Kung fu
icon Bruce Lee celebrated in new exhibition in Hong Kong to mark 40 years since
martial arts legend's untimely death. A towering statue of kung
fu legend Bruce Lee in action looms above the displays at a new exhibition
marking 40 years since the star's death.
Bruce Lee: Kung Fu, Art,
Life, which opened in Hong Kong today on the anniversary of Lee's death, features
everything from the famous yellow tracksuit he wore in 'Game of Death' to poems
he wrote as a young man, to the 3.5 metre high statue illustrating his physical
skill to powerful effect.
Organised by the Bruce Lee
Foundation together with the Hong Kong government, the showcase charts his
journey from child actor and kung fu student to fully-fledged martial arts
icon.
Lee, who was born in San Francisco but raised in Hong
Kong, died at the height of his fame due to an allergic reaction to painkillers
at the age of 32.
His last film, Enter the
Dragon, was released six days after his death and became his most popular
movie.
Shannon Lee, who was just four-years-old when her
father died, said people often assume she is similar skilled in martial arts
when they realise she is the kung fu icon's daughter.
'People immediately assume
that I am some amazingly skilled and deadly martial artist,' said Ms Lee, 44,
who said she has studied martial arts in the past, but pursued a career in
business.
Ms Lee, who has a
10-year-old daughter, Wren, and is president of the Bruce Lee Foundation, said
that, while he is a legend in the world of martial arts, there was more to her
father than his astonishing kung fu skills.
She hopes the new
exhibition will show a more 'complete picture' by revealing Lee's family side,
the poetry he wrote, and the effort that went into creating apparently
effortless action scenes in his movies, she said.
'I think a lot of people
see the final product up on screen and they go, "Oh, there's a talented
guy", but they don't see all the effort that went into it,' she said.
Ms Lee said working to
promote her father's legacy was inspiring because she gets to see 'how many
lives he's touched in such a positive way, and if I can keep that going, that's
meaningful'.
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