Interview Part I (BlackBelt January
1997)
The leading Authority on Bruce Lee's
Fighting Arts Calls for a Halt to Fraudulent Use of His Teacher's Name.
BB: No one in the Jeet Kune Do community has been subjected to more
questions and scrutiny than you have when it comes to matters of Bruce Lee
and his teachings. Have the many years of turmoil and controversy taken a
toll on you?
INOSANTO: I am 60 years old. Over half of my life has been devoted to Bruce
Lee's art and teachings. I am secure in knowing that I have done what Bruce
Lee asked me to do. I am secure in knowing that I am the only individual
Bruce entrusted to teach, promote and carry on for him. I'm not perfect and,
in hindsight, I should have put a stop to a lot of the fraud and misuse of
Bruce's name by people passing themselves off as legitimate teachers
of Bruce Lee's arts. I have always given people the benefit of the doubt and
perhaps more credit than they deserve in representing the truth about
themselves and their training background and credentials. People often say,
"Dan's too nice." Bruce said I was too nice sometimes, but he also told me
humility is another form of pride. I choose not to use it as a forum to
expose the inconsistencies and faults of those individuals. Life is far too
short to waste time and energy on such negativity. Martial arts have become
so political and commercialized in recent years. People spend more time
putting down other martial arts than they do training, teaching and using
their art to bring something to the community. I wish martial arts
publications would devote more time to promoting how martial arts can
be used for good in the world, and to unite cultures, races and communities.
BB: Did you feel a lot of pressure after Lee's death to take the reins of
Jeet Kune do and continue his teachings?
INOSANTO: At the time of Bruce's death, I was not prepared for the attention
and media interest that would follow me the rest of my life. I am continuing
to do today what I have done in the past and what I, and I alone, have been
given the authority and right by Bruce himself to do, and that is to teach,
certify instructors, conduct classes, and promote his name, his arts, his
life and his legacy.
BB: Is it true that, besides yourself, Taky Kimura is the only other living
instructor who is authorized to teach Bruce Lee's arts?
INOSANTO: Taky, the late James Lee and myself are the only three individuals
ever to be given the authority directly from Bruce to teach and carry on his
arts. Taky was Bruce Lee's most senior student in Seattle. Bruce trusted and
respected him. Bruce would often remind me that, no matter how much I
learned, Taky was still my senior and should always be paid the respect that
goes with that seniority. Bruce could be quite traditional at times,
especially when it came to titles of respect.
BB: How many arts did Bruce Lee teach you?
INOSANTO: Bruce actually taught three arts which he developed himself: his
Tao of Chinese kung fu, his method of Jun Fan kung fu and his Jeet Kune do.
BB: Was all your training with BL conducted on a one to one basis?
INOSANTO: Yes.
BB: When BL later opened his Jun Fan Institute in Los Angeles' Chinatown,
you did most of the teaching, did you not?
INOSANTO: Bruce would step in (occasionally) to correct and explain certain
things, but I taught between 90 and 95 percent of all the classes at the Jun
Fan Institute. But I asked Bruce to please stop in and work with the
students periodically. I knew the experience of being able to work with
Bruce was so extraordinary that I wanted the others to have the opportunity
to encounter his presence.
BB: What did the teaching curriculum encompass?
INOSANTO: There was a constant evolution going on. Bruce was constantly
researching every martial art he could find information on. His library was
quite extensive for that time period-or any time period. I'm not saying that
Bruce studied all {martial arts}, but he definitely researched the existing
knowledge that was available at that time. For example, he might not have
embraced completely what he knew in wing chun, but there was definitely an
element of wing chun in his system. He didn't embrace everything in the
southern mantis system, but there are elements of southern mantis in jeet
kune do. He also researched muay Thai; he liked the contact. Bruce also took
elements from French savate. He liked the coup de pied bas (oblique kick),
as well as the lateral chasse kick.
BB: How did BL feel about kali and silat, the arts you tend to focus on in
your teachings today?
INOSANTO: In regard to kali, he, again, researched it, and he would ask me
to show him what I had learned. He would place techniques into four
categories: not good, good, good for stage shows, and good for movies. He
was constantly exploring the cinematic effects of various movements. He also
researched silat. In Bruce's handwritten notes, he states that" a pentjak [silat]
person is a well-conditioned athlete."
Silat was also known for its ground fighting and he made a note to
"investigate into [silat] groundfighting. " Bruce researched all the arts
all of the time, but he kept a tight rein on the amount of knowledge he
wanted to give out at the Chinatown school. He severely limited the amount
of material he allowed me to teach. Bruce dictated that I teach only about
one-tenth of the actual material he had developed at that time. I always
hoped that he would allow me to open up and teach a little more material,
but that is the way Bruce wanted it.
BB: Did you join BL in his research on various martial arts?
