Bruce Lee Museums and Gallery Exhibits

Bruce Lee: SF vs. Shunde

Lately there’s been a wave of ‘unauthorized’ Bruce Lee projects. It’s a big issue since unlike the estates of Elvis or Marilyn Monroe, it crosses into China where estate rights aren’t necessarily upheld (the lawsuit about Jet Li’s FEARLESS is a classic example). The one that’s making a lot of news now is Shunde’s Bruce Lee Museum.

[URL=“http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-ca-brucelee27aug27,0,554482.story?coll=la-home-entertainment”]What’s In a Name? Cash
Bruce Lee’s family tries to guard his legacy against Chinese entrepreneurs looking to turn a profit.
By Robert W. Welkos and Don Lee, Times Staff Writers August 27, 2006

In the southern Chinese city of Shunde, a two-hour boat ride from Hong Kong, government officials are finalizing plans to build a Bruce Lee theme park, complete with a memorial hall and a large statue of the man they call the town’s favorite “son.”

Never mind that the legendary Chinese American kung fu star was born in San Francisco and visited Shunde only briefly, when he was a boy of 5. Shunde is the hometown of Lee’s father and grandfather, and that was enough for local resident Wang Dechao to prod the government to plow $125,000 into opening a Bruce Lee museum in an old teashop in Shunde in 2002.

Since then, more than 300,000 people, some paying $1 for admission, have come to see its collection of Bruce Lee’s rare letters, film posters and other memorabilia. Wang, who now works for Shunde’s cultural and sports authority, hopes to move the museum to the new theme park, which he says is projected to cost $19 million and open before the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.

CCTV, China’s national network, has plans to produce a 40-part documentary about Bruce Lee. Meanwhile, Bruce Lee’s brother, Robert, is planning a movie about him, as is one of Lee’s former students. They all have their sights set on completing the works by the Beijing Olympics.

“I believe we will see another round of Bruce Lee fever,” Wang said.

Although he has been dead 33 years, Bruce Lee remains an enduringly powerful cultural figure. What if, people often ask, he hadn’t died at age 32, barely a month before the release of his blockbuster film “Enter the Dragon”? Most believe that film would have catapulted him into the ranks of Hollywood’s superstars. But what then?

It’s a question that his widow, Linda Cadwell, 61, often asks herself. “I think about it a lot — what he missed,” Cadwell said in a recent interview. “Professionally, I’m sure he probably would have stayed in the film industry and the performing industry, but maybe not always as an actor, because he loved to write.” Then, pausing, she added that this year, “He would be 66.”

When he died July 20, 1973, in Hong Kong, Lee left no will and was not a wealthy man. In those days, there weren’t the movie-based action figures and video and computer games that line store shelves today. The estates of dead celebrities hadn’t yet amassed the staggering licensing fees that they do today, when, say, Elvis Presley or Marilyn Monroe can generate millions annually. “In the early years, there really weren’t things to license,” Cadwell said. “There were key chains or a puppet doll that looked like Bruce,” but little else.

Now, though, Bruce Lee would seem to be a natural as a brand name advertisers and vendors could use to sell products. Mark Roesler, chairman and chief executive of CMG Worldwide, the business agent for the heirs of more than 300 dead celebrities, estimates that Bruce Lee could generate yearly licensing fees in the seven-figure range.

Although Roesler doesn’t represent Lee’s estate, he sees the martial arts star’s earning prospects as good. “He is an icon that is known throughout the world, and when you have someone like a Bruce Lee or a James Dean, someone who has a very strong name recognition, their myth and their legend seems to grow over the years and they can maintain a very consistent revenue source.”

Indeed, although he achieved stardom three decades ago, Lee’s fame has hardly dimmed. He is still regarded as one of the most influential martial artists of the 20th century, a precursor to kung fu stars such as Jackie Chan, Jet Li and Chuck Norris. In his teens, he had formal martial arts training in Wing Chun kung fu under a master teacher in Hong Kong. Lee’s style was known as Jeet Kune Do (Way of the Intercepting Fist). He was famous for a combat technique called the “one-inch punch.”

But it was not only his skill at martial arts that won fans, Cadwell said, it was his philosophy and way of life.

Known far and wide

AROUND the world, his likeness has taken on a symbolic life of its own, even in places as far-flung as Mostar, Bosnia, where a life-size statue of Lee posed in a defensive fighting posture stands. The bronze statue, erected last year, serves as a symbol of healing ethnic tensions in a land that in the 1990s was racked by civil war among Muslims, Serbs and Croats.

“Because of the fighting that had gone on there, a lot of the monuments had been destroyed,” said Lee’s daughter, Shannon Lee, 37. “They wanted to put them back but there was a lot of disagreement about what representative … they should put up. Apparently, they could all agree on a statue of Bruce Lee. And the reason they chose him is not because he’s a martial arts star, but he represents somebody who had a lot of ethnic struggle in his lifetime and overcame it. So, to them, he is a unifying force and representative of somebody who overcame that.”

That kind of enduring resonance is why Cadwell and Shannon Lee are taking steps to ensure his reputation stays intact. That means no licensing of tobacco products, alcohol or weapons bearing his image. “There’s a place for weapons” in martial arts training, Cadwell said, “but not these ninja stars.”

“Basically, what we try to do is run the business with my father’s legacy always in mind,” said Shannon Lee, who is managing partner of Concord Moon, a Los Angeles-based limited partnership that owns all rights to Bruce Lee’s name, likeness, trademarks and works. There is a satellite office in Hong Kong and there will be one soon in Beijing, so that anyone wanting to capitalize on Bruce Lee’s name knows who to contact. Concord Moon’s current plans for Bruce Lee-related entertainment projects include an animated television series, a CGI movie, an animated feature film, a live-action TV series, and a Broadway musical being developed by David Henry Hwang, whose “M. Butterfly” won a Tony Award in 1988 for best play.

Shannon Lee confirmed that Concord Moon has authorized the CCTV project but has not given its approval for any theme park and has not authorized Robert Lee’s plans for a biopic. However, she noted that as Bruce Lee’s brother he is free to do what he wants and that the family is not squabbling.

Li Cheng, executive director of J.A. Media in Beijing, which is producing the movie, wouldn’t comment on whether Lee’s widow and daughter had been consulted or whether they had authorized the production, saying only that “we don’t want to film the story without his family’s permission. In other words, we are open to discussing legal issues as well as suggestions on the movie.”

Shunde may claim Bruce Lee’s Ancestral Home, but Lee is a S.F. native all the way.

Does Bruce Lee have a lower status than chickens?

You’d think it could be parlayed into a decent tourist trap…:rolleyes:

Hong Kong fans fight to save Bruce Lee’s last home as museum
Posted : Wed, 25 Jun 2008 03:53:00 GMT

Hong Kong - Fans of kung fu legend Bruce Lee are campaigning to save the Hong Kong home where he spent his final years as a museum, a news report said Wednesday. The two-storey house in the city’s exclusive Kowloon Tong residential district, where Lee and his family were living at the time of his death in 1973, is being sold by its owner to raise money for earthquake relief in China, the South China Morning Post reported.

The 530-square-metre residence in Cumberland Street was expected to fetch about 13 million US dollars when bids for it and four other properties owned by entrepreneur Yu Panglin close Wednesday.

Fans of Lee, who starred in films that include Fists of Fury and Enter the Dragon, have appealed to the Hong Kong government to buy the house as a memorial to the city’s best-known movie star.

Lee lived with his wife, Linda Lee-Cadwell, in the house, which he affectionately named the Crane’s Nest. He died mysteriously at 32 at the peak of his stardom at the home of an actress friend in another part of Kowloon Tong.

