With labels like "legend" and "legacy" flying around in the psyche of the
martial arts community, expectation and anticipation are often major
factors in any encounter with Shannon Lee. This is the battle that the
daughter of Bruce Lee has now decided to wage as she leaves the overcast
skies of doubt and enigma to step into the sunshine of credibility and
truth. Shannon is stepping out, and as one might guess, a large part of
that strut has its foundation in the martial arts.
When I ask the music major from New
Orleans' Tulane University where she was born, she nonchalantly answers:
"Born in LA, the daughter of an actor and martial artist. I always had in
me the desire to perform. Even as a small child I'd make up stories and
perform all the time, running around the house singing. I will always have
a passion for music, and I love to sing. Now I'm a classically trained
singer."
Moments later, I'm
not getting a demonstration of her piano prowess; rather, I get treated to
a concert of blood, sweat and tears as she first twists her body into
pretzeled positions worthy of a yoga master, then goes three rounds with
her kickboxing instructor, Benny "The Jet" Urquidez.
One quickly realizes that Shannon is
not her father or even her brother; she is her own self, developing her
own identity. While many actresses, under the guidance of star-struck
martial arts instructors, partake in kickboxing aerobics to fool
themselves into thinking they are martial artists, Shannon's technique has
transcended that distinct thinking-you-are-powerful-when-you're-really-not
phase. With good rhythm and steady footwork, her punches and kicks appear
as true as anyone else's as trainer Urquidez offers her targets that she
quickly attacks then counters.
Crash Course
It's a different time and place, and Shannon and I are now able to talk in
peace, but that moment will soon fade as she prepares for her wushu
lessons. "I'm only now beginning to understand what my father went through
to reach the level he attained," she admits. "Yet through all this
training in martial arts and doing the action film Enter the Eagles in
Hong Kong, I've discovered a new appreciation for my father's passions,
and that has helped me in getting to know my father better."
So what exactly has
Shannon Lee been
up to? She explains: "I guess I started when I was young. Mom said that my
father used to fool around with us, having us throw punches and kicks. I
was much younger, so I didn't do it to the extent of [my brother] Brandon.
I started doing jeet kune do with Richard Bustillo, one of my dad's
students, but then I just stopped."
I ask if she stopped because everyone
kept telling her that she had to train because her father did, because
people expected her and Brandon to follow suit. She raises an eyebrow and
responds: "Nobody really said that to me, which was good. It wasn't that I
resented it, but at the same time I stayed away from it probably because
people did want me to practice martial arts. But nobody ever forced me to
train. Besides, when you disassociate from that world, you are not around
martial artists and people telling you to practice. My mother never forced
us to do anything like that. I actually liked soccer."
After a reflective pause, she
continues: "I started doing jeet kune do again but with Ted Wong this
time-and I still do that. When I got involved in action films, I upped the
pace of my training and started preparing for my first Hong Kong film,
Enter the Eagles, by studying taekwondo with Dung Doa Liang [who starred
in John Woo's Hands of Death, which featured Jackie Chan and Sammo Hung]. At
the same time I've been studying wushu with Eric Chen.
"Once I started Eagles, I began
training with Yuen Tak (Yuen De), one of Jackie Chan's opera brothers, and
other stunt guys over there," she continues. "That was a good experience
because real and film martial arts are different. It forced me to have the
mental and physical flexibility to change and do exaggerated movements.
Yuen Kwei [Chan's other "brother" and Lethal Weapon IV's fight director]
also helped with the training. We did a lot of trapping, stylized and
jumping kicks, sweeps and other things. I was comfortable with it because
of the wushu training, but I'm still not comfortable with specific styles
like praying mantis and animal forms. Those things do intrigue me; I just
haven't learned them yet.
"But when they brought in Benny Urquidez to be the bad guy, which they
didn't decide until halfway into the film, he started teaching me
kickboxing, and I have kept at it ever since."
Hollywood, Here I Come
Although she once visited the set of
Enter the Dragon, Shannon's first real taste for film came while she
served as her brother's assistant on the set of Rapid Fire. With Brandon's
support, she decided to pursue film as a career, which led to a cameo on
Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story.
"Ah, yes," she fondly recalls, I
actually did my first passion in that: I sang California Dreaming in the
scene where Lauren [Holly] and Jason [Scott Lee] are dancing at the Green
Hornet party when they announce the show had been canceled and she tells
him that she's pregnant with me."
Shannon next appeared as the bad
guy's kept woman in Lou Ferrigno's Cage 2: The Arena of Death. Her first
major action role was as an undercover cop investigating a
Vietnamese-Mafia-owned bank in High Risk, a film that afforded her the
opportunity to do two small fights: one at a biker bar and one against the
lead Mafia bad guy. But it is in her latest Hong Kong action film,
Enter the Eagles, that Lee really shines.
Filmed mostly in Prague but with
fights later shot in Hong Kong, the movie features Lee as an assassin who
is partnered with a guy hired to steal a diamond for a crime boss played
by Urquidez. Yuen De's fight choreography is staggering, especially when
you realize that it's Shannon rappelling and flying back and forth on top
of a long rickety ladder standing between building tops and flipping and
spinning her way around the place while throwing kicks and punches you
never even saw her father do. But again, it is not a Bruce Lee film; it is
a Shannon Lee film.
