The One And Only Wife Of Bruce Lee: What Happened To Her?

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And this is the story of Bruce  Lee's wife, Linda Lee Cadwell. Linda Lee Cadwell is the widow of Kung  Fu's finest legend Bruce Lee. Linda has   had an aspiring life as a martial artist, writer,  teacher, and philanthropist. In the nine years she   lived with Bruce Lee, Linda describes life with  the martial artist as a fantastic experience;   one that she will always hold dear. Bruce's  untimely death left her devastated, but she   was determined to rise above her misfortune. Linda Lee, the widow of the late Kung Fu star   Bruce Lee, attends the funeral of her husband  full of tears and sadness that cannot be described   with words. With her husband’s demise, she  was left with two young kids in her care.   But, the soulful mom gracefully took the mantle  and lived her life the best way she knew. Linda Emery Cadwell was born on 21st March 1945  in Everett, Washington, to a Baptist family.   When she turned 5 years old, her father passed  away and she had a hard time accepting that. After   her father’s death, her family decided to move  to Seattle. She was raised along with her sister   and her mother tried her best to give her all  love and support when she was at her early age. She is of Swedish-Irish-English-based race,  which defines her outstanding beauty and poses.   Linda Lee Cadwell’s height is 5  feet 7 inches. For her education,   she attended Garfield High School and  completed her school-level study from there.   After that, she joined the University of  Washington in order to become a teacher. While there, she had her first encounter with  Bruce Lee. This happened when Bruce Lee came to   demonstrate gung fu in a class and she was there  watching. Fascinated with Bruce Lee’s talent and   fluent martial art skills, she began taking class  and learning with Lee while they were in the same   University. Theirs was love at first sight, since  they both had an instant attraction to each other.   Linda and Bruce met in 1963 and tied the knot on  17th August 1964. At the time of her marriage to   Bruce, Linda was nineteen years old and short  of a few credits to graduate from university.   While talking about her life with the coveted  martial artist, Linda said this of Bruce Lee,   “He was dynamic. From the very first moment I  met him, I thought, this guy is something else. And what better way to attest  to this than to watch Bruce   Lee’s wife herself tell us all about it: The newlyweds moved to California, and Lee who  had begun developing a new fighting style called   jeet kune do, ultimately opened three schools in  Los Angeles, Oakland, California, and Seattle.   He also began to pursue his acting more  seriously, and landed a part in the TV   series The Green Hornet. The show  was based on a 1930s radio program,   and Lee played the role of the Hornet's Asian  assistant, Kato. He virtually created the role,   imbuing Kato with a theatrical fighting style  quite unlike that which Lee taught in his schools.   The show would be cancelled after one season,  but fans would long remember Lee's role.  After the end of The Green Hornet, Lee made guest  appearances on TV shows such as Longstreet and   Ironside. His most notable role during this time  was in the film Marlowe (1969) with James Garner,   when he played a memorable part as a high-kicking  villain. Clearly Lee had the qualities of a star;   but it was just as clear that an Asian American  faced limitations within the Hollywood system,   which tended to cast Oriental actors in  stereotypical roles. Therefore in 1971, the Lees,   including son Brandon (born 1965), and daughter  Shannon (born 1967) moved to Hong Kong.  Here we have an exclusive footage  of Linda describing the challenges   face by her late husband, Bruce Lee  to becoming an actor in Hollywood.  What was unbeknownst to them at that time  was Bruce Lee is going to revolutionize the   world on how we will view martial arts. Back in  Hong Kong, Lee soon signed a two-film contract,   and released the movie known to U.S. audiences  as Fists of Fury late in 1971. The story,   which featured Lee as a fighter seeking revenge  on those who had killed his kung fu master,   was not original in itself; but the presentation  of it was, and the crucial element was Lee. He   combined the smooth, flowing style of jeet kune  do that he taught in his schools with the loud,   aggressive, and highly theatrical methods he had  employed as Kato. With the graceful, choreographic   qualities of his movements; his good looks and  charm; his sense of humor and his acting ability,   Lee was one of a kind-a star in the making. Fists of Fury set box-office records in Hong   Kong which were broken only by his next  picture, The Chinese Connection, in 1972.   Lee established his own film company, Concord  Pictures, and began directing movies. The first   of these would appear in the U.S. as Way of the  Dragon. Lee was enthusiastic about his future,   not merely as a performer, but as an artist:  "With any luck, I hope to make the kind of movie   where you can just watch the surface story, if you  like, or can look deeper into it." Unfortunately,   Lee would not live to explore his full potential  as a filmmaker: on July 20, 1973, three weeks   before his fourth film, Enter the Dragon, was  released in the United States, he died suddenly.   