From Hong Kong’s Cha-Cha champion to behind-the-scenes of “Enter The Dragon,” these Bruce Lee photos capture the making of a cultural icon.

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Life Under The Shah Of Iran Before 1979, In 47 Revealing Photos

1 of 46Bruce Lee with his mother and siblings in the late 1950s. His parents were Chinese opera singers.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 2 of 46Bruce Lee with his mother and father. It was his father who recognized Lee’s natural talent as a performer and encouraged him to pursue acting as a child. Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 3 of 46Lee’s first big American role was playing superstar sidekick Kato on The Green Hornet, starring Van Williams in the titular role.Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images 4 of 46Bruce Lee fights a dog in a scene from the 1971 classic Fist Of Fury, which was among his first successful movies in Hong Kong.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 5 of 46Bruce Lee’s role as Kato on The Green Hornet attracted fans in the U.S. and Hong Kong, where the show was cheekily dubbed “The Kato Show.“Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives 6 of 46Lee was taught martial arts by Yip Man, a grandmaster of the martial art of wing chun. Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 7 of 46When asked about his co-star’s abilities, actor Van Williams reportedly described Lee as “faster than a speeding bullet,” a popular comic book superhero phrase. Archive Photos/Getty Images 8 of 46Bruce Lee fights Bob Wall in a scene from 1973’s Enter The Dragon. The movie was a joint production between U.S. studio Warner Bros and Hong Kong studio Golden Harvest — and it garnered Lee international attention.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 9 of 46Lee’s moves were reportedly so fast that he was forced to shoot them in slow motion so that the camera could clearly capture them. Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 10 of 46Bruce Lee with his mother and son, Brandon. His son would later grow up to become an actor just like his father — and also like his father, would die young.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 11 of 46Bruce Lee’s iconic roles paved the way for other Asian action stars to command leading roles in Hollywood, like Jackie Chan and Jet Li.National General Picture/Getty Images 12 of 46Lee with his Green Hornet co-stars Van Williams and Wende Wagner.Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives 13 of 46Williams and Lee reportedly developed a close friendship off the set of Green Hornet.Frank Edwards/Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 14 of 46Lee began his American acting career after he was spotted at a martial arts tournament in Long Beach, California by celebrity hairstylist Jay Sebring, who was friends with Sharon Tate and Roman Polanski.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 15 of 46Lee during the filming of the TV series Longstreet. His “be like water” quote from the series remains one of his most memorable lines to date.Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives 16 of 46Bruce Lee and co-star Marilyn Bautista in a scene from Fist Of Fury. Lee’s Hollywood roles built him a loyal fanbase in Hong Kong. Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 17 of 46"The truth is Lee was a formidable opponent with a chiseled physique and technique,” Chuck Norris once said of the martial artist.Warner Brothers/Getty Images 18 of 46While the martial artist understood that he needed to incorporate flashier moves in his fighting scenes to appease Hollywood executives, his daughter has alleged that there was always a line he wasn’t willing to cross in order to maintain realism.Warner Brothers/Getty Images 19 of 46"The series marked the first time that kung fu had been seen in the West, outside the movie theaters of the Chinatown districts, and younger viewers were astonished by what they saw,” wrote actor Bruce Thomas of Green Hornet.Bruce Lee/Instagram 20 of 46Bruce Lee with his wife Linda and their two children, Brandon and Shannon. Bruce Lee/Instagram 21 of 46"My father was up against a difficult system that was not willing to put money behind an Asian as a lead in any way, and not willing to create authentic Asian characters," Shannon Lee said.

Bruce Lee/Instagram 22 of 46Lee in front of Ruby Chow’s restaurant in Seattle, where he was a live-in waiter during his college years.Bruce Lee/Instagram 23 of 46Bruce Lee was featured in more than 20 films during his childhood in Hong Kong.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 24 of 46Bruce Lee and some of his students at the Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute he owned. Pro basketball player and later co-star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar can be seen in the back.Bruce Lee/Instagram 25 of 46After The Green Hornet ended, Lee landed a few other supporting roles. But it proved difficult for him to find roles that depicted fully-formed Chinese or Asian characters that weren’t racialized stereotypes.Getty Images 26 of 46Bruce Lee played a Chinese immigrant in the 1969 Hollywood comedy-slash-western Here Come the Brides. ABC Photo Archives/ABC via Getty Images 27 of 46Bruce Lee and Maria Yi in a scene from Fist of Fury. Lee headed to Hong Kong in 1971 after he was unable to land more substantial roles in Hollywood.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 28 of 46Bruce Lee tosses a man in a fight scene from his 1972 action flick Fist of Fury. Getty Imags 29 of 46"He didn’t love the Chinese kung fu flicks [in the 1960s] where people were flying through the air and sort of having all these magical superhuman qualities… These films didn’t really represent what he understood to be martial arts," Shannon Lee said.Bettmann/Getty Images 30 of 46Another intense fight scene of Bruce Lee from Fist of Fury. Getty Images 31 of 46Bruce Lee’s first leading role in Hong Kong was the 1971 film The Big Boss, which was followed by Fist of Fury in 1972 and The Way of the Dragon. All these films were commercial successes in countries across Asia.Bettmann/Getty Images 32 of 46Bruce Lee wields a pair of nunchucks during his final film Enter the Dragon. The movie was the first kung fu film to be produced by a major Hollywood studio.Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 33 of 46American martial artist Chuck Norris and Bruce Lee on the set of his movie Meng Long Guo Jiang or The Way of the Dragon. Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis/Getty Images 34 of 46Lee fights his former student Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in an iconic scene from the film Game of Death. It was released five years after Lee’s death using leftover footage from Enter the Dragon.Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis/Getty Images 35 of 46Bruce Lee was frustrated after reading the orginal script for Enter the Dragon and rewrote it to include some of the most iconic scenes from the film.Bettmann/Getty Images 36 of 46American studio executives ignored Lee’s rewrites to Enter the Dragon at first but relented after the actor refused to shoot the film without his edits.Stanley Bielecki Movie Collection/Getty Images 37 of 46Bruce Lee with his son, Brandon Lee, who found success as an actor like his father through the series The Crow, 20 years after his father’s untimely death.Wikimedia Commons 38 of 46Lee’s real-life martial arts ideals were about discipline and the philosophical teachings of jeet kune do, an expression of martial arts that was personal to him.Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 39 of 46Bruce Lee with producer Fred Weintraub on the set of the 1973 film Enter the Dragon. Stanley Bielecki Movie Collection/Getty Images 40 of 46Bruce Lee’s signature yellow jumpsuit from Game of Death, which became synonymous with his onscreen legacy.Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images 41 of 46"The wardrobe department produced two tracksuits to choose from – one yellow and one that was black," said film producer Andre Morgan said. They went with the yellow suit so the footprint on the outfit would be more visible.Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images 42 of 46The 1970s TV series Kung Fu starring David Carradine was reportedly based on a rejected script that Lee had pitched to studios.ABC Photo Archives/ABC via Getty Images