Hong Kong officials, apparently wary of Lee’s hell-raising reputation, have repeatedly resisted calls to create any permanent memorial to the movie star, and his home was used five years ago as a “love hotel,” where couples rented rooms at hourly rates.

Bruce Lee Club chairman Wong Yiu-keung told the Post that it was “humiliating” that there was no proper place to commemorate the first Chinese celebrity to gain worldwide fame.

“It is humiliating enough to have the late star’s former residence being turned into a love hotel,” he said. “Hong Kong has been using Bruce Lee to promote the city, but what has Hong Kong done for him?”

Cultural critic Chip Tsao pointed out to the newspaper that Hong Kong’s government was spending hundreds of millions of US dollars compensating chicken farmers after the latest bird-flu scare.

“Does Bruce Lee have a lower status than chickens?” Tsao asked.

A statue to Lee was erected a few years ago along the Victoria Harbour waterfront after years of pressure from his fans in Hong Kong and overseas.

However, his childhood residence and the Golden Harvest studio, where he filmed his most famous movies, have been demolished.

Bruce’s Graceland

Maybe Paul Simon will write a song about it.

Tycoon to turn Bruce Lee’s last home into museum
Mon Jul 7, 2008 12:56pm BST

HONG KONG (Reuters) - The billionaire owner of Bruce Lee’s final home hopes to build a museum to the martial arts legend, giving in to public calls to prevent the sale of the luxury house in a northern Hong Kong suburb for millions of dollars.

Philanthropist hotel and real estate tycoon Yu Panglin, 86, had put Lee’s two-storey, 5,699 square-foot town house in an upscale, leafy Kowloon suburb up for sale but changed his mind, giving in to fans’ desire for the site to be preserved.

Yu told reporters on Monday he would donate the property to Hong Kong’s government for use as a museum, unveiling a plan to expand the site into a memorial to a global icon. He would also raise capital for the site and all future profits would go to charity.

The tycoon wished to retain the house as it was, while expanding the property to 30,000 square feet to include a library, a martial arts centre and a movie house to showcase Lee’s martial arts philosophy, according to Yu’s appointed property consultant.

“If you just do it small scale, you cannot attract tourism and attract people,” said Michael Choi, the consultant.

Lee, who died under mysterious circumstances in 1973 aged 32, starred in such kung fu classics as “Fist of Fury”, “Game of Death” and “Enter the Dragon”.

Revered both by martial arts adherents and movie buffs the world over for popularising the kung fu cinematic genre, Lee also helped usher in a golden age of Hong Kong film in the 1960s.

His fans were delighted by the news, having lobbied the Hong Kong government for years for a museum on hopes the site could prove as big a draw as memorial sites to other stars such as the Beatles Story in Liverpool and Elvis Presley’s Graceland mansion in Tennessee.

Hong Kong newspapers had reported Yu had received an offer of as much as HK$105 million (6.8 million pounds) for the house, which he turned down

“The greatest difficulty has been overcome now that Mr. Yu has donated such a generous gift to the people of Hong Kong,” said Wong Yiu-keung, the Chairman of Hong Kong’s Bruce Lee Club.

“From a tourism point of view, if you have this Bruce Lee museum it will attract a lot of visitors to Hong Kong.”

But Yu’s plan will require government cooperation. He intends to send a proposal to Hong Kong’s Commerce and Economic Development Bureau next week, seeking permission to re-classify the site from residential to commercial usage.

Yu will go ahead and sell the house if the government objected to his plan, his consultants said.

“Bruce Lee has brought so much glory to Hong Kong, so I can’t see any reason for the government opposing this,” Wong said.

In response, the Hong Kong tourism board said it “welcomes all initiatives that support the promotion of Hong Kong as a tourist destination.”

More on HK

Follow the link for a nice pic of an HK Bruce Lee statue.

Kung Fu Travel: Intercepting Fist Saves Bruce Lee’s Home
Where: Kowloon, Hong Kong
7/07/2008 at 2:00 PM

Here’s a kick-ass museum plan: A real estate tycoon is bowing to pressure from Bruce Lee fans and seeks to turn the martial arts star’s last home into a memorial instead of selling it.

If Yu Panglin’s rezoning proposal is approved, the two-story townhouse in Kowloon could become a 30,000-square-foot museum, including training centers and, of course, a movie theater to show Lee’s greatest hits like “Fist of Fury” and “Enter the Dragon.” Yu reportedly fielded offers of as much as $13 million for the house, but says he will help raise the capital to build and run the museum before donating it to the city.

Don’t want to wait? The American-based Bruce Lee Foundation, which has been raising money for a permanent Lee museum, is sponsoring a Bruce Lee Festival in Seattle July 18-20 with the Seattle Art Museum, including a memorial service at his nearby tomb.

a $50 million Bruce Lee museum in Seattle

“Lee the grandfather of mixed martial arts.”

SAM event one of many tributes to Bruce Lee
By Tan Vinh
Seattle Times staff reporter

A THREE-DAY BRUCE LEE TRIBUTE will be Friday-Sunday at the Seattle

Art Museum to commemorate the 35th anniversaries of his death and his groundbreaking movie, “Enter the Dragon.”

A screening of the film along with memorabilia and props also will be on display. Lee’s wife, Linda Lee Caldwell; his daughter Shannon Lee; and Dana White, president of the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC), are scheduled to attend. The family also will unveil its proposal to build a $50 million Bruce Lee museum in Seattle.

The event is sponsored by the Bruce Lee Foundation and the UFC.

Because, apparently, the world’s appetite for all things Bruce Lee knows no limits, there will be Bruce Lee, the musical, coming to Broadway.

But not before a 50-part Lee documentary airs in China after the Summer Olympics. Or the Lee documentary the History Channel has scheduled for next year. Or a Lee cartoon in development.

Dozens of other Lee projects are in the works, including a proposal to raise $50 million to build a museum in Seattle, where Lee lived from 1959-64.

The Lee family will release details of its ambitious fundraising campaign this weekend, during a three-day tribute starting Friday at the Seattle Art Museum to commemorate his passing 35 years ago this week.

The event also marks the 35th anniversary of his groundbreaking movie, “Enter the Dragon.”

Lee died a few weeks before the film was released, but you would think his passing was recent by the surge of interest lately.

Last year, more than 1,000 University of Washington students backed a petition to build a Lee memorial on campus.

These days, young mixed-martial-arts fans often hear fighters cite Lee as an idol or a role model. And the resurgence of old kung-fu flicks also has fed the Lee frenzy.

Lee’s appeal (Time magazine named him one of the 100 most influential people of the 20th century) always has been complex, even contradictory.

Lee became famous by killing people on screen, yet he was honored with the Ethnic Multicultural Academy Legend Award in London in 2004, the same humanitarian media award given to the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Mahatma Gandhi. In 2005, Bosnia erected a life-size Lee statue as a peace symbol in light of ethnic tensions.

“Bruce was so much more than just a bad-ass … that’s why people go back to his story again and again,” said Seattle’s Charles R. Cross, a biographer of Kurt Cobain and Jimi Hendrix who is researching Lee for a possible book.

Lee was born in San Francisco and grew up in Hong Kong, but Seattle has always claimed him as one of its own. He attended Edison Technical School on Capitol Hill and then the University of Washington, where he studied philosophy for three years and married Linda Emery (Garfield grad '63).

Lee, who ran a martial-arts studio in the University District, landed the role of Kato on TV’s “The Green Hornet” in 1966, which helped propel him to movie stardom.

On screen, he was charismatic. His kung-fu moves seemed less structured, less rigid than traditional martial arts. It looked like modern dance. He bounced around like a boxer and made screeching noises with his punches. The young crowd ate it up.

But before his Hollywood career took off, he died July 20, 1973, from cerebral edema from an allergic reaction, perhaps to painkillers. He was 32.

