Bruce Lee's Hong Kong Years
A couple of "juvenile delinquents" named Bruce Lee and
Hawkins Cheung roamed the streets of Hong Kong, picking
fights, having fun and refining their martial arts
techniques.
By Hawkins Cheung, as told to Robert Chu, in "Inside
Kung-Fu" November 1991
Hawkins
Cheung began his training in 1953 under the late
grandmaster Yip Man. He attended high school with the
legendary Bruce Lee and during evenings, the two would
diligently practice wing chun together. To gain combat
experience, they would engage in challenge matches; when
they didn't have opponents to fight, they fought each
other. They were later separated when Bruce went to college
in the U.S. and Hawkins attended college in Australia.
Throughout the years, the two kept in touch through letters
and phone calls. Bruce would detail his martial arts
development through their conversations and correspondence
using Cheung as a sounding board. Hawkins Cheung is one of
the few individuals who experienced the progression that
Lee went through in his martial art development from wing
chun to Jun Fan to jeet kune do. The two were reunited in
Hong Kong in 1970, when Lee returned home to make movies.
The two shared and exchanged fighting experiences and
training methods. They remained in close contact until
Bruce's death in 1973. Hawkins also is well schooled in
other martial arts styles. He is particularly skilled in
the Wu style of tai chi but he is familiar with the Yang,
Chen and Sun styles as well. Master Cheung has also gained
experience in Japanese karate-do and currently holds a
fourth-degree black belt. In 1978, Cheung immigrated to the
U.S. to promote wing chun. He is currently head instructor
of the Hawkins Cheung Asian Martial Arts Academy in Los
Angeles. He has appeared in several issues of Inside
Kung-Fu magazine, given numerous public demonstrations, and
appeared on television. He has always been low key about
his relationship with Bruce Lee. Now that his friend has
died, he finds that many of Bruce's followers are
distorting the real meaning of his jeet kune do. In this
four-part series on Bruce Lee and jeet kune do, Cheung
examines Bruce's development, from his early days in Hong
Kong to his final days as a film star, his creation of JKD,
and the characteristics of the now-famous art.
Hong
Kong in the l95Os was a depressed place. Post-World War II
Hong Kong had suffered from unemployment, a poor economy,
over-crowding, homelessness, and people taking advantage of
each other. Gangs roamed the street, and juvenile
delinquents ran rampant.
I met Bruce in intermediate school; he had been expelled
from the famous European LaSalle Intermediate School to the
Eurasian Francis Xavier Intermediate School which I
attended. I used to make fun of him and call him "Bad Boy"
because he was expelled. That was the beginning of our
friendship. There was a real political situation in 195Os
Hong Kong. The British led the colony and would sometimes
treat the Chinese like dogs.
Bruce wasn't a big star then, he was just an ordinary guy.
We started to learn wing chun to survive. When we weren't
fighting others, we fought each other. We would argue about
our wing chun training, and would argue about our personal
experience and knowledge. Everyone wanted to be top dog. We
would purposely hold back information that we gathered.
Everyone had to find his own source, and not let the others
know what we learned. We would purposely hide a trick that
we would get from Yip Man, the Seniors, or friends from
other styles. We weren't concerned about how good the
gung-fu looked, just whether it worked. Everyone wanted to
know how to get the job done.
We were good buddies. We wouldn't openly share our
knowledge, but we tried to steal each other's card.
Whenever we learned a new method or technique, we would add
it to our repertoire. Bruce would use a new trick on me,
the next time I would throw it back to him first. We always
asked ourselves where was the other's source?
Against outsiders we were allies, but with no one to fight
against, we fought each other. To test and see Bruce's
skill, I would purposely instigate or set up a fight. I
would watch Bruce fight, and be a bystander to see how well
he did. He would do the same. If he won, we would laugh;
but if he lost, he would lose face and work harder to find
a better means of beating an opponent.
We would play tricks on our opponents to psyche them out,
sometimes hiding our best techniques. What someone would
throw to us, we'd throw the technique right back to him.
Our competitive spirit was not only in martial arts, but
extended in daily life. Everyone knew that Bruce was good
at dancing the cha-cha. At school, I knew some Filipino
friends who were pretty good too, so I would pick up steps
to show up Bruce. The next time I saw Bruce, he had a bunch
of new steps! I questioned my friend to see if he had
taught Bruce those new steps, but he denied any knowledge.
I later found out that he went to my Filipino friend's
dance instructor to learn more steps! That was our
character---to always look for a new source. I later went
to the same dance instructor and tried to persuade him not
to teach Bruce.