INOSANTO: Yes, I feel fortunate that I was able to join him in his research
and development during this time. Bruce was always a researcher and a
philosopher. His notes and papers reflect years of searching for knowledge
and all that
could be used toward his "personal liberation." He wrote a series of papers
including "Jun Fan Kung Fu, Toward Personal Liberation." And "Jeet Kune Do,
Toward Personal Liberation." I still refer to them. They have been
invaluable to me in continuing on for Bruce in the
way he wanted his arts, philosophies, principles and concepts to be taught
and remembered.
BB: How does one go about "authenticating Jun Fan or jeet kune do
instructor's
lineage?
INOSANTO: The lineage's of Jun Fan kung fu and jeet kune do are the easiest
of all martial art lines to trace. Bruce made only three instructors during
his lifetime: James Lee, who had made no instructors at the time of his
death; Taky Kimura, who was certified to teach Jun Fan Kung Fu by Bruce, but
to date has made no instructors; and myself. We are the only instructors to
have been given complete and absolute authority to teach, promote, grade and
carry on Bruce's three arts.
BB: Have you promoted any students to instructor level?
INOSANTO: I have made instructors in Jun Fan kung fu. The only legitimate
lineage back to Bruce Lee, in terms of instructors, is through my line. I
must explain a little about my line of instructors. After Bruce's death, I
gave the title of instructor to several students, but did not certify these
individuals, I felt it was important at the time - especially with the
feeling of loss that was felt by all during the passing of Bruce Lee- to
form a support system and to hopefully continue in the perpetuating of
Bruce's methods. Many of these individuals all but disappeared for the next
20 years in regards to Bruce's arts, and continued on with their lives,
pursuing other areas. Several years later, I started my existing
instructor's program. During the last 10 years, I have raised the standards
and made the requirements much more stringent on those entering and
progressing through my program.
BB: What is the "original" jeet kune do and how does it differ from jeet
kune do "concepts" ? Many of our readers seem confused by these two terms.
INOSANTO: Actually, there is no difference between original jeet kune do and
jeet kune do concepts because, to practice the concepts of jeet kune do, one
has to know the original jeet kune do material, which is called Jun Fan kung
fu. I use the term jeet kune do concepts to emphasize that jeet kune do is a
concept. Jeet kune do was Bruce's personal research and development in what
worked for him in combat. Can you teach Jeet kune do? I have always said,
"Yes." Can you standardize jeet kune do? I say "No." Because in Bruce's own
words, "Jeet kune do is finding the cause of your own ignorance. Jeet kune
do favors the formless. Jeet kune do utilizes all ways and is bound by
none." Since each individual is different, he must find the cause of his own
ignorance and must utilize all ways that personally fit him. So original
jeet kune do is really Jun fan kung fu, the material that was handed down by
Bruce when he was alive. Jun Fan kung fu can be taught and is standardized
so that students can learn it easily. Jun Fan kung fu provides the basic
training methods, techniques, strategies, principles and concepts for combat
and self-defense. Jun Fan kung fu basics prepare you for your own personal
way of combat.
BB: Is it true that you taught martial arts to Bruce Lee's son. Brandon Lee?
INOSANTO: As a young boy, Brandon came in for training just once. But as an
adult, he came in earnest to study and train. He really became serious, and
he was truly talented. I trained him with the idea that perhaps someday he
could take over [his father's system]. When he began to train, I told him
"Brandon, you can train strictly in Jun Fan kung fu; you don't have to take
the kali, silat, muay Thai, savate or shootwrestling [I teach many of my
other students]. You can train in whatever you want here. "I thought he
would train strictly in his father's arts, but he said he wanted to train in
everything. Brandon was very open to anything he could use, and one day I
said to him "It is so hard following your father. Some people say I'm doing
this right, and others say I'm doing this wrong, and this is all so hard for
me." Brandon's response was "Tell me about it! I know what you are going
through."
BB: Brandon Lee asked you to be in several of his movies, yet you declined.
Why?
INOSANTO: I didn't want to do it because people would say I was riding on
the shoulders of Brandon Lee, the son of Bruce Lee. Brandon thought this was
ridiculous, but I know how people in the martial arts community talk.
BB: Were you like a father figure to Brandon?
INOSANTO: Brandon would always come by my house and talk to me about
problems he was having. But he really developed a close relationship with my
wife, Paula, and talked with her about more personal issues.
BB: How would you rate Brandon's abilities as a martial artist?
INOSANTO: He excelled at everything he trained in. He became certified in
Thai Boxing, as well as his father's arts.
BB: Does it bother you to see how heavily Bruce Lee has been marketed since
his death more than 20 years ago?
INOSANTO: Bruce Lee has become a commodity, a product. People are selling,
marketing and capitalizing on every phase of his life. This really saddens
me. Bruce was not only my teacher, but also my close friend. Even today when
I am asked about him, I can still get emotional. Bruce was far more than a
piece of martial arts merchandise. He was a human being, complete with
faults like all of us. Yet Bruce left the martial arts world with a strong
and powerful gift.
-Dan Inosanto