“He died looking great,” said Cross. “He never got old or fat like Elvis. That is part of the reason for his enduring legacy. Bruce Lee with his shirt off … 90 percent of people in the world know what that image looks like.”

Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) president Dana White, who will be in Seattle for the tribute, calls Lee the grandfather of mixed martial arts.

But his influence runs deeper, said Cross and UW assistant professor Chris Hamm, who teaches a martial-arts film course in the Department of Asian Languages and Literature.

Lee overcame illness in his youth and racism throughout his life. He often was credited with introducing the mainstream to martial arts. And he had a cultlike following for his philosophy on life and affirmations.

The themes that resonated with the first generation of Lee fans still ring true among today’s young followers, said his daughter, Shannon Lee, who runs the Bruce Lee Foundation and Bruce Lee Enterprises in Los Angeles.

Sure, he looked great fighting, but fans connected to him because “he played the underdog and was seen like that in his life,” she said.

“It’s not just his martial-art skills but the strides he made for us socially as a person of color,” said former UW student Jamil Suleman, 24, of Redmond, who is lobbying the university to build a Lee memorial garden.

Perry Lee, no relation to the superstar, recalls growing up in Seattle in the 1960s and not seeing any Asian faces like his on television — other than Hop Sing, the Cartwrights’ cook on “Bonanza.” So when Bruce Lee came along, thousands of Asian Americans in the Northwest became fans, said Lee, 60, of Renton who has collected thousands of items of the late superstar’s memorabilia.

Lee mania has created a new flood of projects, including the musical “Bruce Lee: Journey to the West,” scheduled for 2010 with David Henry Hwang writing the book, Seattle’s Bartlett Sher directing and David Yazbek (“Dirty Rotten Scoundrels”) writing the lyrics.

This weekend at the tribute, Lee’s daughter and his wife, Linda Lee Caldwell, will unveil sketches for the Lee museum, which will include his writings, props and his signature weapon, the nunchaku.

The family has not found a location or detailed how the $50 million will be raised, but Lee’s wife said the proposed museum will be in Seattle for the same reason her husband was buried here, at Lake View Cemetery (their son, Brandon, is buried alongside). Lee “mentioned that some day, he would like to return to Seattle. It would be his ideal place to live,” she said.

China fever is Bruce Lee fever.

This is coattailing on the Olympics too. Click the links for pix.

Bruce Lee Remembered 35 Years on
2008-07-20 18:45:33

From cinemas to museums, Chinese fans are marking the 35th anniversary of Bruce Lee’s death in various ways.

A weeklong screening of Lee’s best-known films kicked off at the Kingdom Garden Movie Station in Beijing on Sunday, the Beijing News reported.

Films to be screened include “Way of the Dragon,” “The Chinese Connection,” and Lee’s last work, “Game of Death.”

In Hong Kong, where Lee was raised, an exhibit opened Friday featuring 800 items about the action legend, including movie posters, magazine covers and books, the Associated Press reported. Headlining the opening ceremony was Danny Chan, who plays Lee in the new TV series “Legend of Bruce Lee,” produced by China Central Television.

Many Chinese Web sites, including the portal Sina.com.cn, have launched online specials paying homage to the star.

Bruce Lee died on July 20, 1973, at the age of 32. The exact details of his death are still controversial.

Exhibit marks Bruce Lee’s death
2008-07-18 14:51:58 GMT 2008-07-18 22:51:58 (Beijing Time)

HONG KONG - Bruce Lee fans are marking the 35th anniversary of his death with an exhibit featuring movie posters, magazine covers and books about the action star.

Also among the 800 items on display are letters written by Lee that detail his life in the U.S., where he attended college and taught kung fu before returning to Hong Kong.

Danny Chan, who plays Lee in an upcoming Chinese TV series, attended the opening ceremony of the exhibit Friday, organized by the Hong Kong-based Bruce Lee Club.

Chan said he hopes the exhibit will improve public understanding of Lee.

“A lot of people like Bruce Lee but know very little about him,” he said.

Lee died July 20, 1973, at 32 from swelling of the brain.

He was known for movies in which he portrayed characters who defended the Chinese and the working class from oppressors. His credits include “The Chinese Connection,” “Return of the Dragon” and “Enter the Dragon.”

Talks are also ongoing about turning Lee’s former home in Hong Kong into a museum. The philanthropist who owns the two-story house has offered to donate the property and has lobbied the government to help convert it into a museum.

Anyone in Seattle see this?

Anyone here on the forum see this?

Bruce: Undefeated 35 Years Later
International Examiner, News feature, Diem Ly, Posted: Jul 27, 2008

He was convinced of his place in the world, yet broke down barriers and forced his way into history. He was arrogant but tirelessly improved on his skills. Bruce Lee may have been a complex figure, but his massive iconic status has not dimmed nor has it wavered in its significance to Asian Americans today. For some, Bruce Lee is a deeply important character to learn from. For others, he’s the hero they most identified with and one of the coolest Asian Americans ever. No matter what your reverence of him, Bruce Lee is etched in history and lives on as a measure of what each of us are capable of achieving.

Few believe in Bruce Lee’s legendary status more than a Seattle man who shares the martial artist’s surname: Perry Lee (no relation to Bruce Lee). Perry boasts one of the largest collections of Bruce Lee memorabilia in the world. And soon, he’ll share it in an unprecedented Seattle event. The Bruce Lee Foundation, founded by Bruce Lee’s widow, Linda Lee and his daughter Shannon Lee, is sponsoring an event commemorating the 35th anniversary of Bruce Lee’s landmark film “Enter the Dragon (1973)” and honor his passing the same year. The Foundation along with Perry, are working together to organize the July 18-20 event. Organizers are planning Bruce Lee film screenings, exhibitions, and martial arts demonstrations by Lee’s former students. Perry says the Foundation will announce the launch and location of an official Bruce Lee Museum, expected to be in Seattle. The Foundation is also collaborating on an international scale with China, which idolizes the martial artist, to build the first Bruce Lee amusement park in China and preserve the icon’s final home in Hong Kong into a museum and memorial to the star.

The event’s aim is to preserve Lee’s legacy and inspire others through his short, but remarkable life.
“Bruce Lee was one of those rare individuals,” says Perry Lee in an interview with the IE. “A combination of intellect, foresight, incredible physical attributes, and artist ability. People like that come every 10,000 years. He was a real innovator.”

Many know the Bruce Lee saga. For those who don’t, and there aren’t many of you, here’s your Bruce Lee 101.
Bruce Lee was born Jun Fan on Nov. 27, 1940, in San Francisco, CA. The man history would later call “The Dragon”, was born in the year and hour of the dragon, an auspicious sign for the baby boy. A few months later the family returned to Hong Kong.

The soon-to-be martial art star began kung fu lessons at age 13. It’s widely known Bruce Lee spent his teen years in a gang, fighting Hong Kong street thugs. By the age of 18, his parents decided to send the troublemaker to America to stay with a Seattle family friend, Ruby Chow. Chow would later become a well-known and controversial Asian American figure. In the meantime, she owned a restaurant in Seattle’s Chinatown and hired Bruce as a busboy. He stayed in a small living space above the restaurant and started his new life with $100 in his pocket.

Bruce practiced his philosophy of martial art style anywhere he could clear a space. He practiced at HoHo Restaurant, in the basement of the Four Seas Restaurant, and opened a king fu studio on University Way in the UW district. At the studio, Lee taught anyone willing to learn, even non-Asians—a sour point for many community members at the time.
Lee later married one of his students, Linda Emery, and moved to Oakland, California, where a larger martial arts community thrived. He opened another studio and founded his marital art form Jeet June Do. It was in California Lee sought to make his dreams come true and become the first Asian superstar. He’d solidify his goal in a 1969 affirmation statement promising himself he will be the “first highest paid Oriental super star in the United States,” Lee wrote. “I will achieve world fame … I will live the way I please and achieve inner harmony and happiness.”

