Bruce had to go back to California. The article goes into detail about what was taught and the effect it had on Bruce’s outlook on martial arts.
Wow. This is stuff I’d never heard. Bruce studied SPM! And apparently under 2 different teachers. I just saw a Douglas Wong interview done at the school of one of his students in Arizona where he was telling how when he was young you couldn’t even learn certain styles unless you were from a certain village, or your family was from a certain village. Bruce must’ve come from a really important family to get introduced to all these different Si Fu of all these arts and to have actually been taught real stuff by them too! I mean, last I heard Yip Man wouldn’t even teach him because Bruce was part German nor would anyone in Yip’s school practice with him; so WSL and Willie Cheung had to teach him and practice with him. But here in the U.S. he’s learning kung fu from all the top people. And don’t people also say that Bruce even put elements of Bak Mei into his Jeet Kune Do? He must’ve been introduced to a Pak Mei Pai Si Fu here at one point as well.
I don’t recall the details, so I was hoping others could shed some light on the subject.
What I recall is that Bruce sought out Lam Sang, and when they’d met, Lam passed him off to Mark Foon. Not sure if Lam did or did not touch hands first, or if Bruce was too informal to him, or what, but apparently they did meet, and Bruce and Mark Foon did train together on several occasions.
He learnd what he could-it wasn’t that masters wanted to close him down,not at all,he was bitter that no-one wanted to teach him.Its a fact that not even Yip man taught him or finished chum que never mind bui jee.
That’s why jeet kune do was criticised that it wasn’t an art and as training methods strung together.
of course he met many sifu’s and critised that they were to slow etc etc and thats why we have more and more families go underground and let the styles revert to kick boxing etc etc.
[QUOTE=bawang;1132345]sounds like bruce lee was a kung fu window shopper. train for one month then leave.[/QUOTE]
He flew to NYC in June of 1958 to be with his father while he was performing in the city. He was only in NYC while his father was there so he did what any of us would do and seek out somebody to train with. When his father left NYC, so did Bruce who went back to San Francisco (This was before he moved to Seattle and began training with Fook Yueng)
[QUOTE=sanjuro_ronin;1131621]I don’t think he ever took formal lessons but what BL did have that many seem to over look, was this “gift” of being able to pick things up quick and understand how they work.
Chuck Norris once made a comment that BL had very little kicking skill when they met and that He ( Chuck) as a far better kicker, but the he taught him a few kicks and in no time at all BL has surpassed him in kicking skill.[/QUOTE]
I heard a similar anecdote, I think it was in one of the Bruce Lee Docos. He met a Tai Ji Sifu (Wu I think) who offered to teach him Tai Ji in exchange for Cha Cha lessons. Bruce learned the Tai Ji (form, I presume?) to what the Sifu says was an acceptable level in just a few days, and then Bruce left - the Sifu never got to learn the Cha-Cha.
[QUOTE=Xiao3 Meng4;1132581]I heard a similar anecdote, I think it was in one of the Bruce Lee Docos. He met a Tai Ji Sifu (Wu I think) who offered to teach him Tai Ji in exchange for Cha Cha lessons. Bruce learned the Tai Ji (form, I presume?) to what the Sifu says was an acceptable level in just a few days, and then Bruce left - the Sifu never got to learn the Cha-Cha.
So the West Coast guys definitely cross-trained. :)[/QUOTE]
Hello, the story you recount sounds exactly like what is presented in the documentary “Bruce Lee: the man and the Legend” (as well as another docu, “Bruce Lee, the Legend”) which has a few minutes of Shiu Hon Sang talking about Bruce, trading lessons for Cha Cha. Shiu Hon Sang to my knowledge was not a Tai Ji Sifu, but a graduate of Jing Mo (Chin Woo, Jing Wu, etc) and therefore taught many Northern style forms.
[QUOTE=TopCrusader;1132606]Hello, the story you recount sounds exactly like what is presented in the documentary “Bruce Lee: the man and the Legend” (as well as another docu, “Bruce Lee, the Legend”) which has a few minutes of Shiu Hon Sang talking about Bruce, trading lessons for Cha Cha. Shiu Hon Sang to my knowledge was not a Tai Ji Sifu, but a graduate of Jing Mo (Chin Woo, Jing Wu, etc) and therefore taught many Northern style forms.[/QUOTE]
Bruce’s father was the Tai Ji practitioner who taught Bruce, I’m not sure how much he learned though. However, he had come to the conclusion the TJQ took too long to learn how to fight with according to him, and wanted something more practical.
While we are on the subject of Bruce Lee and Southern Mantis…I posted this picture for consideration months ago, so I will do the same again as its a relative topic. I dont practice Southern Mantis but Ive been told they will use bamboo much like the Mook Jong WC dummy to train sensitivity, energy in their hand motions.
This particular picture was taken in Hong Kong by Robert Lee, in 1963 when Bruce was back visiting his family.