However, after creating his first box-office success in Asia, The Big Boss, Lee began making a huge reputation in both Asia and America. He produced Fist of Fury and The Way of the Dragon, which were both also box-office successes. By this point, Lee had caught Hollywood’s attention. Americans loved the way in which Lee portrayed fighting techniques that they had never seen …show more content…
After coming to America, he studied at the University of Washington, where he began his academic success from martial arts. Lee majored in philosophy, putting emphasis on the techniques of his fighting style. Jeet Kune Do is a technique he created to represent the balance of the body, not the restrictions of certain move sets. He later learned that “The principles of yin and yang and could translate into hard and soft physical movements. In this way, he was completing his education as a true martial artist in the time-honored Chinese sense of one whose knowledge encompasses the physical, mental and spiritual aspects of the arts" (“Bibliography”). His knowledge was a foundation that Lee later based his newfound technique of Jeet Kune Do too. It was his pathway towards enlightenment. He knew that Jeet Kune Do was a way to bring a balance between the races. Lee based all his knowledge to his students. He felt that if they couldn’t grasp his techniques, he would strive to help them truly understand the meanings behind Jeet Kune Do. Theoretically, Lee’s type of fighting style brought in numerous techniques of all different races. “Jeet Kune Do’s does lie in Wing Chun theory; Bruce liberally borrowed from other Kung Fu styles: taekwondo, wrestling, fencing and Western boxing” (“Jeet Kune Do”). In a sense, it meant that Lee was assimilating to the American culture