But before stardom, someone would have to discover him.

In a 1964 demonstration in Long Beach, California, Lee captured the attention of a Hollywood insider who raved about Lee’s performance to television producer William Dozier who was seeking an Asian actor for a new series, “Number One Son.” Executives dropped the series, but casting directors approached Lee to fill the role of the sidekick “Kato” for a new television series, “The Green Hornet”. Kato stole the show and Lee was a hit. American audiences were blown away by the never-before seen fighting style. Viewers in Hong Kong loved the show and Lee began his rise on two continents. But, Bruce Lee wanted a say in his work and suggested ideas for new shows to studio executives. One idea revolved around a Shaolin priest who resolved issues without a gun. Executives liked the concept, but eventually gave the leading role to Caucasian actor David Carradine.

Outraged but focused, Lee pushed on. The success of “The Green Hornet” opened the door to his now legendary film roles in “Fists of Fury (1971)”, “The Chinese Connection (1972)”, “Return of the Dragon (1972)”, “Enter the Dragon (1973)”, and a film released post-mortem, “Game of Death (1978)”.

Bruce Lee fulfilled the destiny he prophesized years earlier and entered into the realm of superstardom. He died on July 20, 1973 under circumstances still under controversy.
When asked what set Bruce Lee apart from other successful Asian Americans throughout history, Perry says Lee’s “X-factor” was his image and drive. He says, with all due respect, 1960s Seattle politician Wing Luke (and namesake for the Seattle Asian museum) never look so cool changing the face of the Asian American identity.

“Bruce knew how to style. He was that image of cool when no one knew Asians could be,” says Perry. “Our image of Asians at the time was Hop Sing (the Chinese cook on the television show “Bonanza”). Bruce hated that. He said he didn’t want to wear a pigtail.”

Lee’s other undeniable and unquenchable trait was his drive.
“He was fanatical about being the best,” says Perry. “[Others] might have the skills, but not the hunger … He was driven by an incredible intensity to succeed.”

Even as a teen on the streets of Seattle’s Chinatown/ID, Bruce Lee knew he was a leader, an innovator, and a pioneer. But, often, that confidence grated on some people’s nerves who preferred humility and deference of character.

“He didn’t have a lot of money, but he was arrogant,” describes Perry. “He was 18 or 19 when he was telling the older people they were doing things wrong [in martial arts]. You just didn’t do that, you know.”

Lee was known as a practical joker, a flirt, a flashy dresser, and a Cha Cha dancing champion. But the martial artist never wavered in his intense desire for greatness.

“He had an incredible ability to focus,” says Perry. “He never wasted a minute. While he was talking to you, he’d be stretching his legs against a wall and curling his arms with a barbell.” Perry said in one instance, on a flight with James Coburn, a film industry colleague and fellow marital arts trainer, Lee whipped out a small bean bag and proceeded to chop it repeatedly—even while talking to Coburn.

Perry says Lee wrote down goals and kept meticulous records of his training. Even while recovering from an injury that partially paralyzed his back and doctors said he may never practice martial arts again, Lee still worked out, recorded his reps, and made more goals.

As both an American-born Chinese and one who grew up in Hong Kong, Bruce Lee was in a unique position for success in the film industry.

“Bruce Lee was able to bridge the East and Western culture,” says Perry. “He understood what [American] people wanted.”
Few people know the uniquely Asian icon carried Caucasian blood.
Through his grandmother’s marriage to a German man, Bruce is a quarter Caucasian.

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But, it was not only his connection or savvy of American audiences that earned Bruce Lee success. It’s said, behind every great man, is a great …

“Linda was a part of that success,” says Perry. “She was Caucasian, but she had some Asian characteristics. She stood by him. A Chinese wife wouldn’t have put up with him. They would’ve expected him to go out and get a real job and quit this crazy business to become a movie star.”

Out of what seems like a fearless existence, did Bruce Lee fear anything? Yes, himself, Perry says. He remembers Lee’s fear of facing an opponent like himself—but better.

“Bruce was always worried that a bigger or faster version of himself would fight him. You know, he. wasn’t that tall or big.” In another conversation with Perry, he says, Bruce knew he wasn’t Superman. Bruce Lee used to say that if he was walking down a dark alley and someone jumped him, ‘You’d get to me.’ The difference with Bruce Lee—what he did worked. He backed up his words with action and success. And if success didn’t come as he expected, he’d work harder and force it to come to him.

But, why would a character so inspiring and resilient, not elicit others to emerge as great or greater today in terms of martial arts or Asian American superstardom?

“The conditions were ripe for Bruce,” says Perry. “For there to be another Bruce Lee, you have to be hungry. He had an intense drive to succeed. Nowadays, people are packing [carrying guns]. Back then, you fought as gentlemen with your fists.”

Perry believes there’s a decline in Bruce Lee’s popularity among youth today. He suggests this is due to many factors. More Asian role models exist today than they did in the 60s and 70s, Perry explains. Also, mounting materialism among API youth focus attention on material success rather than inspiration. And, he says, the honor to learn the art of fighting has diminished as people take up guns and fight from a distance. He says the appreciation for what Bruce Lee achieved as a martial artist and Asian American has lost some of its poignancy.

“If you like baseball—you got Ichiro,” says Perry. “If you like basketball—you got Yao Ming. Nowadays, it’s not to be like Bruce, but to be financially secure.” But what Perry fears most is losing Bruce Lee’s legacy, his message, and his teachings.

“He was more than a martial artist. He was an innovator. So now people are forgetting what he had to do to blaze a trail,” says Perry.

The founder of Jeet Kune Do, the actor of films breaking the racial barrier, and the personality that drove the man to greatness, was first and foremost a man. And that may be why we find him so fascinating. We see ourselves in his drive to make something out of nothing and in a remarkable character—what we’re capable of achieving. Bruce Lee would have been 68 years old this year.

“To hell with circumstances—I make opportunities.” –The Dragon.

The Bruce Lee Foundation 35th Anniversary Celebration at the Seattle Museum of Art is from July 18-20, 2008. The event includes an exclusive Friday preview night, a tour of the Bruce Lee exhibit with Linda and Shannon Lee, martial arts seminars and demonstrations, and discussion with JKD instructors. A public screening for “Enter the Dragon” will be Saturday night for $10/per person. On Sunday, a cemetery memorial will be held ($20) while organizers will serve a celebration luncheon at the New Hong Kong Restaurant ($50). An inclusive package for all events is $285.00 To register for the event, please contact the Bruce Lee Foundation at info@bruceleefoundation.org.

Perfect for the museum gift shop

Click the link to see Bruce and Marilyn in all their anatidae glory.

Marilyn Monroe and Bruce Lee Rubber Ducks - Lightening Up a Tough Economy One Duck at a Time

SAN RAFAEL, Calif., Oct. 22 /PRNewswire/ – CelebriDucks, the original creator of the first-ever celebrity rubber ducks of the greatest icons of film, music, athletics and history, is doing their part to bring a little happiness to a tough economy. Thus they are releasing their new Marilyn Monroe and Bruce Lee limited edition rubber ducks just in time for the holidays. Wearing a pink dress with white gloves, the new Marilyn duck embodies the epitome of elegance in the tub. After all, in any economy, diamonds are still a duck’s best friend. Bruce Lee, complete with weaponry, is guaranteed to protect one’s tub from any financial turbulence with his classic pose from “Enter the Dragon.” CelebriDucks president Craig Wolfe remarked, “In hard times, we need some real heavy-hitters in our bath to lighten things up. To have two such classic icons added to our line really gives people some very cool gifts that anyone can afford.”

