TMC
11-27-2017, 09:56 PM
https://metvcdn.metv.com/iMCbP-1490018237-1437-blog-batman_greenhornet_brucelee.png
https://lebeauleblog.com/2017/11/27/november-27-happy-birthday-callie-khouri-and-bruce-lee/
Lee Jun-fan, known worldwide as Bruce Lee (1940-1973), was born in San Francisco’s Chinatown, but grew up in Hong Kong, as his family returned their shortly after his birth; it was there that he began his study of the martial arts. He returned to the US to attend the University of Washington, and also began teaching martial arts and participating in martial arts competitions and exhibitions.
Lee had been appearing in films since he was very young—his father was a Cantonese film star—and by his late teens he had even had a few starring roles. However, his first exposure to Western audiences came when he was cast as Kato on ABC’s The Green Hornet in 1966 (he and Van Williams also made a few crossover appearances on Batman). He had a few guest roles on American television and a supporting role in the 1969 film Marlowe, before being cast in the first of the sequence of five Hong Kong martial arts films that are the source of his lasting fame, The Big Boss. It was followed by Fist of Fury and three others, the last of which, Enter the Dragon, was a posthumous release, coming out just days after Lee’s death from an allergic reaction to a painkiller.
13IuxNixyig
https://lebeauleblog.com/2017/11/27/november-27-happy-birthday-callie-khouri-and-bruce-lee/
Lee Jun-fan, known worldwide as Bruce Lee (1940-1973), was born in San Francisco’s Chinatown, but grew up in Hong Kong, as his family returned their shortly after his birth; it was there that he began his study of the martial arts. He returned to the US to attend the University of Washington, and also began teaching martial arts and participating in martial arts competitions and exhibitions.
Lee had been appearing in films since he was very young—his father was a Cantonese film star—and by his late teens he had even had a few starring roles. However, his first exposure to Western audiences came when he was cast as Kato on ABC’s The Green Hornet in 1966 (he and Van Williams also made a few crossover appearances on Batman). He had a few guest roles on American television and a supporting role in the 1969 film Marlowe, before being cast in the first of the sequence of five Hong Kong martial arts films that are the source of his lasting fame, The Big Boss. It was followed by Fist of Fury and three others, the last of which, Enter the Dragon, was a posthumous release, coming out just days after Lee’s death from an allergic reaction to a painkiller.
13IuxNixyig