After the diamond theft goes awry, Shannon must fight for her life against
Urquidez's character, something that was not initially planned. The
retired kickboxing champ fills us in on the details which tell us more
about what makes Shannon Lee tick.
"When I trained Shannon, I pushed her
hard, training twice a day for the film," Urquidez says. "When she asked
why I was training her like that, I explained that in Hong Kong they don't
care if you are a woman or not. The difference between here and there is
that here you want things to look real, and there they must feel real.
"My fight with Shannon was
just supposed to be for a few days, but after they saw her kickbox we
fought straight for four weeks," Urquidez says. "On a close shot they
wanted me to make contact with her, so I asked her if she wanted a double,
but she refused. The director yelled, 'Action.' Bam. I knocked her flying
back to the ground, and I saw she couldn't breathe. She had a tear in her
eye. I couldn't rush over until the director said cut. I asked her to
breathe, and she said, 'I would if I could.' I felt bad.
"The director said to do it again,
and I told him we should use a double for Shannon," Urquidez says. "He
said OK So again I asked Shannon, but she refused. Then, bam, I hit her
again, and this time it was worse. Now I felt worse, like a real heel, but
she just said, "It's OK, don't worry. I'm just sensitive."
"Then it was her turn to kick me in
the face," Urquidez says. "I told her I'd rather be hit hard just one
time-as hard as she can. She said, 'I know, I'll hit you hard.'
"The director said, 'Action.' Bam. I
went flying back with a waffle print on my face. After the third time, I
was looking for some sympathy from her. None. I smiled to myself and
thought, 'OK, it's payback.' She earned my respect after that. Of course,
we all hugged later."
More Testimony
Although Shannon is still nervous and worries about the expectations
people have of her, she admits that making that film taught her that she
can't torture herself by constantly comparing herself to her father. "I'm
not my dad, and I can do only the best that I can," she says. "It's all
about me developing my own personal style. I don't have the depth of
knowledge my father had, and I haven't studied everything he's written.
I'm in the process. I think people assume that I'm at either end of the
spectrum: I know nothing or everything. I'm actually somewhere in
between."
Sammo Hung, one of the other fight
choreographers for Enter the Eagles and star of CBS' Martial Law, offers
his thoughts and observations on the subject: "It's unfair to compare her
to her father because her father was the biggest star and most
representative of Chinese philosophy and kung fu. You can't even compare
Jackie [Chan] with Bruce because they have different styles. Plus, it
doesn't matter whose daughter she is. Everyone has his or her own
abilities and foundation.
"I will say that when I heard I was going to work with her, I didn't know
about her abilities," Hung continues. "When we did drills, she surprised me. She was pretty good. She works hard and has natural abilities.
Whatever I asked her to do, she did."
The Legacy
Does Shannon ever tire of people telling her about how much her father meant to
them? "That happens a lot, but I'm not really recognized on the street
where people approach me and tell me that," she says. "But when I'm at
martial arts functions, people tell me all the time. It always amazes me
how many lives he has touched. I never realized this in college because I
was doing my own thing, but it's now dawning on me-especially in the
entertainment industry and now that I'm now in contact with more people
not my age.
"After I recently saw Enter the Dragon for the first time, [I noticed that]
everyone in the parking lot was just so psyched," Shannon continues. "[My father] wowed people
with practical power. His kung fu skill level was different from the showy ballet-like skill we
see a lot now. He had the ability to blow you away with one punch. So in that way, people think
that, 'if I work that hard, I can do it, too.' He just inspired people
that way.
"The martial arts
are physical and spiritual; you can't really separate the two," Shannon
says. "In order to better yourself, you have to have a philosophical
understanding-not just physicalbecause the only way to finesse and to
understanding your movement to the maximum potential is to ingrain them in
your thoughts.
"The past few
years has been an awakening process for me. It's funny that when you have
a tragedy in your life, you can separate your life into [the time] before
the tragedy and [the time] after the tragedy. I've had two tragedies. I
was young when my father died, and it's only now as an adult that I'm
starting to see how that is affecting me. But when Brandon died, it was at
a moment of my life when I was going to step out and be my own person. It
has been difficult to grow out of that experience. It's hard to grow out
of any tragedy, but at the same time it's an excellent way to grow. You
have no choice: You either do or you don't."
It can be said that with each end
comes a new beginning, but there is never a guarantee that the new
beginning will be better. It's not a question of whether Shannon Lee is
ready or not; it's a question of whether the public is prepared to see her
as Shannon Lee and not as the daughter of Bruce Lee.
Shannon's career isn't simply a
calculated path to fame and fortune; it's a road to the understanding of
her past and what that means to her. And let's face it: To martial
artists, a lot of her past is part of their past.
Today, I'm left with the image of
Shannon's contorted expressions and gestures as she wrestled to better
herself as a person through the difficult road to mastery of the martial
arts. So just how good is she? To quote one of her teachers, Benny "the
Jet" Urquidez, "That woman can kick some rump."
About the author: Dr. Craig D. Reid is a Los Angeles-based fight
choreographer with more than 15 years of experience in the film business.