Friends of Bruce Lee podcast

Bruce Lee had an incredibly tight group of friends. He would enjoy talking philosophy with them, working out, and training martial arts. He trusted them so much that he even had them run his martial art schools. This core groups was especially important to him after he became famous and many pretended to be his friend. Two of the most important were Dan Inosanto and Richard Bustillo.

Part 1 Dan Inosanto

Dan Inosanto was one of Bruce Lee’s best friends and most important students. He appeared alongside Lee on stage, film, and television. After Lee’s passing Inosanto became one of the most influential teachers of Lee’s art of Jeet Kune Do.

Early Life

Dan Inosanto was born in 1936 and learned Karate from his uncle at age 11. He later went on to learn Judo and Jujitsu. In 1959 he joined the army and served as a paratrooper until 1961 (Wikipedia, Inosanto).

Close Friendship

Inosanto met Bruce Lee in the summer of 1964 when Lee gave a demonstration at the Long Beach International Karate Championship. Inosanto was assigned to be Lee’s guide by organizer Ed Parker. “Mr. Parker gave me $75 and said, ‘Make sure he eats properly, and show him the area.’” (Life, page 146).

When they met, Lee asked Inosanto to hit him as hard as possible.

“In the hotel room [Lee] says you can choose everything, you can side kick, you can front kick and I’ll just use my jab. He used a little bit more than a jab because when he knocked me out it was little more like a hook. It sort of came off the side like that so. The ease in which he did it and explaining while he was doing it to me. That was mind boggling for me. He was just really uniquely different from everybody else. (I Am).

“I was completely flabbergasted! He controlled me like a baby. I couldn’t sleep that night. It seemed as though everything I’d done in the past was obsolete (Life, page 146).

They became close friends and began to train together. Inosanto appeared on stage with Lee for demonstrations and eventually became Lee’s assistant instructor at his L.A. martial arts school (Words, page 76 and Life, pages 149-150, 199). Inosanto also began teaching physical education at Malaga Cove Intermediate School in Palos Verdes Estate, California (Wikipedia, Inosanto).

Green Hornet TV Series

In 1966 Lee asked Inosanto to be a body double in his series The Green Hornet. Inosanto played the villain Low Sing in the episode The Praying Mantis (Words, page 77, Life page 189).

“I introduced nunchakus to Bruce Lee and at the time he thought this was the worthless piece of junk. When he moved into the L.A. area I taught him how to use it and the he said I’m going to use this on the Green Hornet. Then the short time I think almost every child is using this you know. It became like a household product. Then it is outlawed in California.” (I Am).

Dan Inosanto using nunchakus in the I Am Bruce Lee Documentary.

Jeet Kune Do Evolution

Inosanto saw firsthand the development of Jeet Kune Do. It started as a practical fighting method with a foundation in Wing Chun Kung Fu, boxing, and fencing.

“Bruce’s style was made for street survival. It’s made cause he grew up fighting fights in Hong Kong on the rooftops.” (I Am).

However, it began to change over time. Lee emphasized simplicity, directness, and discarding what didn’t work. He also believed it should be adapted to the student.

“He once told me that Jeet Kune Do in 1968 will be different in 1969 and 1969 Jeet Kune Do will be different than 1970 (Life, page 203).

By 1972 Lee became so concerned that Jeet Kune Do would become a style that he closed down his schools and made Inosanto promise not to teach it commercially. Lee allowed him to still informally train a small number of students (Life, page 488).

Game of Death

In 1972 Inosanto costarred in Lee’s film The Game of Death. He took leave from his teaching job to play an Eskrima expert defending the third level of a Padoga. “And on the third level there was supposed to be a person who is trained in weaponry and so he chose me to do the part.” (Life, page 383, I Am, Game).

Dan Inosanto in The Game of Death.

Bruce Lee’s Passing

Bruce Lee’s passing was a massive blow to Inosanto and left him in a state of shock. He served as a pallbearer at Lee’s funeral (Life, page 6).

“How he could…pass away at that age? But it does happen so I have learned to cope with it and deal with it, but it always puzzled me. I’m now 74 but there really has not ever been a day that I haven’t thought about him. At least once, maybe twice, or three times, or four times, or five times to the day.” (I Am).

Inosanto Academy of Martial Arts

Inosanto stopped teaching physical education in 1975 and started to teach martial arts full time. In 1976 he certified his training partner Richard Bustillo as Senior Instructor in Jeet Kune Do (Wikipedia, Bustillo). In 1977 he taught players on the Dallas Cowboys how incorporate martial arts (Wikipedia, Inosanto).