The company is best known for their line of celebrity ducks including The Wizard of Oz, Elvis Presley, Bill Clinton, Larry the Cable Guy, and KISS, among hundreds of others. The company created a Tropical Parrot, complete with Hawaiian shirt and shades, for The Jimmy Buffet Margaritaville Cafes, and successfully sells their Blues Brothers ducks at all House of Blues venues nationwide. They also recently broke new ground by creating the world’s first-ever floating Pink Flamingo, which debuted at The Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas.

CelebriDucks has produced ducks for the NBA, Major League Baseball, the NHL, Collegiate Mascots, and NASCAR. The company has pioneered a whole new collectible and to date their ducks have appeared on numerous TV shows, including The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, CBS Evening Magazine, and Late Night with Conan O’Brien. CelebriDucks were voted one of the top 100 gifts by Entertainment Weekly.

Their work can be viewed at http://www.celebriducks.com/
High-resolution photos available upon request

Contact:
Craig Wolfe
415-456-3452
info@celebriducks.com
http://www.celebriducks.com/

Grand opening of the Shunde Museum

Anyone going to be in Guangdong soon, give me a holla. We’d love a report. :wink:

Largest Bruce Lee Museum Opens in S. China
2008-11-11 15:12:48

Visitors crowd the new Bruce Lee museum that opened in Shunde, Guangdong Province on November 9, 2008.

The ancestral hometown of Bruce Lee in southern China has finished building the world’s largest memorial museum for the action legend, China News Service reported Tuesday.

The museum, located in Shunde, Guangdong Province, was inaugurated Sunday by Bruce’s sister Phoebe Lee, who traveled from San Francisco for the occasion.

More than 1,000 items related to or used by Bruce Lee are on display, including costumes and photographs. Some letters and poems written by the martial artist are being exhibited for the first time, the report says.

The compound also includes a sculpture park that will feature the world’s tallest Bruce Lee statue when the 18.8-meter-tall artwork is finished early next year.

Future meet-ups for Bruce Lee’s fans are being planned, with which the museum’s director Huang Dechao hopes to create a communication forum for worldwide fans.

There has been a resurgent interest in China over Bruce Lee, who passed away three decades ago, thanks to a new 50-episode drama series “The Legend of Bruce Lee,” produced by China Central Television (CCTV). The drama, although controversial for some bloopers found in its scenes, has become the most-watched CCTV drama in history following its initial airing in October.

Bruce Lee’s HK Home news

This is the story we’ve all been waiting for. Bruce Lee’s former home in Hong Kong has been donated to the city after years as a low rent hotel. The plan is to turn it into a museum. Who knew you could by Bruce Lee’s home in HK and why didn’t any of us do it?

HONG KONG (Reuters) – A philanthropic bid by a Hong Kong tycoon to preserve the one-time residence of kung fu legend Bruce Lee and transform it into a major tourist attraction honoring the film icon was approved on Tuesday.

The green light comes after a long-running struggle by fans to save the 5,700 square-foot, two-storey town house from an inglorious fate as a seedy love motel in a leafy Kowloon suburb.

The fate of Lee’s last home had hung in the balance for years, until its owner, real estate and hotel tycoon Yu Pang-lin, made a surprise decision last year to donate it to the city where the martial arts master first shot to fame.

“Both sides have now reached a consensus to go ahead and essentially proceed with this good plan,” Yu told reporters after a meeting with government officials.

“I’m 88 years old now and hope that while I’m still alive I’ll be able to see this Bruce Lee museum completed,” he added.

Hong Kong’s Commerce and Economic Development Bureau said it agreed to preserve the “original outlook of the building and its features” with an aim to revitalize it for long-term sustainable operation as a tourism attraction.

We’re at 815,808 posts now - who worries about clutter?

This story even made the NYT:

Enter the Museum: Bruce Lees Home Saved
Compiled by DAVE ITZKOFF
Published: January 6, 2009

More than 35 years after the death of the martial-arts legend Bruce Lee, below, fans will once again be able to get their kicks from him following the approval of a plan to turn his Hong Kong home, above, into a tourist attraction, Reuters reported. In July Yu Panglin, a real estate tycoon and philanthropist, reversed his decision to sell Lee’s 5,600-square-foot town house in the Kowloon area of Hong Kong and instead donated it to that region’s government for use as a museum. On Tuesday, Hong Kong’s Commerce and Economic Development Bureau said it had agreed to preserve the “original outlook of the building and its features,” according to Reuters. Parts of the home, including Lee’s study and training hall, will be restored; Mr. Yu has said he wants to add a movie theater, a library and a martial-arts center.

love motel

I’m now getting confused on how many Bruce Lee homes are being restored…

HK plans to restore late martial arts star Bruce Lee’s building
Owner and authorities decide to hold an open competition to renovate the property
Associated Press

The Hong Kong government will hold a design competition to restore a former home of late martial arts legend Bruce Lee that has fallen into disrepute.

The two-story house where Lee lived in 1972-73 is currently used as a “love motel,” where rooms are rented by the hour and people often carry on affairs. The owner has lobbied to convert it into a museum.

The decision to hold an open competition came late Friday after a meeting between the owner and Hong Kong’s commerce and economic development secretary. Both agreed that the best design would be used as the blueprint for restoring the property, the government said.

“The competition would allow the incorporation of suitable design elements to maximize the use of space when restoring the property to its original appearance,” a government spokesman said in a statement that did not elaborate on the timeframe or what the winner would get.

Lee, who died in Hong Kong in 1973 at age 32 from swelling of the brain, was born in San Francisco but grew up in Hong Kong.

His credits include “The Chinese Connection,” “Enter the Dragon” and “Return of the Dragon.”

Nice to hear some progress is being made here

those pesky secret gongfu sects…

Thu, Jul 09, 2009 The New Paper
Plans for Bruce Lee Museum get off the ground, finally
By Gan Ling Kai

ICONIC movie star Bruce Lee’s home in Hong Kong will become a historical site.

The two-storey mansion on Cumberland Road, which was converted into a love motel some time after the actor’s death, was nearly sold last year to raise funds until one man and his team stepped in.

That man is Hong Kong Bruce Lee Club president and chairman Wong Yiu Keung, 40, who runs a publishing company.

He told The New Paper in a recent phone interview that the 460-sq-m property in Kowloon Tong was once a rendezvous point for lovers, something which raised the hackles of the late star’s fans.

Now the house he lived in till his death in July 1973 has been tentatively named the Bruce Lee Museum.

Last year, businessman Yu Panglin, the owner of the property, wanted to sell it to raise funds for charity after the Sichuan earthquake.

The government at that time had no interest in the building as it was deemed to have no architectural value. The mansion has had major alterations done over the years - a front verandah, for example, had been completely removed.

But Mr Wong feels architectural value should not be the only criterion for conserving a building. ‘The value lies in where Bruce Lee really spent time and that’s a cultural heritage,’ he said.

'To prevent the house from being sold, we started an online petition and garnered more than 10,000 signatures to preserve this historical site.

‘Finally (in January this year), with us as the middleman, Mr Yu and the government began negotiating to turn the place into a museum.’

Mr Yu had bought the house for just HK$850,000 ($160,000) in the 1960s and it is now worth around HK$100 million.

Complex

Plans are being made to expand the property to turn it into a museum complex with a cinema, library and martial arts centre.

This is good news for fans all over the world, including former local TV action star Vincent Ng, 34.

When contacted by The New Paper yesterday, the martial art instructor, who bagged three SEA Games wushu gold medals in 1993 and 1997, said: ‘Bruce Lee is a wushu legend who propagated the Chinese martial art across the world. How did his home end up becoming a love motel in the first place?’

Bruce, the high-kicking hero of films such as Big Boss and Fist Of Fury, is the first Asian actor to gain fame in the West. Current gongfu movie megastar Jackie Chan started his showbiz career as Bruce’s stuntman.