43 of 46Bruce Lee developed his own form of kung fu known as jeet kune do, which means “way of the intercepting fist.“Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images 44 of 46"I don’t think anyone looked at Asians as full humans that come in every variety under the sun, just like everybody else, because there was no representation of that,” Shannon Lee said.Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images 45 of 46Lee’s Enter the Dragon remains one of his most memorable roles to date. Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images 46 of 46Like this gallery?Share it:

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Bruce Lee’s Legendary Life In 45 Revealing Photographs View Gallery

Bruce Lee is cherished by film buffs and martial arts fans worldwide, but his legacy goes beyond his work as an action movie star.

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Life Under The Shah Of Iran Before 1979, In 47 Revealing Photos

1 of 46Bruce Lee with his mother and siblings in the late 1950s. His parents were Chinese opera singers.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 2 of 46Bruce Lee with his mother and father. It was his father who recognized Lee’s natural talent as a performer and encouraged him to pursue acting as a child. Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 3 of 46Lee’s first big American role was playing superstar sidekick Kato on The Green Hornet, starring Van Williams in the titular role.Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images 4 of 46Bruce Lee fights a dog in a scene from the 1971 classic Fist Of Fury, which was among his first successful movies in Hong Kong.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 5 of 46Bruce Lee’s role as Kato on The Green Hornet attracted fans in the U.S. and Hong Kong, where the show was cheekily dubbed “The Kato Show.“Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives 6 of 46Lee was taught martial arts by Yip Man, a grandmaster of the martial art of wing chun. Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 7 of 46When asked about his co-star’s abilities, actor Van Williams reportedly described Lee as “faster than a speeding bullet,” a popular comic book superhero phrase. Archive Photos/Getty Images 8 of 46Bruce Lee fights Bob Wall in a scene from 1973’s Enter The Dragon. The movie was a joint production between U.S. studio Warner Bros and Hong Kong studio Golden Harvest — and it garnered Lee international attention.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 9 of 46Lee’s moves were reportedly so fast that he was forced to shoot them in slow motion so that the camera could clearly capture them. Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 10 of 46Bruce Lee with his mother and son, Brandon. His son would later grow up to become an actor just like his father — and also like his father, would die young.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 11 of 46Bruce Lee’s iconic roles paved the way for other Asian action stars to command leading roles in Hollywood, like Jackie Chan and Jet Li.National General Picture/Getty Images 12 of 46Lee with his Green Hornet co-stars Van Williams and Wende Wagner.Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives 13 of 46Williams and Lee reportedly developed a close friendship off the set of Green Hornet.Frank Edwards/Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 14 of 46Lee began his American acting career after he was spotted at a martial arts tournament in Long Beach, California by celebrity hairstylist Jay Sebring, who was friends with Sharon Tate and Roman Polanski.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 15 of 46Lee during the filming of the TV series Longstreet. His “be like water” quote from the series remains one of his most memorable lines to date.Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives 16 of 46Bruce Lee and co-star Marilyn Bautista in a scene from Fist Of Fury. Lee’s Hollywood roles built him a loyal fanbase in Hong Kong. Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 17 of 46"The truth is Lee was a formidable opponent with a chiseled physique and technique,” Chuck Norris once said of the martial artist.Warner Brothers/Getty Images 18 of 46While the martial artist understood that he needed to incorporate flashier moves in his fighting scenes to appease Hollywood executives, his daughter has alleged that there was always a line he wasn’t willing to cross in order to maintain realism.Warner Brothers/Getty Images 19 of 46"The series marked the first time that kung fu had been seen in the West, outside the movie theaters of the Chinatown districts, and younger viewers were astonished by what they saw,” wrote actor Bruce Thomas of Green Hornet.Bruce Lee/Instagram 20 of 46Bruce Lee with his wife Linda and their two children, Brandon and Shannon. Bruce Lee/Instagram 21 of 46"My father was up against a difficult system that was not willing to put money behind an Asian as a lead in any way, and not willing to create authentic Asian characters,” Shannon Lee said.

