Bruce Li
Bruce Li was born in Taiwan on June 5th, 1950 and is the Movie Actor. At the age of 73, Bruce Li biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 73 years old, Bruce Li has this physical status:
Bruce Li (born Ho Chung-tao, 1950) is a Taiwanese actor, martial artist, and Bruce Lee imitator who appeared in martial arts films from the Bruceplantion period.
Career
Under the name of James Ho, he began to perform stuntman in Taiwan and Hong Kong.
Ho Chung-tao's acting career began after Bruce Lee's death. Ho resembled the kung fu actor in Hong Kong's studios. They first employed him in Conspiracy. Game of Death's creators begged him to complete their film in Lee's role, but Ho declined.
Ho was employed by actor Jimmy Shaw, who gave him the name Bruce Li.
Although Ho was finishing his military service, he appeared in Goodbye Bruce Lee: His Last Game of Death. In 1976, he would appear in other Bruce Lee and Bruce Lee's "The Myth" sequence.
Many Taiwanese and Hong Kong designers have decided to specifically mention Bruce Lee under the name "Bruce Lee," even going so far as to use the real Bruce Lee's picture on posters. Li also appeared in Bruce Lee Against Supermen, where he appears as Kato, assistant to the Green Hornet, a role originally played by Bruce Lee.
Dragon Dies Hard, 1975, became a hit in Japan, where the box office earned 2 billion ($6.7 million).
Li was supposed to be Bruce Lee's "official" replacement, according to the producers. Li meets Lee in the 1976 film Exit the Dragon, Enter the Tiger. He says he is the one who will replace him. Li was dubbed the "Tiger" on Lee's "Dragon" by Li. Li appeared in Return of the Tiger, starring Angela Mao. Bruce Liu fights Paul L. Smith in the film.
Ho continued playing in two unofficial sequels to Bruce Lee's classic Fist of Fury.
In 1976, Ho returned to Bruce Lee's "The Man, The Myth" a biography film. Li choreographed the combat sequences himself. Fans of Bruce Lee's "best biopics" are recognizing it as a hit.
Until the 1980s, Horatio began shooting martial arts films. He also directed films, including the 1981 film The Chinese Stuntman.
Ho eventually ran into difficulties when separating himself from his Bruce Lee roles, as well as standing out from the crowd of Bruce Lee impersonators. After his wife's death in 1985, Ho ended his career. He returned to Taiwan to work as a physical education instructor at Ping Chung University in Taipei. He has also taught martial arts to comedian apprentices. Since then, he has only appeared in martial arts cinema or Bruce Lee documentaries.
Li retired from acting at the age of 40 in 1990.
Bruce Li's career was the subject of a segment of the 1995 film Top Fighter. He said in the interview that he was angry that the studios wanted to turn him into a Bruce Lee marketing gimmick, "I could act like him but I could never be him."