From Tai Chi in Guangdong to the one-inch punch and global fame — the story of Jeet Kune Do
This is covered in a CCTV+ report.
Bruce Lee is more than just an icon of martial arts. From his roots in southern China’s Guangdong province to his revolutionary approach to combat, his journey showed how tradition and personal philosophy can unite to create something unique: Jeet Kune Do.
To understand the story behind Jeet Kune Do, one must visit his ancestral home in Guangzhou.
He Jingzi, a guide at Yongqingfang, Bruce Lee’s ancestral home, says: “We are now in the main hall of Bruce Lee’s ancestral house, which is considered the heart of the traditional Xiguan mansion. The plaque above reads: ‘A Family of Opera and Martial Arts’, reflecting the spirit of Bruce Lee’s father, Lee Hoi-chuen.”
Lee Hoi-chuen was a master of Cantonese opera and also a skilled Tai Chi master.
Bruce Lee began learning Tai Chi from his father at the age of seven. At 13, he became a student of Ip Man and started learning Wing Chun. By that time, he had entered his teenage years and became somewhat of a rebel. He felt that Tai Chi was too soft and could not satisfy his needs.
Cheng Zhaowei, an inheritor of the Cheng style in Guangzhou, explains how Bruce Lee’s experience in Wing Chun helped him create Jeet Kune Do: “Wing Chun includes the ‘Twelve Forms and Eight Principles’. Bruce Lee took the concept of ‘jeet’, which means ‘intercept’, and developed it further. In Wing Chun, interception means that when your opponent attacks, you meet them, intercept their movement mid-stroke and immediately counterattack. This aligns with the balance philosophy of Chinese Yin-Yang theory. You intercept, then immediately attack. Then came his ‘one-inch punch’. Very fast.”
Starting with Wing Chun, Bruce Lee gradually became a martial arts master. In 1959, he moved to the United States and was exposed to many different martial arts styles. Breaking with tradition, he combined Wing Chun with his own philosophy, creating a unique martial arts system known as Jeet Kune Do.
From tradition to innovation — this spirit is reflected not only in Bruce Lee’s martial arts but also in his films. Between 1971 and 1973, in just three years, he starred in five films, earning worldwide fame that has lasted for more than half a century.
Bruce Lee’s path is not just a change of techniques. It is a dialogue between father and son, between the softness of Tai Chi and the hardness of street fighting, between tradition and rebellion. It is this dialogue that created Jeet Kune Do — an art that, like the master himself, still knows no boundaries.