Bruce Lee/Instagram 22 of 46Lee in front of Ruby Chow’s restaurant in Seattle, where he was a live-in waiter during his college years.Bruce Lee/Instagram 23 of 46Bruce Lee was featured in more than 20 films during his childhood in Hong Kong.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 24 of 46Bruce Lee and some of his students at the Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute he owned. Pro basketball player and later co-star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar can be seen in the back.Bruce Lee/Instagram 25 of 46After The Green Hornet ended, Lee landed a few other supporting roles. But it proved difficult for him to find roles that depicted fully-formed Chinese or Asian characters that weren’t racialized stereotypes.Getty Images 26 of 46Bruce Lee played a Chinese immigrant in the 1969 Hollywood comedy-slash-western Here Come the Brides. ABC Photo Archives/ABC via Getty Images 27 of 46Bruce Lee and Maria Yi in a scene from Fist of Fury. Lee headed to Hong Kong in 1971 after he was unable to land more substantial roles in Hollywood.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 28 of 46Bruce Lee tosses a man in a fight scene from his 1972 action flick Fist of Fury. Getty Imags 29 of 46"He didn’t love the Chinese kung fu flicks [in the 1960s] where people were flying through the air and sort of having all these magical superhuman qualities… These films didn’t really represent what he understood to be martial arts," Shannon Lee said.Bettmann/Getty Images 30 of 46Another intense fight scene of Bruce Lee from Fist of Fury. Getty Images 31 of 46Bruce Lee’s first leading role in Hong Kong was the 1971 film The Big Boss, which was followed by Fist of Fury in 1972 and The Way of the Dragon. All these films were commercial successes in countries across Asia.Bettmann/Getty Images 32 of 46Bruce Lee wields a pair of nunchucks during his final film Enter the Dragon. The movie was the first kung fu film to be produced by a major Hollywood studio.Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 33 of 46American martial artist Chuck Norris and Bruce Lee on the set of his movie Meng Long Guo Jiang or The Way of the Dragon. Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis/Getty Images 34 of 46Lee fights his former student Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in an iconic scene from the film Game of Death. It was released five years after Lee’s death using leftover footage from Enter the Dragon.Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis/Getty Images 35 of 46Bruce Lee was frustrated after reading the orginal script for Enter the Dragon and rewrote it to include some of the most iconic scenes from the film.Bettmann/Getty Images 36 of 46American studio executives ignored Lee’s rewrites to Enter the Dragon at first but relented after the actor refused to shoot the film without his edits.Stanley Bielecki Movie Collection/Getty Images 37 of 46Bruce Lee with his son, Brandon Lee, who found success as an actor like his father through the series The Crow, 20 years after his father’s untimely death.Wikimedia Commons 38 of 46Lee’s real-life martial arts ideals were about discipline and the philosophical teachings of jeet kune do, an expression of martial arts that was personal to him.Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 39 of 46Bruce Lee with producer Fred Weintraub on the set of the 1973 film Enter the Dragon. Stanley Bielecki Movie Collection/Getty Images 40 of 46Bruce Lee’s signature yellow jumpsuit from Game of Death, which became synonymous with his onscreen legacy.Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images 41 of 46"The wardrobe department produced two tracksuits to choose from – one yellow and one that was black," said film producer Andre Morgan said. They went with the yellow suit so the footprint on the outfit would be more visible.Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images 42 of 46The 1970s TV series Kung Fu starring David Carradine was reportedly based on a rejected script that Lee had pitched to studios.ABC Photo Archives/ABC via Getty Images

43 of 46Bruce Lee developed his own form of kung fu known as jeet kune do, which means “way of the intercepting fist.“Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images 44 of 46"I don’t think anyone looked at Asians as full humans that come in every variety under the sun, just like everybody else, because there was no representation of that,” Shannon Lee said.Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images 45 of 46Lee’s Enter the Dragon remains one of his most memorable roles to date. Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images 46 of 46Like this gallery?Share it:

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40 Bruce Lee Quotes That Will Change Your Life

Meet Shannon Lee, The Martial-Artist-Turned Actress Keeping Bruce Lee’s Legacy Alive

Life Under The Shah Of Iran Before 1979, In 47 Revealing Photos

1 of 46Bruce Lee with his mother and siblings in the late 1950s. His parents were Chinese opera singers.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 2 of 46Bruce Lee with his mother and father. It was his father who recognized Lee’s natural talent as a performer and encouraged him to pursue acting as a child. Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 3 of 46Lee’s first big American role was playing superstar sidekick Kato on The Green Hornet, starring Van Williams in the titular role.Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images 4 of 46Bruce Lee fights a dog in a scene from the 1971 classic Fist Of Fury, which was among his first successful movies in Hong Kong.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 5 of 46Bruce Lee’s role as Kato on The Green Hornet attracted fans in the U.S. and Hong Kong, where the show was cheekily dubbed “The Kato Show.“Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives 6 of 46Lee was taught martial arts by Yip Man, a grandmaster of the martial art of wing chun. Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 7 of 46When asked about his co-star’s abilities, actor Van Williams reportedly described Lee as “faster than a speeding bullet,” a popular comic book superhero phrase. Archive Photos/Getty Images 8 of 46Bruce Lee fights Bob Wall in a scene from 1973’s Enter The Dragon. The movie was a joint production between U.S. studio Warner Bros and Hong Kong studio Golden Harvest — and it garnered Lee international attention.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 9 of 46Lee’s moves were reportedly so fast that he was forced to shoot them in slow motion so that the camera could clearly capture them. Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 10 of 46Bruce Lee with his mother and son, Brandon. His son would later grow up to become an actor just like his father — and also like his father, would die young.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 11 of 46Bruce Lee’s iconic roles paved the way for other Asian action stars to command leading roles in Hollywood, like Jackie Chan and Jet Li.National General Picture/Getty Images 12 of 46Lee with his Green Hornet co-stars Van Williams and Wende Wagner.Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives 13 of 46Williams and Lee reportedly developed a close friendship off the set of Green Hornet.Frank Edwards/Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 14 of 46Lee began his American acting career after he was spotted at a martial arts tournament in Long Beach, California by celebrity hairstylist Jay Sebring, who was friends with Sharon Tate and Roman Polanski.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 15 of 46Lee during the filming of the TV series Longstreet. His “be like water” quote from the series remains one of his most memorable lines to date.Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives 16 of 46Bruce Lee and co-star Marilyn Bautista in a scene from Fist Of Fury. Lee’s Hollywood roles built him a loyal fanbase in Hong Kong. Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 17 of 46"The truth is Lee was a formidable opponent with a chiseled physique and technique,” Chuck Norris once said of the martial artist.Warner Brothers/Getty Images 18 of 46While the martial artist understood that he needed to incorporate flashier moves in his fighting scenes to appease Hollywood executives, his daughter has alleged that there was always a line he wasn’t willing to cross in order to maintain realism.Warner Brothers/Getty Images 19 of 46"The series marked the first time that kung fu had been seen in the West, outside the movie theaters of the Chinatown districts, and younger viewers were astonished by what they saw,” wrote actor Bruce Thomas of Green Hornet.Bruce Lee/Instagram 20 of 46Bruce Lee with his wife Linda and their two children, Brandon and Shannon. Bruce Lee/Instagram 21 of 46"My father was up against a difficult system that was not willing to put money behind an Asian as a lead in any way, and not willing to create authentic Asian characters,” Shannon Lee said.