William Cheung and Wong Shun Leung were Bruce's source of
information on wing chun. They were our seniors, but we
couldn't openly let them know what level we were at for
fear they wouldn't show us more. If a senior got into a
street fight, however, and lost, we could find out his
standard. If we couldn't figure out a problem, we would
have to ask the old man (Yip Man) from different angles.
When we matured, we began to share more openly.
I lived a couple of blocks from Bruce. Being from
well-to-do families, we would sometimes have our driver
pick up one another, if we wanted to hang out we would
sometimes spend a weekend at each other's home. When we had
final exams, we would study together.
We still kept up our old game. We would play tricks on an
unsuspecting participant, one guy playing "good guy," the
other being the "bad guy." One time, we persuaded two
younger European classmates to fight each other. They were
a grade younger than us and were good friends. Bruce and I
separated them, and to find out who was the better
instructor, we each picked one and trained him to beat each
other up.
Bruce's nickname at school was "Gorilla," because he was
muscular and walked around with his arms at his sides.
Everyone feared him, but I was the only one who called him
"Chicken legs." He'd get really mad and chase me all over
the school yard. Our friendship was very close.
Our school was the best in soccer, but Bruce and I never
participated in any team sports. One day, there was an
announcement that there was an inter-school boxing
championship. The all English Saint George Intermediate
school held the championship. Our school didn't have a
boxing team. Someone in our school suggested that we get a
boxing team together. We had a reputation in the school as
being the naughtiest, so someone suggested that Bruce and I
get involved.
The night of the match, I went into the champ's dressing
room. He was my friend's brother. Bruce was supposed to
face him. I spoke to the champ and warned him that he was
facing the Gorilla now, who was an expert in gung-fu, not
boxing, so he'd better watch out!
The champ was intimidated, because he heard that Bruce and
I practiced gung-fu together. Bruce, on the other hand, was
concerned that we never boxed before. At the beginning of
the fight, Bruce attacked his opponent from the inside with
a tan da and cut to his opponent's center. The champ was
psychologically unbalanced, while Bruce continued to
use
tan da
with a follow-up of straight punches to the champ's face,
and blew him out. Bruce won the championship!
The next match was myself and another for the lightweight
championship. I was disqualified for using
pak da,
which the judges considered against the rules. In 1958, we
graduated from high school. Bruce said that he was going to
the U.S. upon his father's request. Bruce didn't want to
go, but his father forced him. Bruce feared his father and
had to comply. I was deciding to attend college in
Australia. I asked Bruce what he wanted to study. Bruce
replied he was going to be a dentist. I cracked up and
laughed in his face! "You, a dentist?" I said, 'Your
patients would lose all their teeth."
Bruce said that his father would support him and pay for
his expenses in the U.S., but he wanted to be independent.
To make money on the side, he said he would teach wing
chun. I replied that he didn't have much to teach at that
time; we had both only learned up to the second wing chun
form, chum kiu, and 40 movements on the dummy. We had a
friend whom we called "Uncle Shiu" (Shiu Hon Sang), who
taught northern styles of gung-fu. Bruce thought it would
be a good idea to learn some of the more pretty, showy
styles before he left. Bruce learned northern style for
showmanship. In the late 195Os, Bruce had already planned
to hide his art. Many were looking for the showmanship, not
the killer. Bruce would give them what they wanted.
We went to Uncle Shin's gung-fu club at seven every
morning. We began to learn lam ad (a basic northern style
gung-fu set). I hated master Shin's dog, and his dog hated
me equally, as he would bark at me every time I visited.
Finally, the early mornings and the loud dog made me drop
out. Bruce continued for two months more and learned
gung lik kuen
(training power fist set),
bung bo kuen
(a basic praying mantis set), and
jeet kuen
(quick fist), all northern style sets.
Prior to any Hong Kong resident leaving for a new country,
you had to check with the police station to make sure your
record was clean. Bruce applied for this certificate, and
found that our names were on a blacklist of known juvenile
delinquents. He called me at home. "Hawkins, big trouble,"
Bruce exclaimed. "Our names are on a known gangster list.
I'm going down to the police station to clear my name, and
while I'm there, I'll clear yours, too.", I thanked him.
A
few days later, a police investigator came to my house and
questioned me about gang relations. Bruce's efforts to
clear me actually got me more in trouble. My father had to
pay off this investigator to have my name wiped from the
record, or else I wouldn't have been able to attend college
in Australia. I hated Bruce for that!
The
day he left, I escorted him to the dock. After many years
of being as close as twins, we would be apart for the first
time. It would be many years before our paths would again
cross.