The US-born star’s death at age 32 was the subject of much speculation. It is believed that reactions to medication led to his death.

Last month, his name cropped up when action star David Carradine, 72, was found dead in a Bangkok hotel room. Entertainment news site Hollyscoop reported that his family believed a gongfu sect murdered him.

US actor Frank Krueger, a martial arts practitioner, told Hollyscoop: ‘One of the widely held theories about Bruce Lee’s death was that he was killed by one of these groups for teaching martial arts secrets.’

Additional reporting by Kwok Kar Peng

Lee made 46 kung fu movies?!?!

Dang, I must have missed like 40 of them…:rolleyes:

Hong Kong to open Bruce Lee museum
J.A. Media plans trilogy on kung fu master’s life
By CLIFFORD COONAN

HONG KONG — Hong Kong is gearing up to honor a debt it owes to its most famous native son, Bruce Lee, who died 36 years ago this week, with the construction of a museum in his former house, that is currently serving as a love hotel that rents by the hour.

Lee is synonymous with Hong Kong, and his success was crucial in kick-starting the success of the Hong Kong biz, but for years his contribution has been unmarked by an official museum in his home town, except for a statue on the waterfront. Lee’s fans demonstrated last year in front of the statue on the harborfront, accusing the government of not paying proper homage to him.

Now officials in the territory hope to redress this oversight with the launch of a design competition to build a Hong Kong museum for the kung fu master.

“I hope I can personally witness and oversee the completion of the Bruce Lee museum in my lifetime,” owner Yu Pang-lin, who is in his 80s, said at a press conference marking the anniversary of Lee’s death. The museum is expected to include a kung fu studio, a film archive and a library.

Lee’s daughter, Shannon Lee, and a panel of architects and town planners will judge the design competition, and the winners will be announced in November or December.

Other efforts to remember the martial arts king include a new trilogy about his life, called “Bruce Lee.” Pic will start shooting in October this year and will be a joint production between his family and the J.A. Media group, local media reported.

Producer Li Chen and director Manfred Wong said the first part of the three-parter would focus on his early life, and so far the only casting decision that had been made was that Tony Leung Ka-fai would play Lee’s father.

Initial investment in the movie will be 50 million yuan ($7.3 million) and the pic is scheduled for release on Nov. 27, 2010, the 70th anniversary of Bruce Lee’s birth.

Lee was born in November 1940 in San Francisco and raised in Hong Kong, before his father sent him back to the States after a brawl as a youngster. As well as his martial prowess, he was also a ballroom dancing champion.

He is buried in Seattle’s Lake View Cemetery next to his son, actor Brandon Lee, after spending some time attending the University of Washington where he taught martial arts.

Lee made 46 kung fu movies, and his popularity around the world paved the way for stars like Jackie Chan and inspired filmmakers like Quentin Tarantino. But he could have been even bigger.

Lee was just 32 years old when he died of a swelling in the brain in 1973, while starring and directing the movie “Game of Death” in Hong Kong, less than a month after the release of “Enter the Dragon,” the definitive Bruce Lee movie which turned him into an international star.

A museum would also draw a fair number of visitors from mainland China, where Bruce Lee is a national hero, as much for the way he embodied Chinese pride and nationalism in his movies.

Many in mainland China missed him the first time around in the early 1970s because movies like “Enter the Dragon” and “Fists of Fury” were banned by Chairman Mao Zedong’s closed Communist government as spiritual pollution and rightist sentimentality. A popular skein last year did much to help complete the picture on the mainland.

The Hong Kong government has started collecting Lee’s personal items and commissioned a documentary about the late actor and one about the construction of the museum, said secretary for commerce and economic development Rita Lau.

Officials showed an eight-minute trailer for the biography produced by veteran Hong Kong director Ng See-yuen. It included interviews with “Mission: Impossible II” director John Woo; Lee’s frequent collaborator producer, Raymond Chow; Ip Chun, the eldest son of his kung fu teacher, Ip Man; and actress Betty Ting Pei — in whose home Lee died — as well as footage of Lee’s body in an open casket at his funeral.

July 20, 2009, 1:18 pm
Design Competition for Bruce Lee Museum
By rachel lee harris

Hong Kong officials announced on Monday a design competition to turn the martial arts king Bruce Lee’s home into a museum, The Associated Press reported. Lee’s daughter, Shannon Lee, along with a panel of architects and town planners, are to serve as judges, with winners announced in November or December. According to a statement by Rita Lau, Hong Kong’s secretary for commerce and economic development, the government has also commissioned two films, a documentary of the building of the museum and a biography of Lee, who died in 1973. Yu Panglin, owner of the property, has offered $13,000 in prize money. In July Mr. Yu, a real estate tycoon and philanthropist, donated the 5,600-square-foot town house in the Kowloon area of Hong Kong to that region’s government for the purpose of turning it into a memorial for Lee.

Not quite Bruce’s museum

Madame Tussaud’s wax museum. Click for ET vid.

Bruce Lee Immortalized in Wax

The late Bruce Lee’s wax figure was recently unveiled at Madame Tussauds Hollywood, and the martial arts icon’s daughter was on hand for the festivities.

“It’s really an honor to be here today to launch this figure,” said Shannon Lee, who helped unveil her father’s wax double. “I think it’s really wonderful that they’ve included my father here in Madame Tussauds. … I feel really proud that he is getting that recognition.”

The ‘Enter the Dragon’ star, who died at the age of 32 in 1973, received the honor in celebration of the Chinese New Year.

Update on Shunde

Some one from here must go to Shunde when they complete that statue, don’t you think?

A slower legacy for Bruce Lee in Chinese ancestral town
James Pomfret
SHUNDE, China
Thu Mar 25, 2010 4:28am EDT

SHUNDE, China (Reuters) - In the sleepy town of Xiacun in southern China, elders doze and children play along “little dragon” alley, which winds its way to the ancestral home of kung fu star Bruce Lee.

The small, grey-brick courtyard house contains old photos of Lee on the walls, an altar, a musty bedroom and a wooden dummy used for martial arts training, but visitors are few and far between, and other efforts by the town’s council to commemorate their most famous son are also off the tourist radar.

While Lee is renowned the world over as a martial arts legend with a slew of action flicks to his name, back in his father’s Chinese hometown, where many share the Lee name, his legacy remains low-key, even in 2010, the 70th anniversary of his birth.

“We don’t really think about it that much,” said a young woman sitting on the threshold of a home next door.

Local officials, however, have been trying to change that.

Millions have been invested in a park filled with lakes and rare birds, and called Bruce Lee Paradise, that authorities in Shunde and nearby Foshan hope will become a major tourist draw.

“Lee’s image and reputation are becoming more and more familiar now in Foshan,” said Chen Xian, the administration manager of Bruce Lee Paradise. “The Bruce Lee brand is something we’ve been trying actively to promote … he’s someone the Chinese people should be proud of.”

The motivation is part cultural, part commercial. But the park, nearly 90 minutes by car from Guangzhou along dusty highways, remains largely off the beaten tourist track.

During a recent visit, a 12-meter (39 ft 4.4 in) high bronze statue of Lee remained half-finished and under scaffolding. A museum filled with Lee’s weapons, books, posters and other memorabilia was virtually deserted.

While Lee was been born and raised in San Francisco, later forging his movie career in Hong Kong, Lee’s family originates from Shunde, one of several southern Chinese towns that were home to much of the Chinese diaspora that immigrated in the late 1800s and early 1900s.

While popular overseas, restrictions on Western cultural imports during China’s Cultural Revolution meant Lee was unknown inside China during his cinematic heyday in the late 60s and 70s.