Bruce Lee/Instagram 22 of 46Lee in front of Ruby Chow’s restaurant in Seattle, where he was a live-in waiter during his college years.Bruce Lee/Instagram 23 of 46Bruce Lee was featured in more than 20 films during his childhood in Hong Kong.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 24 of 46Bruce Lee and some of his students at the Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute he owned. Pro basketball player and later co-star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar can be seen in the back.Bruce Lee/Instagram 25 of 46After The Green Hornet ended, Lee landed a few other supporting roles. But it proved difficult for him to find roles that depicted fully-formed Chinese or Asian characters that weren’t racialized stereotypes.Getty Images 26 of 46Bruce Lee played a Chinese immigrant in the 1969 Hollywood comedy-slash-western Here Come the Brides. ABC Photo Archives/ABC via Getty Images 27 of 46Bruce Lee and Maria Yi in a scene from Fist of Fury. Lee headed to Hong Kong in 1971 after he was unable to land more substantial roles in Hollywood.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 28 of 46Bruce Lee tosses a man in a fight scene from his 1972 action flick Fist of Fury. Getty Imags 29 of 46"He didn’t love the Chinese kung fu flicks [in the 1960s] where people were flying through the air and sort of having all these magical superhuman qualities… These films didn’t really represent what he understood to be martial arts," Shannon Lee said.Bettmann/Getty Images 30 of 46Another intense fight scene of Bruce Lee from Fist of Fury. Getty Images 31 of 46Bruce Lee’s first leading role in Hong Kong was the 1971 film The Big Boss, which was followed by Fist of Fury in 1972 and The Way of the Dragon. All these films were commercial successes in countries across Asia.Bettmann/Getty Images 32 of 46Bruce Lee wields a pair of nunchucks during his final film Enter the Dragon. The movie was the first kung fu film to be produced by a major Hollywood studio.Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 33 of 46American martial artist Chuck Norris and Bruce Lee on the set of his movie Meng Long Guo Jiang or The Way of the Dragon. Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis/Getty Images 34 of 46Lee fights his former student Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in an iconic scene from the film Game of Death. It was released five years after Lee’s death using leftover footage from Enter the Dragon.Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis/Getty Images 35 of 46Bruce Lee was frustrated after reading the orginal script for Enter the Dragon and rewrote it to include some of the most iconic scenes from the film.Bettmann/Getty Images 36 of 46American studio executives ignored Lee’s rewrites to Enter the Dragon at first but relented after the actor refused to shoot the film without his edits.Stanley Bielecki Movie Collection/Getty Images 37 of 46Bruce Lee with his son, Brandon Lee, who found success as an actor like his father through the series The Crow, 20 years after his father’s untimely death.Wikimedia Commons 38 of 46Lee’s real-life martial arts ideals were about discipline and the philosophical teachings of jeet kune do, an expression of martial arts that was personal to him.Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 39 of 46Bruce Lee with producer Fred Weintraub on the set of the 1973 film Enter the Dragon. Stanley Bielecki Movie Collection/Getty Images 40 of 46Bruce Lee’s signature yellow jumpsuit from Game of Death, which became synonymous with his onscreen legacy.Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images 41 of 46"The wardrobe department produced two tracksuits to choose from – one yellow and one that was black," said film producer Andre Morgan said. They went with the yellow suit so the footprint on the outfit would be more visible.Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images 42 of 46The 1970s TV series Kung Fu starring David Carradine was reportedly based on a rejected script that Lee had pitched to studios.ABC Photo Archives/ABC via Getty Images

43 of 46Bruce Lee developed his own form of kung fu known as jeet kune do, which means “way of the intercepting fist.“Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images 44 of 46"I don’t think anyone looked at Asians as full humans that come in every variety under the sun, just like everybody else, because there was no representation of that,” Shannon Lee said.Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images 45 of 46Lee’s Enter the Dragon remains one of his most memorable roles to date. Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images 46 of 46Like this gallery?Share it:

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40 Bruce Lee Quotes That Will Change Your Life

Meet Shannon Lee, The Martial-Artist-Turned Actress Keeping Bruce Lee’s Legacy Alive

