"WARM MARBLE" The Lethal Physique of Bruce Lee
By John Little
Introduction by Mike Mentzer
It is absolutely amazing how much of an impact that Bruce Lee's strength and physical development have had on athletes,
bodybuilders and average men all over the face of the globe. As a young boy in high school, I can clearly recall all of the
talk among my friends about the great Bruce Lee; they all were intimately familiar with Bruce's films; and they would discuss
not just his epochal martial arts skills, but, also, his incredible strength and lean, shredded physique.
Bruce LeeAs Mr. Little reports in his article, even such a personage as Joe Weider remarked on the astounding muscular
refinement and definition of Lee's physique, especially the master's abs. As Mr. Little also explains, Bruce Lee's physique
had a remarkable influence on some of today's top physique champs. Bodybuilding luminaries, including Lou Ferrigno, Lee
Haney, Dorian Yates, Rachel Mclish, Lenda Murray, Flex Wheeler and Shawn Ray have all spoken on record concerning the
enormous impact the physique of Bruce Lee had on them. Why? Why would the physique of the mighty mite, never massively
developed along the lines of the bodybuilding greats I just enumerated, but described by some "as the most defined
physique in the world." I leave that unanswered, as author, John Little, will provide an incisive, eloquent answer...
Subsections in the article will titillate the legion of existing Lee fanatics, and whet the appetite of those for whom this
article will serve as their initial introduction to the subject. For instance, Functional Strength, Unbelievable Strength, A
Battle in San Fransisco, The Bodybuilding Connection and The Routine, will rivet the reader's focus such that he will finish
this article in one reading, and prompt him to want to re-read it and re-re-read it.
I've been extremely impressed over the years as to how many bodybuilders are also highly trained martial artists. In fact,
over the years I having personally supervised the training of many martial artists, with many of my phone clients already
being rabid Lee fans, and martial artists seeking the most efficient manner of training for strength and speed; which was the
goal of Lee's training. Also, I receive more e-mails, letters and phone calls from martial artists than any other type of
athlete. This I believe follows from Lee's well known concern with weight training to develop efficiency and strength.
I am extremely proud to say that one of my best friends, for the past 22 years, wrote this article, which is excerpted from
one of the 11 books he's written on Bruce Lee. I first met John Little at Eaton's department store in Toronto where Arnold,
Franco and I had made an appearance for Weider and the IFBB, in 1979. We hit it off immediately, as John was
philosophically oriented, along with having a passionate interest in bodybuilding. After that initial meeting, we met at Lou
Hollozi's gym in Toronto in 1980, where I conducted a seminar; and, with that, John and I further cemented our friendship.
Subsequently, John made a number of trips to Los Angeles, where he'd usually stay with me in my apartment in West
Hollywood. His primary purpose in traveling to southern California was to pursue the subjects of those he wrote books about,
including Steve Reeves and Lou Ferrigno.
It was finally, in 1992, that Joe Weider brought John to Los Angeles to write for Flex. This only lasted three years, as John
was more interested in writing freely about his passion, namely - philosophy, martial arts, the philosophy of Bruce Lee's, who,
too, was a fervent student of philosophy, his personal library packed with philosophy books that extended from the floor to
the ceiling and spanned the length of the room. His quest for the truth saw him avidly studying philosophies ranging from that
of Krishnamurti's to our most revered, Ayn Rand.
Bruce Lee's life was most interesting as he rose from a starving, poor boy in Hong Kong to the world's most celebrated movie
star in Hollywood, having a greater impact on more people than that of Elvis Presley's, James Dean's and Marilyn Monroe's
combined!
I trust that you, dear reader, will gain much knowledge from John Little's article, along with the added inspiration that will
act to have you approach your own training with greater inspiration and motivation than ever before. Above all else, I
ardently desire that you will read John Little's superlative article mostly for the sheer pleasure of it.
Mike Mentzer
"If you're talking about combat -- as it is -- well then, baby you'd better train every part of your body!" -- Bruce Lee (from
the video, Bruce Lee: The Lost Interview)
There's an anecdote that has endured some 28 years concerning the texture of the muscles that adorned the physique of the
late martial arts pioneer/philosopher, Bruce Lee.
It concerns a lady named Ann Clouse, the wife of Robert Clouse, the man who directed Lee's last film Enter the Dragon for
Warner Bros. It seems that Clouse's wife had ventured onto the set of the film and was mesmerized by Lee's incredible
physique as he went through his paces choreographing the fight scenes for the film, stripped to the waist under the hot and
humid Hong Kong sun. In between takes, Ann approached the young superstar and asked if she could "feel his biceps."
"Sure," Lee responded -- it was a request he'd received on numerous occasions -- tensing his arm and inviting her to check it
out for herself. "My God!" she exclaimed, drawing her hand back instantly, "It's like feeling warm marble!"
