logo
Bruce Lee Club closes archive doors citing operating costs

Bruce Lee Club closes archive doors citing operating costs

Japan Today2 days ago
At least temporarily, all the assorted ephemera related to Bruce Lee will be boxed up and stored
Bruce Lee aficionados gathered at a Hong Kong mini-museum dedicated to the legendary martial artist to bid farewell to the site on Tuesday, as operating expenses forced the itinerant archive to close once again.
The Bruce Lee Club, which was founded by the Lee family, had put a collection of about 2,000 artefacts, including decades-old magazines and a large sculpture showing the superstar's iconic moves, on display in the bustling Yau Ma Tei neighbourhood in 2001. But a rent increase shut the project in 2016.
Three years and a move to industrial Kwun Tong later, the club began welcoming visitors to see the collection again just before democracy protests roiled the city, dampening tourism.
In a statement, the club wrote that the social movement followed by the Covid-19 pandemic had "severely disrupted" plans for the archive.
"We anticipated a recovery, yet reality fell short," it said. "The accumulated expenses over these six years have compelled us to rethink how to most effectively utilise our resources to sustain the flame of Bruce Lee's spirit."
It added that it will "explore new ways" to engage with the public, but for now, ahead of what would have been Lee's 85th birthday, it is shutting shop.
At least temporarily, all the assorted ephemera related to the Hong Kong icon will be boxed up and stored.
Born in San Francisco in 1940, Bruce Lee was raised in British-run Hong Kong and had an early brush with fame as a child actor. He later became one of the first Asian men to achieve Hollywood stardom before his death at the age of 32.
At the unassuming Kwun Tong archive on Tuesday, visitor and martial arts coach Andy Tong called it a "great pity" to lose the place.
"(Lee) helped build the image of the Chinese and overseas Chinese in the Western world," Tong, 46, said.
While the superstar is widely beloved and celebrated in the city, with frequent retrospectives and exhibitions staged, fans have struggled to ensure organised and systematic preservation.
In 2004, petitioners successfully managed to get a bronze statue of Lee installed on Hong Kong's famed harbourfront, but a campaign to revitalise his former residence failed to spare it from demolition in 2019.
Bruce Lee Club's chairman W Wong said the Hong Kong government lacks long-term and continuous planning for preserving Lee's legacy.
But he added the Club "will never give up" their dedication to championing Lee's spirit.
"Although Bruce has passed away, his spirit continues to inspire people of all kinds," Lee's 76-year-old brother Robert Lee told AFP.
"I believe, rather than hope, the spirit of Bruce Lee will forever remain here (in Hong Kong)."
© 2025 AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Novelist Otani becomes Japan's 1st to win British crime writing award
Novelist Otani becomes Japan's 1st to win British crime writing award

