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ISBN: 978-988-17742-2-4
Paperback, 256 pages,
with photos and illustrations
Size: 19.8 x 12.9 cm
Price: HK$118 /
US$14.95
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Wing Chun Warrior
The True Tales of Wing Chun Kung Fu Master Duncan Leung,
Bruce Lee’s
Fighting Companion
by
Ken Ing, M.D.
MARTIAL ARTS / BIOGRAPHY
Duncan Leung was introduced to Wing Chun
Kung Fu by his childhood friend, famed screen star Bruce Lee. At the
age of 13, after the ritual of ‘three kneels, nine kowtows’ in the
traditional Sifu worship ceremony, he became the formal disciple of sixth-generation Wing Chun master Yip Man. Between 1955 and 1959 he
studied with his Sifu at home, where Yip taught him how to apply Wing
Chun to actual fighting. Leung trained six hours a day, seven days a
week for four years, and used this knowledge fighting in the streets and
martial arts studios of Hong Kong.
In 1964 Leung befriended an old man who
taught him rare secrets of close fighting, including the art of disarming
a knife-wielding opponent, and silencing an opponent barehanded. When he
opened his Wing Chun studio in New York City in 1974, he was
challenged by martial art practitioners of every school
but remained
undefeated. Since moving to Virginia Beach in 1976, he has taught US Navy
SEALs, members of the FBI, and various SWAT teams.
In 2002 he accepted perhaps the greatest
challenge of his life: to train six Chinese teenagers to become
world-class professional fighters within two years. To this end, he
returned to China to accomplish what many considered an impossible
mission.
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Bruce Lee and I Beaten
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MEDIA ATTENTION
"The
story of Duncan Leung — childhood friend
of Bruce Lee and disciple of Wing Chun master Yip Man —
is valuable not only for the insights it offers into Chinese martial arts
but also for its portrayal of the lost Hong Kong of the 1950s and 1960s.
Reading Ken Ing's Wing Chun Warrior, which chronicles Leung's Kung
Fu escapades, will be a jarring revelation to anyone familiar with the
manic but orderly and largely peaceful city of seven million people that
is Hong Kong today. The city described by Ing is a place where Kung Fu
practitioners wielded eight-chop knives in the streets and literally
battled their way from one martial arts studio to another to prove their
fighting prowess.
... As Ing tells the story, [Bruce] Lee may have been Yip Man's most
famous pupil, but Leung underwent more intensive training with the great
man — four years of daily private
lessons that started in 1955, when Leung was 13. During this time, Leung
virtually forgot about regular schooling and devoted himself to learning
Wing Chun from the master, training six hours a day, seven days a week.
How did a mere boy command the daily individual attention of the world's
greatest Wing Chun sifu? It was all thanks to his gullible mother, who
agreed to give her son HK$300 (US$39) a month for "private tuition" with
no questions asked. That was a lot of money in the 1950s, but Leung came
from a well-to-do family that tended to indulge him. So while regular
students paid Yip Man HK$8 a month, Leung gave his teacher nearly twice
the salary of high school graduates employed by the Hong Kong government
at the time. According to Leung, Yip was keen to take the money to support
his opium addiction.
... Soon the eager student began applying his lessons on the streets and
in the Kung Fu studios of Hong Kong, and this is where Ing's book is hard
to put down. At one point, a young Leung comes across two triads
(underworld figures) raining blows on a defenseless old man outside the
long-defunct London Theater in Kowloon. His Wing Chun principles and
reflexes immediately kick in, and the two toughs are quickly dispatched." —
Kent Ewing,
Asia Times Online
Author
Ken Ing talked to RTHK Radio 3's Sarah Passmore about the stories
contained in Wing Chun Warrior and the state of Wing Chun kung
fu today. Listen in at the online
programme archive, date: 2009-03-02, from 19 minutes in.
"Thrilling Reads... Here are a couple of exciting books that will let you
live dangerously without moving a muscle." —
Parents' Journal
"The
book is geared to those with prior knowledge of Wing Chun kung fu
and the style of the book is an acquired taste. But there are some gems in
the text that have the feeling of a 1950s Hong Kong film. For example,
when Leung is queueing up for an evening function and two triads jump the
queue, he decks them, much to the admiration of the crowd. But he has only
a moment to enjoy their adulation before he spots 20 men with broken
bottles heading for him. He then runs 2km, loses his entourage and comes
to rest at the Queen Victoria statue in Victoria Park, where he promptly
vomits.
There are also his references to his friend Bruce Lee, who to a certain
extent has become more legend than man —
that as well as fighting, they were Elvis Presley fans and enjoyed
dancing, at which they were apparently skilled. The book describes the two
teenagers going to weekly dance classes so they could swivel their hips
like the King." —
Annemarie Evans,
Sunday Morning Post
Wonderfully informal and
instructive. There are many stories and personal revelations that should
be fascinating, intriguing and occasionally infuriating to students of
this style and those interested in the clouds surrounding the Hong Kong
days of Bruce Lee and others." — Ted Mancuso
"A great addition to your collection."
— Wing Chun Archive
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