Bruce LeeIt's fascinating that almost three decades later, people are still talking about the body of Bruce Lee -- although it
is by no means surprising. The Lee physique, once described by no less an authority on such matters than bodybuilding
magnate Joe Weider as "the most defined body I've ever seen!" has attracted (much like the man's martial art and
philosophy) a following that not only rivals but exceeds those of Elvis Presley, James Dean and Marilyn Monroe -- combined!
Certainly his following exceeds that of any bodybuilder of a similar vintage. And even more fascinating is the fact that
almost everyone gets something different out of Bruce Lee -- martial artists revere his physical dexterity, power, speed and
the genius he displayed in bringing science to bear on the world of martial arts; moviegoers are impressed with the man's
screen presence and animal magnetism, along with the fact that he single-handedly created a new genre of action film thus
opening the door to the Stallones, Schwarzeneggers and Jackie Chans who were to follow in his footsteps; philosophers are
impressed with Lee's ability to bridge the philosophical chasm separating East and the West and to synthesize the best
aspects of both cultures. But there exists another pocket of humanity that sees in Lee something else -- although not entirely
unrelated -- the bodybuilders. Bodybuilders, young and old, know from one quick glance at Lee's physique exactly how much
labor went into its creation -- and they are, one and all, very impressed.
Ironically, bodybuilding luminaries of no less stature than Flex Wheeler, Shawn Ray, Rachel McClish, Lou Ferrigno, Lee
Haney, Lenda Murray and former Mr. Olympia, Dorian Yates -- that is to say, the best in the business - have all spoken on the
record regarding the impact the physique of Bruce Lee had on their bodybuilding careers. "How could this be?" I can hear
you ask, perhaps somewhat incredulously. After all, Lee was only 5'7" tall and checked in at a weight that fluctuated
between 126 to 145 pounds! What could a behemoth like Dorian Yates, for example, see in Bruce Lee's physique that would
give him grounds for any form of inspiration? The answer, in a word, would be quality.
There has seldom been seen - this side of a jungle cat -- the incredible sinewy and ripped-to-the-bone quality of muscle
displayed by Bruce Lee. He was ripped in places that bodybuilders are just now (28 years later) learning they can train.
Every muscle group on his body stood out in bold relief from its neighbor -- not simply for show (unlike many bodybuilders)
but for function. Lee was, to quote his first student in the United States, Seattle's Jesse Glover, "above all else, concerned
with function." Lee's body was not only a thing of immense grace and beauty to watch in action, but it was supremely
functional. Leaping eight feet in the air to kick out a light bulb (as evidenced in Lee's office-wrecking scene in the MGM
movie Marlow), landing a punch from five feet away in five-hundredths of a second and catching grains of rice -- that he'd
thrown into the air -- with chopsticks were things Lee had trained his body (and reflexes) to accomplish. In fact, during his
famous "Lost Interview" Lee referred to his approach to training as "the art of expressing the human body." Indeed, perhaps
never before has there been such an incredible confluence of physical attributes brought together in the form of one human
being -- lightening fast reflexes, supreme flexibility, awesome power, feline grace and muscularity combined in one total --
and very lethal -- package.
Furthermore, the Lee physique was balanced and symmetrical and, while not everyone can be said to admire the massive
musculature of our Olympians, everyone -- or so it would seem (including the world's greatest bodybuilders) admire the
"total package" that was Bruce Lee.
See one of the best and most controversial championships of all-time
Who should have won? Judge for yourself.
All of the aforementioned champion bodybuilders have indicated that Bruce Lee was a major influence on their bodybuilding
careers, which is no small accomplishment when one considers the fact that Lee never entered a physique contest in his life.
Ironically, despite his influence being, felt by the hardest of hard-core bodybuilders, Lee himself was never interested in
developing a massive musculature. One of Lee's closest friends and an instructor in Lee's art of Jeet Kune Do, Ted Wong,
recalls that "Bruce trained primarily for strength and speed." The physique -- while certainly appreciated by Lee -- came
almost as a by-product of such training.
According to those who met him, from Hollywood producers to his fellow martial artists, Lee's muscles carried considerable
impact. Taky Kimura, one of Lee's closest friends (in fact, the best man at Lee's wedding in 1964) recalls that Lee was never
loath to remove his shirt and display the results of his labors in the gym -- often just to see the reactions of those around
him. "He had the most incredible set of lats I'd ever seen," recalled Kimura, "and his big joke was to pretend that his thumb
was an air hose, which he'd then put in his mouth and pretend to inflate his lats with. He looked like a damn cobra when he
did that!"
Lee's physique holds up under scrutiny and has survived the passage of time simply because it possessed what many consider
to have been the perfect blend of razor-sharp cuts, awesome muscularity, great shape and an almost onion skin definition.
The muscles that bulged and rippled across the Lee physique were thick, dense, well-chiseled from their neighbor and, above
all, functional.