Inosanto became upset that so called experts were making money by teaching Jeet Kune Do. Inosanto fought against this by starting the Inosanto Academy of Martial Arts teaching JKD “Concepts” along with a blend of Filipino martial arts such as Kali, Eskrima, Kuntao, and Silat. He felt this was the direction Lee was headed and continued to stress the importance of individualized training (Life, page 487, Academy).

He taught many famous students including Diana Lee Inosanto (his daughter and actress), Brandon Lee (actor and son of Bruce Lee), Jerry Poteet, and Paul Vunak (Life page 484). He also released a series of training videos on mixed martial arts, Silat, Thai boxing, sticks, Kali, Jeet Kune Do, MMA, boxing, and weapons disarms (Academy).

Legacy

On January 10, 1996 Linda Lee formed the “nucleus” inviting former students to preserve Lee’s Jeet Kune Do. Inosanto came to the first meeting but declined to join. This created a division between nucleus members who strictly followed Lee’s originally techniques and “Concept” members like Inosanto who wanted to evolve Jeet Kune Do (Life, page 489).

In 1996 Inosanto was named the Black Belt Magazine “Man of the Year” and in 2012 he was interviewed for the documentary I am Bruce Lee.

He has been instrumental in spreading Filipino Martial Arts including Silat which may have otherwise disappeared. He became vice-president of Lameco International which promotes the Filipino martial art of Eskrima.

He became an authority on Jeet Kune Do and spread its teaching throughout the world and at the same time evolved it to incorporate Filipino martial arts (I Am, Wikipedia).

Part 2 Richard Bustillo

Early Life

Richard Bustillo was born in Hawaii in 1942. He studied Filipino martial arts at age 8, boxing at 10, and Kajukenbo at 14. He moved to California for college and competed in boxing tournaments.

Richard Bustillo, 1968.
Richard Bustillo and Remy Presas with Grand Master Angel L. Blancia, 1968.

Jeet Kune Do

Bustillo first saw Bruce Lee in 1964 at Ed Parker’s First International World Karate Championship.

“When Bruce Lee came up and did his performance on his Gung Fu, it was something different I had never seen before. And he said the individual is more important than any style or system. That’s when I said I need to train like a man like this.” (I Am Bruce Lee).

At 24 he began to study under Bruce Lee at the Jun Fan Gung Fu Institute in Los Angelos.

“He said that to learn to swim you can not swim on land you have to get it on water. To learn to fight you got to fight.” (I Am Bruce Lee).

Bustillo had a lot of training sessions with Lee.

“One time we were training and Bruce was hitting the heavy bag – and he was going wild, like he was pissed off with the heavy bag. He was snorting and really whacking the bag…I asked him, “What was that about?’ He said, ‘That’s Jeet Kune Do – you’ve got to be emotionally involved when you train.” (The Art, page 155).

Bustillo would also train with Lee outside the Jun Fan Gung Fu institute.

“Back when I was training with Bruce, there wasn’t much talk of what they now call interval training. Bruce was already doing that before it became popular. And what he used to do, he’d be jogging for a while, and then he’d be sprinting, and then he’d jog, then he’d run backward, and then he’d jog; he’d even do crossovers…He ran backward for footwork and coordination because he realized that fighting is not just like jogging; sometimes you’ve go to turn fast or backpedal. That’s how he applied it, and that’s how he ran. That’s no fun running! Geez, to me, I like to do things and enjoy things. Man, that was a workout.” (The Art, page 148).

Bustillo was more than just a student and became a friend who visited Lee’s home.

“He had a huge library of books in his den from the ceiling to the floor. Any book I picked up there were notations about what was good, what was functional, what was no good.” (I Am Bruce Lee).

Bustillo continued to see Lee even after Lee moved to Hong Kong.

“The last time I saw Bruce was two months before he died, and I asked him, ‘Are you working out every day still?’ And Bruce jumped to his feet and said, ‘Oh yeah, Check this!’ He flexed his quadriceps and a muscle that inserted right into the hip joint just popped out. ‘Hit that!’ he said. So I did – Jesus! It was just like hitting a piece of wood! Man, it was hard! I said, ‘What’s that muscle for?’ And he said, ‘This is for the inverted kick – that’s the muscle that pops it out there.’ He told me that he had been doing special weight training to develop that.” (The Art, page 73-74).