His death was untimely and a shock to his loved  ones and fans especially more so for his wife,   Linda Lee. He was 32 years, and his career was  at the peak till he succumbed to cerebral oedema.  Lee's death became a source of controversy.  Officially the cause of death was brain   swelling as a reaction to aspirin he had taken for  a back injury. But the suddenness of his passing,   combined with his youth, his good health, and the  bizarre timing on the verge of his explosion as   an international superstar, spawned rumors that  he had been killed by hit men. Some speculated   he had run afoul of the Chinese mafia and other  powerful interests in the Hong Kong film industry,   and had been poisoned. Throughout his life, Lee  had been obsessed by fears of his early death,   and some believed that the brilliant young  star had some sort of bizarre "curse" on him.  According to legend and rumor, when Lee bought  a house in Hong Kong shortly before his death,   he incurred the wrath of the neighborhood's  resident demons. The curse is said to last   for three generation. Tragically, the notion  of a curse gained eerie credence on June 18,   1993-a month and two days before the 20th  anniversary of Lee's death-when Brandon Lee   died under equally strange circumstances. While  filming a scene for the movie The Crow, he was   shot by a gun that supposedly contained blanks but  in fact had a live round lodged in its chamber.   Like his father, Brandon Lee  was on the verge of stardom.  Lee gave the world an enormous artistic legacy,  in the process virtually creating a new cinematic   art form. By the 1990s, Enter the Dragon  alone had grossed more than $100 million,   and Lee's influence could be found in the work  of numerous Hollywood action heroes. For example,   in 1993, Jason Scott Lee appeared in Dragon:  The Bruce Lee Story, directed by Rob Cohen.   Actress Lauren Holly played Lee's wife Linda, and  Holly became friends with Lee's daughter Shannon.  Linda is the epitome of resilience. She  is an attest to the statement "when life   gives you lemons, make lemonade." Being  single with 2 children at that time,   Lee had no choice but to sell of Her love life has been turbulent, apart   from being married to Bruce Lee, Linda remarried  several times after losing her first husband. Linda Lee and Tom Bleecker tied the knot in  1988. However, theirs was not a "forever at last"   relationship. They divorced two years later, and  the media was trolling Linda Lee with all reasons   for gossip. Shortly after divorcing Bleecker,  Linda married Bruce Cadwell in 1991 and settled   in Southern California. Cadwell was by then a  stockbroker and made a living out of it. To date,   the couple is retired and continues to enjoy each  other’s company. They spend time playing golf and   travelling together. Her life as Lee's widow has  always been perceived with lots of speculations,   including, "Is Linda Lee Cadwell still alive?"  Outrightly, Linda is still alive and lives in   Boise, Idaho, with her current husband, Bruce  Cadwell. Linda is the founder of the Bruce   Lee Foundation, which she co-directs with her  daughter, Shanon. Linda Lee Cadwell’s wealth is   estimated to be $12 million as of 2021. Most of  her proceeds emanate from her successful writing   career. Her best-selling book is Bruce Lee: The  Man Only I Knew. Still, her inheritance of the   Bruce Lee estate has been a significant source  of wealth for the philanthropist who took over   from her late husband. Linda Lee Cadwell  is currently taking life at a slow pace.   She likes the country life and has handed over  the estate to her daughter. When Cadwell makes   appearances at the organization, it is  usually in the capacity of a volunteer.   However, even after forty eight years of the  day after the untimely death of the legend,   the legacy of Bruce Lee lives on: a  cultural icon of Hong Kong, a great   exponent of the martial arts and a philosopher  whose words continue to serve as an inspiration,   bonding people of different generations  and cultures across the world. Nonetheless, Linda Lee and her daughter, Shannon  Lee had quite a difficult time getting along   with the siblings of the late Bruce Lee. The  two sides of the family have often pursued   projects devoted to Bruce separately What little communication there has   been has more often come in the form of e-mail  exchanges and letters from lawyers, rather than   heartwarming phone calls and family gatherings.  The division in the Lee family is no secret.   The first factor is, distance since most live in  different parts of the United States. Cultural   differences also come into play, with Lee's  siblings forming a traditional Chinese family.  Shannon and Cadwell, who has remarried  twice since Bruce's death, are all American.  "We are not on bad terms," Shannon said.  "We just don't communicate very often."  At the crux of the family feud are  the lucrative rights to Bruce's name,   image and work. Rights issues have become an  unshakable problem for the Lee family since   Bruce's death from acute cerebral edema. Records of the office of the secretary of   state of California show that in 1985, Cadwell,  Lee's late son Brandon and Shannon made claims as   successor-in interest to the rights of a deceased  personality under California code Section 3344.1.   The code offers protection of the  rights to a person "whose name,   voice, signature, photograph, or likeness  has commercial value at the time of his   or her death" for the immediate family - a  surviving spouse, children, grandchildren,   or surviving parent or grandparents. Public  records show Cadwell claimed 50 per cent of   "all types of rights'' as Lee's surviving spouse  under the name Linda Lee. Brandon and Shannon   each claimed 25 per cent as Lee's surviving  children. Shannon was just four when Bruce died.  The Bruce Lee Foundation was established in  2002 as a charity to promote Bruce's legacy.   Shannon serves as president and it  is chaired by Linda Lee Cadwell. When Bruce Lee’s movie called Bruce Lee, My  Brother, is produced by the real siblings of Bruce   Lee, Robert Lee and his two sisters, they received  legal letters from Shannon's lawyer before the   movie was released in 2010. This is because they  did not have the right to use Bruce Lee's image or   likeness as images of Bruce Lee is currently  being handled by the Bruce Lee’s Foundation.   When asked about this, Robert said that he tried  to involve Shannon by giving her the details   of the investors. "Then she didn't want to work  with me. She wanted the whole deal to herself,".   "We don't talk as much as I would like  to. They don't want to collaborate with   us. We are one family. There is no  reason why we shouldn't collaborate.   We share different parts of Bruce's life." In another case of rivalry, when the Bruce Lee   Club of Hong Kong, of which Phoebe and Robert are  honorary chairman, raised the money for the iconic   statue of Bruce on the Avenue of Stars in Tsim  Sha Tsui in 2005, they reached out to Shannon.   But she chose not to get involved. "I'm not trying to take over the Bruce   Lee empire," said Robert. "I will soon  be in my late sixties and semi-retired.   I'm not interested in pursuing anything.  If they think I'm trying to make money,   I haven't done except for from the movie." He says the two books he wrote about   Bruce - one in Chinese, the other in  Japanese - sold only 1,000 copies each.   Robert said: "Our family was never sued, but  received threatening cease-and-desist letters from   Linda's ex-attorney. I stopped talking to Linda." Clarence Lee who is another sibling of the late   Bruce Lee, who lives in Macau and Hong  Kong, said: "I'm speaking not just for   this family but for any family. To speak  through lawyers is kind of wrong." He said   his father and aunts were frustrated, as  they wanted only to share their experiences   with fans interested in Bruce's childhood. Robert recalled a family that was closer back   then, supporting each other when Bruce died even  though Bruce's siblings were in the United States   when the news broke. Phoebe moved to the US with  her American-born Chinese husband 43 years ago.   Robert lived in the US at the time and returned  to Hong Kong in 1975 to build his music career.  When Bruce's mother died in 1996, three  years after a tragic accident on the set   of the film The Crow claimed Brandon's life,  Shannon, then 27, did not attend the funeral.  "Shannon and Cadwell did not visit mother during  her last months and they did not attend her   funeral," Robert said. Bruce's siblings say it  is a far cry from Bruce's attitude to his family.   Phoebe, who is two years older than Bruce, said  her beloved brother made family his top priority.   She remembered the delight of her father,  Cantonese opera maestro Lee Hoi-chuen, when he   learned of Brandon's birth in the United States. "He was very happy because it was the first   grandchild and a son. You know what a son means  in Chinese tradition," she said. One week later,   Lee Hoi-chuen passed away in his sleep. Bruce  rushed back from California to attend the funeral.   Phoebe said Bruce was devastated that he could not  bid farewell to his father in person. "He walked   on his knees from the outside to the altar. He  was in tears, and I said to him, 'Don't cry,   brother'," Phoebe recalled. Phoebe is reluctant  to speak about her relationship with Shannon and   Cadwell. She said she didn't really communicate  with Cadwell and blamed her poor English.   "I just wish one day things would work  out ... I hope all this can be resolved   before my two sisters and I die,"  he said. "Let's tear the wall down."
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Channel: Celebrity Reporter
Views: 4,368,152
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Length: 18min 48sec (1128 seconds)
Published: Mon Jun 21 2021
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