Life Under The Shah Of Iran Before 1979, In 47 Revealing Photos

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1 of 46Bruce Lee with his mother and siblings in the late 1950s. His parents were Chinese opera singers.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 2 of 46Bruce Lee with his mother and father. It was his father who recognized Lee’s natural talent as a performer and encouraged him to pursue acting as a child. Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 3 of 46Lee’s first big American role was playing superstar sidekick Kato on The Green Hornet, starring Van Williams in the titular role.Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images 4 of 46Bruce Lee fights a dog in a scene from the 1971 classic Fist Of Fury, which was among his first successful movies in Hong Kong.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 5 of 46Bruce Lee’s role as Kato on The Green Hornet attracted fans in the U.S. and Hong Kong, where the show was cheekily dubbed “The Kato Show.“Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives 6 of 46Lee was taught martial arts by Yip Man, a grandmaster of the martial art of wing chun. Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 7 of 46When asked about his co-star’s abilities, actor Van Williams reportedly described Lee as “faster than a speeding bullet,” a popular comic book superhero phrase. Archive Photos/Getty Images 8 of 46Bruce Lee fights Bob Wall in a scene from 1973’s Enter The Dragon. The movie was a joint production between U.S. studio Warner Bros and Hong Kong studio Golden Harvest — and it garnered Lee international attention.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 9 of 46Lee’s moves were reportedly so fast that he was forced to shoot them in slow motion so that the camera could clearly capture them. Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 10 of 46Bruce Lee with his mother and son, Brandon. His son would later grow up to become an actor just like his father — and also like his father, would die young.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 11 of 46Bruce Lee’s iconic roles paved the way for other Asian action stars to command leading roles in Hollywood, like Jackie Chan and Jet Li.National General Picture/Getty Images 12 of 46Lee with his Green Hornet co-stars Van Williams and Wende Wagner.Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives 13 of 46Williams and Lee reportedly developed a close friendship off the set of Green Hornet.Frank Edwards/Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 14 of 46Lee began his American acting career after he was spotted at a martial arts tournament in Long Beach, California by celebrity hairstylist Jay Sebring, who was friends with Sharon Tate and Roman Polanski.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 15 of 46Lee during the filming of the TV series Longstreet. His “be like water” quote from the series remains one of his most memorable lines to date.Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives 16 of 46Bruce Lee and co-star Marilyn Bautista in a scene from Fist Of Fury. Lee’s Hollywood roles built him a loyal fanbase in Hong Kong. Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 17 of 46"The truth is Lee was a formidable opponent with a chiseled physique and technique,” Chuck Norris once said of the martial artist.Warner Brothers/Getty Images 18 of 46While the martial artist understood that he needed to incorporate flashier moves in his fighting scenes to appease Hollywood executives, his daughter has alleged that there was always a line he wasn’t willing to cross in order to maintain realism.Warner Brothers/Getty Images 19 of 46"The series marked the first time that kung fu had been seen in the West, outside the movie theaters of the Chinatown districts, and younger viewers were astonished by what they saw,” wrote actor Bruce Thomas of Green Hornet.Bruce Lee/Instagram 20 of 46Bruce Lee with his wife Linda and their two children, Brandon and Shannon. Bruce Lee/Instagram 21 of 46"My father was up against a difficult system that was not willing to put money behind an Asian as a lead in any way, and not willing to create authentic Asian characters,” Shannon Lee said.

Bruce Lee/Instagram 22 of 46Lee in front of Ruby Chow’s restaurant in Seattle, where he was a live-in waiter during his college years.Bruce Lee/Instagram 23 of 46Bruce Lee was featured in more than 20 films during his childhood in Hong Kong.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 24 of 46Bruce Lee and some of his students at the Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute he owned. Pro basketball player and later co-star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar can be seen in the back.Bruce Lee/Instagram 25 of 46After The Green Hornet ended, Lee landed a few other supporting roles. But it proved difficult for him to find roles that depicted fully-formed Chinese or Asian characters that weren’t racialized stereotypes.Getty Images 26 of 46Bruce Lee played a Chinese immigrant in the 1969 Hollywood comedy-slash-western Here Come the Brides. ABC Photo Archives/ABC via Getty Images 27 of 46Bruce Lee and Maria Yi in a scene from Fist of Fury. Lee headed to Hong Kong in 1971 after he was unable to land more substantial roles in Hollywood.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images 28 of 46Bruce Lee tosses a man in a fight scene from his 1972 action flick Fist of Fury. Getty Imags 29 of 46"He didn’t love the Chinese kung fu flicks [in the 1960s] where people were flying through the air and sort of having all these magical superhuman qualities… These films didn’t really represent what he understood to be martial arts," Shannon Lee said.Bettmann/Getty Images 30 of 46Another intense fight scene of Bruce Lee from Fist of Fury. Getty Images 31 of 46Bruce Lee’s first leading role in Hong Kong was the 1971 film The Big Boss, which was followed by Fist of Fury in 1972 and The Way of the Dragon. All these films were commercial successes in countries across Asia.Bettmann/Getty Images 32 of 46Bruce Lee wields a pair of nunchucks during his final film Enter the Dragon. The movie was the first kung fu film to be produced by a major Hollywood studio.Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 33 of 46American martial artist Chuck Norris and Bruce Lee on the set of his movie Meng Long Guo Jiang or The Way of the Dragon. Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis/Getty Images 34 of 46Lee fights his former student Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in an iconic scene from the film Game of Death. It was released five years after Lee’s death using leftover footage from Enter the Dragon.Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis/Getty Images 35 of 46Bruce Lee was frustrated after reading the orginal script for Enter the Dragon and rewrote it to include some of the most iconic scenes from the film.Bettmann/Getty Images 36 of 46American studio executives ignored Lee’s rewrites to Enter the Dragon at first but relented after the actor refused to shoot the film without his edits.Stanley Bielecki Movie Collection/Getty Images 37 of 46Bruce Lee with his son, Brandon Lee, who found success as an actor like his father through the series The Crow, 20 years after his father’s untimely death.Wikimedia Commons 38 of 46Lee’s real-life martial arts ideals were about discipline and the philosophical teachings of jeet kune do, an expression of martial arts that was personal to him.Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images 39 of 46Bruce Lee with producer Fred Weintraub on the set of the 1973 film Enter the Dragon. Stanley Bielecki Movie Collection/Getty Images 40 of 46Bruce Lee’s signature yellow jumpsuit from Game of Death, which became synonymous with his onscreen legacy.Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images 41 of 46"The wardrobe department produced two tracksuits to choose from – one yellow and one that was black," said film producer Andre Morgan said. They went with the yellow suit so the footprint on the outfit would be more visible.Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images 42 of 46The 1970s TV series Kung Fu starring David Carradine was reportedly based on a rejected script that Lee had pitched to studios.ABC Photo Archives/ABC via Getty Images

43 of 46Bruce Lee developed his own form of kung fu known as jeet kune do, which means “way of the intercepting fist.“Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images 44 of 46"I don’t think anyone looked at Asians as full humans that come in every variety under the sun, just like everybody else, because there was no representation of that,” Shannon Lee said.Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images 45 of 46Lee’s Enter the Dragon remains one of his most memorable roles to date. Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images 46 of 46Like this gallery?Share it:

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1 of 46Bruce Lee with his mother and siblings in the late 1950s. His parents were Chinese opera singers.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images

2 of 46Bruce Lee with his mother and father. It was his father who recognized Lee’s natural talent as a performer and encouraged him to pursue acting as a child. Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images

3 of 46Lee’s first big American role was playing superstar sidekick Kato on The Green Hornet, starring Van Williams in the titular role.Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images

4 of 46Bruce Lee fights a dog in a scene from the 1971 classic Fist Of Fury, which was among his first successful movies in Hong Kong.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images

5 of 46Bruce Lee’s role as Kato on The Green Hornet attracted fans in the U.S. and Hong Kong, where the show was cheekily dubbed “The Kato Show.“Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives

6 of 46Lee was taught martial arts by Yip Man, a grandmaster of the martial art of wing chun. Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images

7 of 46When asked about his co-star’s abilities, actor Van Williams reportedly described Lee as “faster than a speeding bullet,” a popular comic book superhero phrase. Archive Photos/Getty Images

8 of 46Bruce Lee fights Bob Wall in a scene from 1973’s Enter The Dragon. The movie was a joint production between U.S. studio Warner Bros and Hong Kong studio Golden Harvest — and it garnered Lee international attention.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images

9 of 46Lee’s moves were reportedly so fast that he was forced to shoot them in slow motion so that the camera could clearly capture them. Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images

10 of 46Bruce Lee with his mother and son, Brandon. His son would later grow up to become an actor just like his father — and also like his father, would die young.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images

11 of 46Bruce Lee’s iconic roles paved the way for other Asian action stars to command leading roles in Hollywood, like Jackie Chan and Jet Li.National General Picture/Getty Images

12 of 46Lee with his Green Hornet co-stars Van Williams and Wende Wagner.Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives

13 of 46Williams and Lee reportedly developed a close friendship off the set of Green Hornet.Frank Edwards/Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images

14 of 46Lee began his American acting career after he was spotted at a martial arts tournament in Long Beach, California by celebrity hairstylist Jay Sebring, who was friends with Sharon Tate and Roman Polanski.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images

15 of 46Lee during the filming of the TV series Longstreet. His “be like water” quote from the series remains one of his most memorable lines to date.Walt Disney Television via Getty Images Photo Archives

16 of 46Bruce Lee and co-star Marilyn Bautista in a scene from Fist Of Fury. Lee’s Hollywood roles built him a loyal fanbase in Hong Kong. Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images

17 of 46"The truth is Lee was a formidable opponent with a chiseled physique and technique,” Chuck Norris once said of the martial artist.Warner Brothers/Getty Images

18 of 46While the martial artist understood that he needed to incorporate flashier moves in his fighting scenes to appease Hollywood executives, his daughter has alleged that there was always a line he wasn’t willing to cross in order to maintain realism.Warner Brothers/Getty Images

19 of 46"The series marked the first time that kung fu had been seen in the West, outside the movie theaters of the Chinatown districts, and younger viewers were astonished by what they saw,” wrote actor Bruce Thomas of Green Hornet.Bruce Lee/Instagram

20 of 46Bruce Lee with his wife Linda and their two children, Brandon and Shannon. Bruce Lee/Instagram

21 of 46"My father was up against a difficult system that was not willing to put money behind an Asian as a lead in any way, and not willing to create authentic Asian characters,” Shannon Lee said.

Bruce Lee/Instagram

22 of 46Lee in front of Ruby Chow’s restaurant in Seattle, where he was a live-in waiter during his college years.Bruce Lee/Instagram

23 of 46Bruce Lee was featured in more than 20 films during his childhood in Hong Kong.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images

24 of 46Bruce Lee and some of his students at the Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute he owned. Pro basketball player and later co-star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar can be seen in the back.Bruce Lee/Instagram

25 of 46After The Green Hornet ended, Lee landed a few other supporting roles. But it proved difficult for him to find roles that depicted fully-formed Chinese or Asian characters that weren’t racialized stereotypes.Getty Images

26 of 46Bruce Lee played a Chinese immigrant in the 1969 Hollywood comedy-slash-western Here Come the Brides. ABC Photo Archives/ABC via Getty Images

27 of 46Bruce Lee and Maria Yi in a scene from Fist of Fury. Lee headed to Hong Kong in 1971 after he was unable to land more substantial roles in Hollywood.Michael Ochs Archive/Getty Images

28 of 46Bruce Lee tosses a man in a fight scene from his 1972 action flick Fist of Fury. Getty Imags

29 of 46"He didn’t love the Chinese kung fu flicks [in the 1960s] where people were flying through the air and sort of having all these magical superhuman qualities… These films didn’t really represent what he understood to be martial arts," Shannon Lee said.Bettmann/Getty Images

30 of 46Another intense fight scene of Bruce Lee from Fist of Fury. Getty Images

31 of 46Bruce Lee’s first leading role in Hong Kong was the 1971 film The Big Boss, which was followed by Fist of Fury in 1972 and The Way of the Dragon. All these films were commercial successes in countries across Asia.Bettmann/Getty Images

32 of 46Bruce Lee wields a pair of nunchucks during his final film Enter the Dragon. The movie was the first kung fu film to be produced by a major Hollywood studio.Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images

33 of 46American martial artist Chuck Norris and Bruce Lee on the set of his movie Meng Long Guo Jiang or The Way of the Dragon. Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis/Getty Images