Bustillo continued to study Jeet Kune Do even after Lee passed in 1973. In 1976 he became Senior Instructor in Jun Fan Jeet Kune Do under Dan Inosanto who was his friend and training partner. He continued to teach others Jeet Kune Do ‘Concepts.’

He was a founding member of the Bruce Lee Foundation which promotes Bruce Lee’s legacy and philosophy. He continued to be close to Lee’s family and even was a Jeet Kune Do Instructor to Lee’s children Brandon and Shannon.

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is RichardBustillo-203x300.jpg

Filipino Martial Arts

Bustillo helped spread Filipino martial arts around the world. In 1967 he studied the Filipino martial arts of Kali, Escrima, and Arnis under Angel Cabales. In 1976, Bustillo and Inosanto started the Filipino Kali Academy in Torrance, California.

In 1978, he studied Muay Thai and became a Kru in 1985. He also became a boxing coach for U.S. Amateur in Southern California. He was a Guro in Filipino martial arts and eleventh degree blackbelt.

Expanding Horizons

In 1984, he started the International Martial Arts & Boxing Academy (IMB) which later moved to Torrance, California. He taught mixed martial arts including Jeet Kune Do, boxing, May Thai, and Filipino martial Arts. He was not a fan of martial artists opening up a school and claiming to teach Jeet Kune Do.

“All the wannabes, all the imposters who put up Jeet Kune Do signs in their school building and they have no idea what Jeet Kune Do is. They think it is a style. I don’t know if you did dojo busting in his days, but that would upset Bruce.” (I Am Bruce Lee).

In 1989 he was Instructor of the Year for the Black Belt Hall of Fame. In 1992 he starred with Ted Wong in the Bruce Lee’s Fighting Method documentary. He was also interviewed for the 2012 I Am Bruce Lee documentary.

This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is Bustillo-I-am-bruce-lee-300x175.webp

Brustillo became a certified law enforcement defensive tactics instructor and a member of the L.A. Search and Rescue Team. He released instructional videos in JKD, boxing, and other martial arts.

He reflected on his life and the challenges he faced.

“Certain times they were prejudiced against my skin but I never let it bother me. Because in the back of mind I used to think I’ll take you out to the parking lot. I’ll beat your head in.” (I Am Bruce Lee).

He passed away on March 30, 2017 leaving behind a wife and four children but also a legacy of martial arts. His students continue to operate the IMB Academy to this day.

Resources:

Game of Death. A movie star fakes his death to investigate who is trying to kill him. Includes only 11 minutes of original footage from 1972 Game of Deathfootage. Uses a stand in actor, bandage coverings, and a cardboard cutout to represent Bruce Lee. I suggest you watch one of the other versions instead! 1h 40m (IMDB).

Wikipedia, Inosanto. Retrieved 6/26/24.

Wikipedia, Bustillo. Retrieved 4/18/24.

Words of the Dragon: Interviews, 1958-1973, John Little, Editor, Tuttle Publishing, 1997, 2017. Volume 1 of the Bruce Lee Library, commissioned by the Bruce Lee Estate. Interview transcripts of Bruce Lee on a variety of topics including philosophy, martial arts, and his personal life. Put together by John Little, Bruce Lee historian.
Letters of the Dragon: The Original 1958-1973 Correspondence, John Little, Editor, Tuttle Publishing, 1998, 2016. Volume 5 of the Bruce Lee Library, commissioned by the Bruce Lee Estate. Letters to friends, family, and business associates. Put together by John Little, Bruce Lee historian.
Bruce Lee: A Life, Matthew Polly, Author, Simon & Schuster Publishing, 2019. Highly rated biography of Bruce Lee.
I Am Bruce Lee. Excellent Bruce Lee documentary including his family, friends, and training partners. Includes much footage of Bruce Lee talking in interviews. 1h 34m (IMDB).

Inosanto Academy of Martial Arts.

Inosanto nunchaku image from I Am Bruce Lee documentary.

Inosanto image from The Game of Death.

IMB Academy, Retrieved 4/18/24.

The Art of Expressing the Human Body, John Little, Editor, Tuttle Publishing, 1998. Volume 4 of the Bruce Lee Library, commissioned by the Bruce Lee Estate. Includes workouts, circuit training, weight lifting, and stretching. Put together by John Little, Bruce Lee historian.

Richard Bustillo image, Mike Searson, CC BY-SA 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Richard Bustillo class image, CC BY-SA 3.0 &lhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0, via Wikimedia.

AI Narration provided by elevenlabs.io.


Comments

Let me know what you think.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Bruce Lee Blog

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading