Bruce Lee was taught the escrima or kali sticks by his friend Dan Inosanto, along with the nunchaku as well, late sixties.
Bruce used a pair of wooden kali sticks covered in a thin rubber-like material in the underground fight scenes of Enter the Dragon 1973. One of the wooden sticks is broken inside its covering near one end, as can been seen on film. These actual used sticks are with a top UK collector. As with most props a second set was made for backup, likely with a Japanese collector.
I like to use WikiAnswers' Bruce Lee category for that.
It does not seem like Bruce Lee used cocaine because no traces of it showed up in his autopsy.
Bruce and I
Yes, he has two in particular. One is "Yuen Biao," who does the acrobatic work for "Bruce Lee" and would later have a successful career in Hong Kong cinema. The other is "Kim Tai Chung," a Korean Tae Kwon Do expert, who doubles for Lee in fight scenes in "Game of Death," then later for "Tower of Death."
Yes, Bruce Lee had his own Bullworker, the original steel tube version, his had brown grip handles each end. There are many pictures of him with his Bullworker in his office at Golden Harvest studios, he always leant it against the corner behind his desk, so he could pick it up anytime to train. The actual Bullworker Bruce owned and used is with a UK collector.
I like to use WikiAnswers' Bruce Lee category for that.
The use of sticks is similar to the Philipino art of Kali. And it is similar to fencing and sword work as well.
A combination of body stance and motion techniques, along with muscle memory.
I don't think Bruce Lee ever documented his workouts since he didn't want anyone to use it as advertisements. The best documentation you can find about his workouts is "The Art of Expressing the Human Body" by John Little
It does not seem like Bruce Lee used cocaine because no traces of it showed up in his autopsy.
Bruce studied a style of Chinese kung fu named Wing Chun. The Chinese don't traditionally use belts, that is a Japanese style.
Bruce and I
Yes, he has two in particular. One is "Yuen Biao," who does the acrobatic work for "Bruce Lee" and would later have a successful career in Hong Kong cinema. The other is "Kim Tai Chung," a Korean Tae Kwon Do expert, who doubles for Lee in fight scenes in "Game of Death," then later for "Tower of Death."
You use sticks, but a special pair of snare sticks. You do NOT want to use trap set sticks on a marching snare drum. If it's a trap set snare drum then you can use thinner trap set sticks.
Yes, Bruce Lee had his own Bullworker, the original steel tube version, his had brown grip handles each end. There are many pictures of him with his Bullworker in his office at Golden Harvest studios, he always leant it against the corner behind his desk, so he could pick it up anytime to train. The actual Bullworker Bruce owned and used is with a UK collector.
Bruce Lee had a mastery of many forms of martial arts. Linguistics professors must have a mastery of all common words in English.
tony jaa would destroy Bruce lee. Bruce doesn't even compare to jaa It very clear that Bruce Lee would have won this fight. Why? because Bruce Lee was a real fighter he grew up fighting, I think that the reason we would say otherwise is because we base our answers on what we see in movies, Tony Jaa is a great fighter but I've never seen any of his real stuff Bruce Lee on the other hand you can youtube him and you'll find him fighting in tournaments, you'll find him peforming his 1 inch punch, Bruce started out as a street fighter and once he learned how to fight well he got older and famous but that didnt keep him from his focus which was to find what fighting tequniques worked. He later found that there was not one but many, the reason I mention this is because it is important that you know he would have won because he had more than one fighting style he said "Use only that which works, and take it from any place you can find it." Bruce Lee was the real deal and to the person that said Bruce Lee doesn't even compare to Jaa well that is a biased answer, as a matter of fact Tony Jaa grew up watching Bruce Lee movies. "What they do was so beutiful, so heroic that I wanted to do it to" Tony Jaa told time in 2004 interview "I practiced until I could do the move exactly as I had seen the masters do it."