Chairman Mao Zedong, who launched the Cultural Revolution, is said to have been a fan, according to Chen of Bruce Lee paradise, who says Mao once requested a screen reel of Lee’s hit film “Fist of Fury” for private viewing in Beijing.

CULTURAL ICON, MOVIE STAR

For some modern martial arts practitioners like Wang Hongxin, who is a master of nunchuka sticks, a martial arts weapon which Bruce Lee excelled at, the star continues to embody China’s need to stand up to the West.

“There are now a lot of kung fu masters. But in those days, foreigners really bullied the Chinese. And Bruce Lee back then, used his fists to survive abroad,” said Wang, who runs the Guangdong Bison Wushu Club in a factory in the Pearl River Delta.

Lee, who died in mysterious circumstances in 1973 aged 32, starred in kung fu classics such as “Fist of Fury,” “Game of Death” and "Enter the Dragon.

Revered both by martial arts adherents and movie buffs the world over for popularizing the kung fu cinematic genre, Lee also helped usher in a golden age of Hong Kong film in the 1960s.

This year, the Hong Kong International Film Festival is planning a retrospective, while authorities in Hong Kong are planning to convert one of Lee’s former residences, a motel, into a commemoration site and museum.

“He’s a part of Hong Kong,” says Sam Ho, a film critic who works at Hong Kong’s public film archive. “He helped the world know about Hong Kong cinema, though his films represent a small part of Hong Kong cinema.”

Several upcoming films will also touch upon the life of Bruce Lee, including “Ip Man 2,” chronicling the life of his teacher, the grandmaster of the of the fluid “Wing Chun” martial arts style. Hong Kong arthouse director Wong Kar-wai also has a movie on Ip Man in the works.

“Bruce Lee is already a standard. He’s like Confucius … he’s part of our culture that we will embrace,” Donnie Yen, who plays Ip Man in the movie, told Reuters.

“He (Lee) never stopped progressing as a martial artist. He was in search of a higher level all the way till his death.”

Who needs a museum?

…when you got an iPhone app?

All Press Releases for May 24, 2010
New Game Brings Bruce Lee’s Martial Arts to Apple® iPad®, IPHONE® & IPOD TOUCH®

The new Bruce Lee martial arts fighting game, Bruce Lee Dragon Warrior, available from Apple’s App Store is the first and only game at the Store to bear his name, and features motion captures from those who studied Lee’s style, bringing a level of detail and 3D graphics never before seen in the genre.

Los Angeles, CA (PRWEB) May 24, 2010 – Bruce Lee’s teachings and martial arts mastery are legendary. His spirit remains an inspiration to an untold number of people around the world. Now the powerful name of the icon comes to the iTunes®, App Store with Bruce Lee Dragon Warrior, developed for the iPad®, iPhone®, and iPod touch®. The game, which brings Bruce Lee’s history and legacy to life, is available worldwide for $4.99, and is the first and only fighting game in the iTunes®, App Store to bear his name.

The input from those who best know Bruce Lee’s teachings was invaluable during the development of Bruce Lee Dragon Warrior
The game is co-published and co-developed in partnership with Universal Partnerships & Licensing by two of the top mobile game companies in the industry, Indiagames and Digital Legends Entertainment. The Bruce Lee Estate contributed guidance and support through Bruce Lee Enterprises, the licensing company helmed by Bruce’s daughter, Shannon Lee.

A masterpiece of the 3D martial arts genre, the game uses motion-capture technology and features players fighting in historical locations around the world in an attempt to become the Master of Martial Arts. Customizable fighting styles make Bruce Lee Dragon Warrior highly user-friendly and the game also boasts the most realistic fighting game environment possible on these devices. Loosely based on the events of Bruce Lee’s career, the game honors the martial arts legacy left by one of its greatest masters. Players follow Lee’s journey as he trains with a Kung Fu master, then fights in tournaments and later faces his worst enemies.

There are many fighting games on the market, but Bruce Lee Dragon Warrior is the only one in the iTunes®, App Store with the Bruce Lee heritage, as well as the most authentic and realistic graphics and game play. Designed for casual players and hardcore gamers alike, it is easy to pick up and play, but more difficult to master. The game features motion capture from those who studied Lee’s style, as well as facial animations, environmental animations and a custom soundtrack.

The primary motion capture subject for Bruce Lee Dragon Warrior was Joaquin Marcelo, a student of Ted Wong, a board member of the Bruce Lee Foundation. Wong was a private pupil of Bruce Lee himself, and teaches the martial arts style and philosophy he learned from the master.

“I was thrilled with how the game turned out,” said Shannon Lee. “It surpassed my highest expectations.”

“The input from those who best know Bruce Lee’s teachings was invaluable during the development of Bruce Lee Dragon Warrior,” said Vishal Gondal, CEO of Indiagames. “Their mastery of Lee’s style of martial arts style has helped us make the most authentic game possible.”

“Their mastery of Bruce Lee’s style and technique has enabled us to create the premier mobile game in the fighting genre," said Xavier Carrillo, CEO of Digital Legends. “Working on this international project from Barcelona, Mumbai and Los Angeles, has been tremendously gratifying, and we have taken full advantage of our previous experience on fighting games as well as our cutting-edge 3D technology."

“This game highlights Bruce Lee’s everlasting impact on our culture,” said Calvin Lim, Director of Mobile Sales, Universal Partnerships & Licensing. “Capturing the essence of his spirit for these digital platforms will beget new generations of Bruce Lee fans.”

Bruce Lee Dragon Warrior was designed specifically for the iPad®, iPod touch®, & iPhone®, but will also be available for play on other mobile phones.

For more information on Bruce Lee Dragon Warrior, go to the following URLs:
iPad: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/bruce-lee-dragon-warrior-hd/id364676826?mt=8
iPhone: http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/bruce-lee-dragon-warrior/id372377860?mt=8

About Bruce Lee Enterprises
Bruce Lee Enterprises owns, controls and licenses intellectual property related to Bruce Lee and Brandon Lee worldwide. For more information, please visit http://www.brucelee.com.

About Indiagames
Indiagames Ltd. is India’s largest games company and a pioneer in mobile and online games. The company has established relationships with more than 80 telecom operators across 67 countries around the world, including Vodafone, Verizon, T mobile, AT&T, Hutch, Airtel and many more. Indiagames also has relationships with all major game publishers and media companies in the world, including EA, Disney, THQ, Atari, Universal, Fox, Warner brothers, Sony, MTV, 2K and others. Indiagames has developed and published mobile games such as Bioshock, Garfield, Flavor Of love, Godzilla, Bruce Lee, The Office, Scorpion King, Cricket 20-20, Movin Maze, and others. The company also runs the only subscription-based games on demand service for PC games across all major broadband operators in India. For more information on Indiagames, please visit http://www.indiagames.com.

About DLE
Digital Legends Entertainment (DLE) is Barcelona’s international games development studio, distinguished worldwide by award-winning 3D iPhone and smartphone games powered by in-house cutting-edge technology across native platforms.

DLE origins in 2001 were on PC and console games, and since 2006 its exclusive focus is on mobile native platforms envisioning a convergence between mobile and handheld digital consumption and technologies. DLE has won nominations from 1up.com as “Best E3 Mobile Game” “Best Cell Game of the Year” for the fighting game “ONE” in 2005. Also has been winner of “Excellence in 3D” by International Mobile Gaming Awards (IMGA) in 2008 for “ONE” sequel and includes other honours like “Best Gameplay” nominee by IMGA in 2009 for the music game “Dance Fabulous” and winner of the “People’s Choice Award” by IMGA in 2009 and 2010. Its B2B customers include major game Publishers, market leading OEM’s like Nokia and Samsung and also technology suppliers. For more information on Digital Legends Entertainment, please visit http://www.digital-legends.com.