34 of 46Lee fights his former student Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in an iconic scene from the film Game of Death. It was released five years after Lee’s death using leftover footage from Enter the Dragon.Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis/Getty Images

35 of 46Bruce Lee was frustrated after reading the orginal script for Enter the Dragon and rewrote it to include some of the most iconic scenes from the film.Bettmann/Getty Images

36 of 46American studio executives ignored Lee’s rewrites to Enter the Dragon at first but relented after the actor refused to shoot the film without his edits.Stanley Bielecki Movie Collection/Getty Images

37 of 46Bruce Lee with his son, Brandon Lee, who found success as an actor like his father through the series The Crow, 20 years after his father’s untimely death.Wikimedia Commons

38 of 46Lee’s real-life martial arts ideals were about discipline and the philosophical teachings of jeet kune do, an expression of martial arts that was personal to him.Fotos International/Archive Photos/Getty Images

39 of 46Bruce Lee with producer Fred Weintraub on the set of the 1973 film Enter the Dragon. Stanley Bielecki Movie Collection/Getty Images

40 of 46Bruce Lee’s signature yellow jumpsuit from Game of Death, which became synonymous with his onscreen legacy.Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images

41 of 46"The wardrobe department produced two tracksuits to choose from – one yellow and one that was black," said film producer Andre Morgan said. They went with the yellow suit so the footprint on the outfit would be more visible.Concord Productions Inc./Golden Harvest Company/Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty Images

42 of 46The 1970s TV series Kung Fu starring David Carradine was reportedly based on a rejected script that Lee had pitched to studios.ABC Photo Archives/ABC via Getty Images

43 of 46Bruce Lee developed his own form of kung fu known as jeet kune do, which means “way of the intercepting fist.“Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

44 of 46"I don’t think anyone looked at Asians as full humans that come in every variety under the sun, just like everybody else, because there was no representation of that,” Shannon Lee said.Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

45 of 46Lee’s Enter the Dragon remains one of his most memorable roles to date. Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

46 of 46Like this gallery?Share it:

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Bruce Lee’s Legendary Life In 45 Revealing Photographs View Gallery

Bruce Lee’s Legendary Life In 45 Revealing Photographs View Gallery

Bruce Lee’s Legendary Life In 45 Revealing Photographs View Gallery

Bruce Lee’s Legendary Life In 45 Revealing Photographs View Gallery

Bruce Lee’s Legendary Life In 45 Revealing Photographs

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Lee started his career as a martial arts teacher in Seattle, and his style of instruction attracted celebrities like actor Steve McQueen and basketball star Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. His behind-the-scenes work with Hollywood heavyweights soon translated into onscreen roles for himself, though securing these gigs was no easy task for an Asian American in ’70s Hollywood.

Indeed, despite his charisma and popularity among celebrities, Lee was constantly denied lead roles in favor of white actors in eye makeup. And when he did find onscreen work, it was usually in a role that exotified his heritage.

In 1973, Lee scored a starring role in the film Enter the Dragon, a joint production between American and Hong Kong studios. The film was a box office success, but Lee was unable to enjoy the fame that came with it.

While on a trip to Hong Kong, where he was reportedly in talks to star in another major film, Lee dropped dead in his hotel room from a brain edema. He was just 32 years old.

In his brief life, Bruce Lee brought a deeper understanding of martial arts to western audiences and changed the way Asians, and especially Chinese Americans, were represented in U.S. films and popular culture.

Bruce Lee Was Raised A Performer

Bruce Lee Family ArchiveA photo of Bruce Lee as a young man in San Francisco.

The son of a Cantonese opera star, Bruce Lee was born Jun Fan Lee on November 27, 1940, in San Francisco, California while his parents were on a performance tour through the U.S.

Lee was reportedly nicknamed Bruce by a nurse at the hospital where he was born, and even though his parents didn’t use the nickname while he was growing up, the moniker eventually stuck.

After their tour, Lee’s parents returned to Hong Kong where they enrolled him in martial arts classes under the tutelage of Yip Man, a grandmaster of the martial art of wing chun. He also took dance lessons and even won the 1958 Hong Kong cha-cha Championship.

Lee also acted as a child star in a number of movies, appearing in his first role at just three months. He went on to appear in more than 20 films while growing up.

At 18, Bruce Lee moved to the U.S. to pursue a degree in philosophy at the University of Washington in Seattle. With $100 in his pocket, the martial artist boarded a steamship to Seattle where he was able to find employment and housing with a family friend who owned a restaurant in the city. He also briefly worked as a dance instructor.

National General Picture/Getty ImagesThis photo of Bruce Lee shows him demonstrating his gung fu skills in the film The Chinese Connection.

While he finished his degree, Bruce Lee began to teach wing chun gung fu. “Gung fu” is also the Cantonese pronunciation of kung fu.

He started out teaching small groups of students outside in the city park, but as his lessons became more popular, he was eventually able to open a proper studio. Lee named the studio Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute — and it would be the first of many martial arts studios that he owned.

Bruce Lee relocated to California where he opened two other branches of the Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute in Oakland and Los Angeles. Then in 1964, the young martial artist settled down with his wife Linda and the couple had two children together, Shannon and Brandon Lee.

By this time, Bruce Lee had focused his full attention on his martial arts teachings and expanding his schools. But as fate would have it, his path would take a turn back onto familiar terrain.

Pursuing His Acting Career

Archive Photos/Getty ImagesA photo of Bruce Lee in a fighting stance.

Bruce Lee’s reputation as a talented martial artist culminated in a fateful invitation from Ed Parker, the father of American kenpo karate, who wanted him to give a demonstration at the International Karate Tournament in Long Beach.

Lee’s agile movements there caught the attention of Jay Sebring, a celebrity hairstylist who was well-connected in Hollywood. Sebring was the ex-boyfriend of starlet Sharon Tate, who Lee later trained for a film, and with whom Sebring was brutally murdered by the Manson family in 1969.

