Shannon Lee

Shannon Emery Lee (born April 19, 1969) is an American actress, martial artist and businesswoman. She is the daughter of martial arts film star Bruce Lee and retired martial arts teacher Linda Lee Cadwell, the granddaughter of Cantonese opera singer Lee Hoi-chuen, and the younger sister of Brandon Lee.[1]

Shannon Lee
李香凝
Born
Shannon Emery Lee

(1969-04-19) April 19, 1969
NationalityAmerican
Alma materChadwick School
Tulane University
OccupationBusinessperson, actress, martial artist
Years active1993–present
Height1.7 m (5 ft 7 in)
Spouse(s)
Anthony Ian Keasler (m. 1994)
ChildrenWren Keasler (daughter)
Parents
FamilyBrandon Lee (brother)
StyleJeet Kune Do
Taekwondo
Wushu
Kickboxing
Teacher(s)Richard Bustillo (Jeet Kune Do)
Ted Wong (Jeet Kune Do)
Dung Doa Liang (Taekwondo)
Eric Chen (Wushu)
Benny Urquidez (Kickboxing)
Musical career
Also known asShan Shan
Associated actsMedicine
Chinese name
Chinese李香凝

Early life

She was born on April 19, 1969, in Los Angeles, to martial arts film star Bruce Lee and Linda Emery. She is descendant of Charles Henry Maurice Bosman from her grandmother, Grace Ho.[2][3] In her youth she studied Jeet Kune Do, the martial art created by her father, under Richard Bustillo, one of her father's students. However, her serious studies did not begin until the late 1990s. To train for parts in action movies, she studied Jeet Kune Do with Ted Wong.[4]

She studied Taekwondo under Dung Doa Liang and Wushu under Eric Chen. She also studied under the tutelage of the director of Enter the Eagles, Yuen De, Jackie Chan's Chinese opera brother. Because the film Enter the Eagles required her to fight Benny Urquidez, Urquidez himself taught her in kickboxing.[4]

Career

Lee made her acting debut playing a cameo in her father's 1993 biopic film Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story as the party singer of the song "California Dreamin.'" She went on to appear in the direct-to-video films Cage II (1994) with bodybuilding veteran and actor Lou Ferrigno and High Voltage (1997) with Antonio Sabato Jr. In 1998, she starred in the Hong Kong action film Enter the Eagles, directed by Corey Yuen, co-starring Michael Wong and Anita Yuen.

On television, she guest-starred in an episode of the television series Martial Law alongside Sammo Hung in 1998 and appeared in the sci-fi television film Epoch, which first aired on the Sci Fi Channel in 2001. That same year, she played the leading role in the action film Lessons for an Assassin. She was also the host of the first season of the game show WMAC Masters. She sang on the band Medicine's album The Mechanical Forces of Love in 2003. She sang a cover of "I'm in the Mood for Love" for the movie China Strike Force (2000), which starred Leehom Wang and Aaron Kwok.

Lee is president of the Bruce Lee Foundation.[5] She was the executive producer of the 2008 television series The Legend of Bruce Lee, based on her father's life, and the 2009 documentary film How Bruce Lee Changed the World.[6]

In 2015, Perfect Storm Entertainment and Shannon Lee announced that the series Warrior, based on an original idea by Bruce Lee, would be produced and would air on the Cinemax and that filmmaker Justin Lin was chosen to direct the series,[7][8] scheduled to debut in 2019.[8]

Filmography

Film
Year Title Role Notes
1993 Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story Party Singer
1994 Cage II Milo
1997 High Voltage Jane Logan
1998 Enter the Eagles Mandy Alternative title: Gwan Guen See Dam
1998 Blade Resident
2001 Lessons for an Assassin Fiona
2002 She, Me and Her Paula Jemison
2020 Be Water self
Television
Year Title Role Notes
1995 WMAC Masters Host 13 episodes
1998 Martial Law Vanessa Feng Episode: "Take Out"
2000 Epoch Pamela Television film
2012 I Am Bruce Lee Executive producer, herself Television documentary
2019 Warrior Executive producer Television series

References

  1. "Shannon Lee". geni_family_tree. Retrieved February 18, 2020.
  2. Polly, Matthew (June 4, 2019). Bruce Lee: A Life. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-1-5011-8763-6.
  3. Reid, Dr. Craig D. (1999). "Shannon Lee: Emerging From the Shadows of Bruce Lee, the Butterfly Spreads her Wings". Black Belt. 37 (10): 33.
  4. Bruce Lee Foundation website. Retrieved December 10, 2014.
  5. Bellafante, Ginia (May 15, 2009). "The Hagiography of the Dragon, a Continuing Saga". The New York Times.
  6. Andreeva, Nellie (May 21, 2015). "Cinemax Developing Bruce Lee-Inspired Crime Drama 'Warrior' From Justin Lin".
  7. Cecchini, Mike (August 22, 2018). "Warrior: First Teaser for Bruce Lee Inspired TV Series". Denofgeek.

Further reading

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