The Mainichi

time2 hours ago

  • The Mainichi

Novelist Otani becomes Japan's 1st to win British crime writing award

LONDON (Kyodo) -- A Japanese novelist on Thursday became her country's first to win a major British award for crime and mystery writing, highlighting a boom in the popularity of translated Japanese fiction. Akira Otani was given the best translated crime novel prize at the Dagger Awards for "The Night of Baba Yaga," beating out five shortlisted competitors including fellow Japanese author Asako Yuzuki. "I'm in complete shock. My head is kind of upside down," Otani, 44, said during an award ceremony through an interpreter. Otani also told reporters that she has known about the Dagger Awards since she was young as her late grandfather loved foreign mystery novels. "So, if possible, I would want to tell him the most that I won this award," she said. Her novel tells the story of a woman kidnapped by a yakuza crime syndicate and forced to serve as a bodyguard to the boss's daughter. As the story progresses, the relationship between the pair develops in unexpected ways as the attitudes of the men around them grow darker and more sinister. Judges compared the story to a manga comic, praising the work for its raw depiction of the yakuza as well as the humanity and feeling of its characters in the competition organized by the Crime Writers' Association. "This saga sparkles with originality and delivers a splendid if bizarre love story," the judges said. The book, originally published in Japanese in 2020, is Otani's first work to appear in English. It was translated by Sam Bett and released in July 2024 in the United States, followed by publication in Britain two months later. The popularity of translated Japanese novels has grown in recent years in Britain. According to NielsenIQ statistics, three of the five best-selling translated fiction books in Britain for the first eight months of 2024 were by Japanese authors. The Guardian reported in November that among the top 40 translated fiction titles for 2024, 43 percent were Japanese. Otani was born in Tokyo and grew up mostly in the neighboring countryside. On writing the novel, she said she started out with the idea of resisting patriarchal society and that fiction allowed her to explore the concept. She added that for her, writing the story with the relationship between two women as the focus was not a conscious choice, but merely felt "more natural" to her than one between a man and a woman. Speaking to Kyodo News before the ceremony, Otani said that she thought one of the reasons it resonated with overseas readers was because she "wrote it with only domestic readers in mind." "Small things like place names and canned coffee, stuff that Japanese people would just understand right away, give it this feeling of being very authentically Japanese," she said. (By Callum Cafferty)

H.K.'s tribute museum to Bruce Lee closes amid financial strain
H.K.'s tribute museum to Bruce Lee closes amid financial strain

The Mainichi

time6 hours ago

  • The Mainichi

H.K.'s tribute museum to Bruce Lee closes amid financial strain

HONG KONG (Kyodo) -- A Hong Kong museum dedicated to martial arts legend Bruce Lee set up by his fans shut its doors earlier this week, citing financial difficulties. Considered a must-see by Lee's overseas admirers visiting the territory, the Bruce Lee Club had put on display items from its collection of over 2,000 artifacts, including sculptures, decades-old magazines and precious film stills from the late star's early career. But the club earlier said on Facebook that accumulated expenses had forced them to "rethink how to most effectively utilize our resources to sustain the flame of Bruce Lee's spirit." The club's operators had expected a recovery after revenue was hit during the COVID-19 pandemic, but "reality fell short," the Facebook post said. It is not known whether the museum will reopen. The fan club was founded by Lee's family to "share our knowledge and closest memories" of the late superstar, who died in July 1973 at the age of 32. The itinerant archive first opened in a different location in Hong Kong in 2000, before reopening in 2019 after a years-long hiatus. A Hong Kong-American, Lee is known for bringing Chinese martial arts, or kung fu, to Hollywood, and for developing a new school known as Jeet Kune Do. In 2019, pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong were seen following the advice of "Be water, my friend" from the 1971 TV drama series Longstreet featuring Lee as a reminder to stay flexible and constantly shift their tactics in the face of a police crackdown. The museum's last day Tuesday attracted scores of visitors, including Andy Tong, 46, a Jeet Kune Do instructor, and his son Andre, 13, who hailed Lee as a "god." "Things related to him or his deeds in Hong Kong are getting harder and harder to come by," Tong said.

Japan's Akira Otani Wins British Crime Novel Award

time8 hours ago

Japan's Akira Otani Wins British Crime Novel Award

News from Japan Culture World Jul 4, 2025 13:43 (JST) London, July 3 (Jiji Press)--The English version of "The Night of Baba Yaga," a novel by Japanese author Akira Otani, has won a prestigious British crime novel award, Britain's Crime Writers' Association said Thursday. Otani, 44, was awarded the 2025 Dagger prize for crime fiction in translation, becoming the first Japanese winner of the prize. The novel "sparkles with originality and delivers a splendid if bizarre love story," judges said. In the category, "Butter," a novel by Japanese author Asako Yuzuki, which received the debut fiction category of the 2025 British Book Awards in May, was also shortlisted. Otani told reporters, "I didn't expect this to happen, and it doesn't feel real." [Copyright The Jiji Press, Ltd.] Jiji Press

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store