Sebring was so impressed by Bruce Lee’s demonstration that he raved about it to his client William Dozier, the producer of Batman. After reviewing a recording of Lee’s performance at the tournament, Dozier invited the martial artist for a screen test.

Lee scored his first major acting part on the 1966 American TV series The Green Hornet, where he played Kato, the superhero’s sidekick. Lee’s prowess in martial arts and his natural charisma quickly made him popular with viewers and Hollywood executives alike.

Meanwhile, Lee developed his own martial art, Jeet Kune Do, which translates to “the way of the intercepting fist.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cDkfw3jHFmw

Bruce Lee’s role on The Green Hornet did more than catapult his career, it also made cultural history in America. According to Bruce Thomas, a fellow actor and martial artist who wrote the biography Bruce Lee: Fighting Spirit, “The series marked the first time that kung fu had been seen in the West, outside the movie theaters of the Chinatown districts, and younger viewers were astonished by what they saw.”

The series’ writers even wrote in more screentime for Lee due to his popularity. But there were some difficulties offscreen with the production. Bruce Lee was often told to downplay his abilities to avoid outshining his co-star Van Williams, who played the titular role on the show. He was also forced to shoot his fight scenes in slow motion because his moves were too fast for the camera to pick up clearly.

The series only lasted a season, but it was popular enough to reach audiences in Hong Kong, where it was cheekily referred to as “The Kato Show.”

After the series ended, Bruce Lee landed a few other supporting roles. But it was 1960s Hollywood and so it was difficult for Lee to find roles that depicted fully-formed Chinese or Asian characters without racial stereotypes.

Wikimedia CommonsA picture of Bruce Lee as Kato in The Green Hornet.

According to Shannon Lee, Bruce Lee’s daughter, the performer wrote a TV script in the late 1960s about a Buddhist monk that was ultimately rejected because “a Chinese actor’s accent will be hard for people to understand.”

But just months later, studio executives made the 1970s show Kung Fu, which was awfully similar to the script Lee had pitched, with white actor David Carradine cast in the lead role.

“My father was up against a difficult system that was not willing to put money behind an Asian as a lead in any way, and not willing to create authentic Asian characters,” Shannon Lee said. “I don’t think anyone looked at Asians as full humans that come in every variety under the sun, just like everybody else, because there was no representation of that.”

Briefly disenchanted by Hollywood, Bruce Lee headed back East to Hong Kong in 1971 where a legion of adoring fans and a booming film industry awaited him.

Finally Finding Some Success — And Dying Suddenly

Bruce Lee/InstagramA photo of Bruce Lee with his wife Linda and their two children.

While his career stalled in the States, the success of Bruce Lee’s role on The Green Hornet had turned the actor into a sensation in Hong Kong.

Lee landed his first leading role in Hong Kong in the film The Big Boss in 1971, which was followed by Fist of Fury in 1972. In The Way of the Dragon, also released in 1972, Bruce Lee acted alongside a budding American martial artist-turned-actor named Chuck Norris. The films were a commercial success in multiple countries across Asia.

“Bruce Lee learned from everybody,” Norris later said of the martial artist’s ability. “He had a very open mind… He believed that everything had strengths and weaknesses and that we should find the strengths in each method.”

Soon Hollywood came knocking with earnest at Bruce Lee’s door and offered him the leading role in a film produced by American studio Warner Bros and Hong Kong studio Golden Harvest. The film began shooting in January 1973 and was released in theaters several months later — thought Lee would not live to see it.

A scene from Enter the Dragon. Pictures of Bruce Lee showcasing his martial arts ability in this film can be viewed in the gallery above.

The film, Enter the Dragon, cemented Bruce Lee’s status as a martial arts icon. But Lee never got to see any of that fame. Lee had collapsed in the midst of filming the movie in May and was subsequently diagnosed with cerebral edema, a condition in which excess fluid in the brain creates swelling and pain. Lee was treated without incident and continued with his intense training and diet.

A scene from Enter the Dragon. Pictures of Bruce Lee showcasing his martial arts ability in this film can be viewed in the gallery above.

Then, just six weeks before the film’s opening on July 20, 1973, Bruce Lee collapsed during a business trip to Hong Kong. This time the actor never woke up. An autopsy revealed that Lee had a buildup of fluid which had increased his brain size by 13 percent.

It’s believed that Bruce Lee’s death was brought on by a reaction to a pain medication that he had taken before his collapse. But the sudden and inexplicable nature of his demise has spurred conspiracy theories ever since.

Remembering Bruce Lee In Pictures

Warner Brothers/Getty ImagesLee’s 1973 film Enter The Dragon was released six weeks following his death.

Enter the Dragon was a box office hit and it catapulted Bruce Lee to international stardom following his death. Bruce Lee’s legacy of self-expression, philosophy, innovation, and equality continues to inspire people everywhere, decades after his untimely passing.

The late actor’s filmography has become an archive of iconic scenes, as seen in these pictures of Bruce Lee above, and his persona — including his signature yellow jumpsuit in Enter the Dragon — has been immortalized in pop culture. He’s also paved the way for other Asian actors like Jackie Chan and Jet Li to secure leading roles in blockbuster movies.

In 2020, the most recent Bruce Lee documentary Be Water debuted on ESPN. His daughter released a book about his martial arts philosophies in Be Water, My Friend: The Teachings of Bruce Lee and contributed as an executive producer on the Cinemax martial arts series Warrior. The show’s script was based on an original concept by Bruce Lee, and its second season premiered in October 2020.

“His words are timeless, really,” Shannon said, “and I just feel like when I read his words, I feel soothed. I feel hopeful. I feel energized. Those are all things that we will always need and, in some ways, now more than ever.”

Now that you’ve explored these pictures of Bruce Lee, absorb some of the martial artist’s teachings through these famous Bruce Lee quotes. Then, read about what happened when Bruce Lee fought a real kung fu master.