About Universal Partnerships & Licensing
UP&L oversees Universal’s consumer product licensing, film and home entertainment promotions, and all corporate alliances for Universal’s theatrical, home entertainment, theme parks and stage productions. This dedicated division is also responsible for monetizing the Studio’s vast library of films and characters through licensing, branding and marketing opportunities. UP&L is part of NBC Universal, one of the world’s leading media and entertainment companies in the development, production, and marketing of entertainment, news, and information to a global audience. Formed in May 2004 through the combining of NBC and Vivendi Universal Entertainment, NBC Universal owns and operates a valuable portfolio of news and entertainment networks, a premier motion picture company, significant television production operations, a leading television stations group, and world-renowned theme parks. NBC Universal is 80%-owned by General Electric, with 20% owned by Vivendi.

Bruce looses to red tape

Action disappoints Dragon’s fans
Mary Ma
Thursday, July 22, 2010

This year marks the 70th anniversary of the birth of kung fu superstar Bruce Lee.

As a fan of the Hong Kong legend, I’m sad and disappointed - like millions of his admirers - that there’s still no sight of a museum in the city where he rose to fame.

We’ve been patient, but there’s still only one statue of Hong Kong’s most famous son in the Avenue of Stars.

About two years ago, following a long struggle to save Lee’s former home, the green light was finally given for the property to become a museum.

Located at 41 Cumberland Road in Kowloon Tong, the 5,700-square-foot mansion was where Little Dragon spent the last years of his life, before his untimely death 37 years ago on Tuesday at age 32. The building had been converted into a love motel, with rooms rented by the hour, before billionaire Yu Pang-lin bought the property and later handed it over to the Hong Kong government to convert into a museum.

Although no time frame was set, I’d have thought once those plans were put in place, it would take shape quickly and, in no time, Mr Fist of Fury would finally have his own museum here.

But despite the generosity of philanthropist Yu’s HK$100 million donation, and the government’s efforts through a public contest to select a tailor-made design for the museum, the building remains off-limits to visitors. On any given day, it’s become common to see scores of tourists snapping pictures just outside the locked premises.

So, why the delay? In this case, I can hardly blame red tape or government bureaucracy. The holdup is procedural wrangling, as the land donation has yet to be processed since Yu wanted to preserve the two-story structure.

Under a recommended plan, the museum would include an exhibition hall, video room, kung fu room, library and souvenir shop. The master plan calls for building a basement, designated to be Yu’s charity fund office.

All this posed no problem until a suggestion was made that the basement should be three floors, which would have to be built underground since the two-story building must be preserved.

This poses more than a headache for the authorities, since buildings in Kowloon Tong usually only have one underground floor, mainly for parking and air-conditioning facilities.

So if one wants to build three underground floors, it requires approval from the Town Planning Board. Besides this, problems such as whether the construction will affect the structures of nearby buildings, the environment, and traffic must also be carefully addressed.

According to the plan that won the design contest, it was recommended to build one floor underground. So why insist on the “three-floor” concept?

In fact, the government also reckoned that using the basement as a private office posed a problem. For while it is for charitable purposes, the money would come from taxpayers - setting a bad precedent.

We can only hope both Yu and the government can cooperate despite the constraints, and use their imagination to make the museum possible.

Otherwise, Lee fans will be highly disappointed.

Wonder if it would be cheaper to buy the neighboring building and convert it instead of digging an underground level. Then again, real estate in HK is very expensive.

Statue of Lee-birty

“China’s Statue of Liberty” under way
English.news.cn 2010-08-18 10:14:15

BEIJING, Aug. 18 (Xinhuanet) – Artists in Foshan, a city in Guangdong province that bills itself as the home of Chinese kungfu, are creating a 30-meter-tall sculpture of Bruce Lee which they hope will one day become a landmark on the scale of the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor.

The red-painted ceramic statue depicts an eight-legged Bruce Lee, known as Li Xiaolong in Chinese, balancing world famous monuments on each foot. These include The Arc de Triomphe in Paris, Shanghai’s Oriental Pearl Tower, and the Bird’s Nest, or National Olympic Stadium, in Beijing.

Over 100 smaller sculptures of China’s most iconic martial arts fighter will form the centerpiece of Foshan Week, which opens to the public at the Expo on Tuesday afternoon.

Identical, except for the monuments they balance on their feet, the sculptures took 100 people six months to complete, due to the complexity and size of the ceramics.

The Enter the Dragon star was born in San Francisco of Hong Kong heritage but has ancestral links to Foshan. Recently, the series of Yip Man movies have celebrated his teacher Ye Wan, who was born to affluent parents in Foshan.

In reality, the city competes with several Chinese towns and provinces for kungfu bragging rights, notably the Shaolin Monastery in Henan province. But Foshan locals claim more responsibility for promoting the art internationally over the last century.

The towering sculpture, which looks like a stop-motion capture of Lee doing one of his explosive high kicks, will not be ready for another year, according to artist Shu Yong.

“We hope it can compete with the Statue of Liberty. But our sculpture, The Kungfu God of 1,000 Legs, is meant to symbolize Chinese wisdom, creativity and health,” he said.

“We are taking it to the Guggenheim Museum (in Manhattan) next year as part of a grand world tour,” he said.

While the neoclassical Statue of Liberty was an international gift of friendship from France, Shu and cohorts hope an epic 10-year world tour will suffice.

One of the criticisms of Expo 2010 Shanghai is that it has not celebrated the debut of any breakthrough monuments like the Statue of Liberty, parts of which appeared at two World Expos in the late 20th century. In their place, the Shanghai-hosted event offers dazzling pavilions, many designed by world-famous architects such as the UK’s Thomas Heatherwick.

Qiu Dailun, director of the exhibition commemorating Foshan Week, said the Bruce Lee sculpture was designed to “help China communicate with the world on an artistic level”.

“During China’s recent development, much has been made of our shortcomings and problems, but our strengths and skills have been largely forgotten by the rest of the world,” he said. “We hope, through cultural exchanges like these, to restore a sense of balance.”

The sculpture also shows how it is “possible to use the least amount of resources during the act of construction for the benefit of all”, he said. Foshan produces 25 percent of the world’s construction ceramics, 60 percent of which is used in China, officials said.

The exhibition, located inside the Urban Best Practices Area in Puxi, also features a replica of one of the world’s oldest ceramics kilns. It was built in Foshan in 1506.

As such, organizers said they plan to give away 100 prizes of 1,506 yuan ($220) to visitors who can best emulate Lee’s martial arts prowess by assuming difficult poses over the course of the week.


The little dragon in bright CCCP red (and a clown shoe?)

China creating eight-legged Bruce Lee sculpture to compete with Statue of Liberty

Beijing, Aug 18 (ANI): Chinese artists in Foshan, a city in Guangdong province, are creating a red painted 30-meter-tall and eight-legged sculpture of legend Bruce Lee, which they hope would eventually be recognised as a landmark very much like the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbour.

According to China Daily, the ceramic statue depicts an eight-legged Bruce Lee, known as Li Xiaolong in Chinese, balancing world famous monuments on each foot. These include The Arc de Triomphe in Paris, Shanghai’s Oriental Pearl Tower, and the Bird’s Nest, or National Olympic Stadium, in Beijing.

“We hope it can compete with the Statue of Liberty. But our sculpture, The Kungfu God of 1,000 Legs, is meant to symbolize Chinese wisdom, creativity and health,” an artist Shu Yong, said.

It took 100 people six months to complete the sculpture, because of its complexity and size of the ceramics.

Lee, the Enter the Dragon star, was born in San Francisco but has ancestral links to Foshan.

The towering sculpture, which looks like a stop-motion capture of Lee doing one of his explosive high kicks, is expected to be ready by next year.

“We are taking it to the Guggenheim Museum (in Manhattan) next year as part of a grand world tour,” Yong added. (ANI)