Jim Kelly, ‘Enter the Dragon’ star, dies at 67
He was not on the list.
Jim Kelly,
an African American actor and martial arts expert who starred opposite Bruce
Lee in “Enter the Dragon,” has died at the age of 67.
Kelly, whose
credits also included the “blaxploitation” films “Black Belt Jones” and “Three
the Hard Way,” died Saturday in San Diego, said his ex-wife, Marilyn Dishman.
No cause of death was disclosed.
“I broke
down the color barrier -- I was the first black martial artist to become a
movie star,” Kelly told the Los Angeles Times in 2010. “It’s amazing to see how
many people still remember that, because I haven’t really done much, in terms
of movies, in a long time.”
Distinguished
by an oversized Afro, Kelly played college football but believed he had a
better chance at becoming a karate champion than making it into the NFL.
Raised in
Millersburg, Ky., and San Diego, where his father ran a locker-rental service
for Navy personnel, Kelly excelled at sports in high school and attended the
University of Louisville on a football scholarship, but he abruptly quit school
in protest of a coach’s racist treatment of a fellow player.
He
discovered karate by chance in the mid-1960s and quickly made it his life’s
focus. By decade’s end, he was living in Los Angeles, studying and competing
with prominent martial artists and teaching at his own karate school.
“My ultimate
goals were to get into the movie business, to become famous, to make a lot of
money and motivate and inspire young people, people of all nationalities and
colors,” Kelly said.
“But I
didn’t know anything about acting. And there weren’t a lot of black heroes in
the movies at that time. I felt that with the martial arts, I could offer
Hollywood something different. So my goal was to become a world champion
martial artist and try to get noticed.”
In 1971,
Kelly won the middleweight division title at the Long Beach International
Karate Championships.
Soon
afterward, he was hired to train actor Calvin Lockhart in karate for the 1972
thriller “Melinda,” and he ended up playing a martial arts instructor. His
breakthrough role in “Enter the Dragon” came after Rockne Tarkington, the actor
originally set to play Kelly’s role in the classic film, dropped out of the
production.
“Two or
three days before we left to shoot in Hong Kong ... suddenly I was stuck
without an actor,” producer Fred Weintraub recalled. “Somebody told me about a
school that Jim Kelly had on Crenshaw Boulevard. I went down to see him,
watched him work out and hired him immediately.”
In addition
to “Enter the Dragon” and the blaxploitation films, Kelly subsequently landed
some minor roles on television and some direct-to-video titles. But his career
quickly petered out in the 1980s. He was a competitive tennis player later in
his life, and a ranked senior and coach.
He said that
working with Lee, who died in 1973, was one of the best experiences of his
life.
“I probably
enjoyed working with Bruce more than anyone else I’d ever worked with in movies
because we were both martial artists,” Kelly told Salon in 2010. “And he was a
great, great martial artist. It was very good.”
Filmography
Film
Melinda (1972) –
Charles Atkins
Enter the Dragon
(1973) – Williams
Black Belt Jones
(1974) – Black Belt Jones
Three the Hard Way
(1974) – Mister Keyes
Golden Needles
(1974) – Jeff
Take a Hard Ride
(1975) – Kashtok
Hot Potato (1976)
– Jones
Black Samurai
(1977) – Robert Sand
The Tattoo
Connection (a.k.a. E yu tou hei sha xing, Black Belt Jones 2) (1978)[10] –
Lucas
Death Dimension
(1978) – Lt. Detective J. Ash
The Amazing Mr. No
Legs (a.k.a. Mr. No Legs) (1979)
One Down, Two to
Go (1982) – Chuck
The Last Match
(1990)
Stranglehold
(1994)
Ultimatum (1994) –
Executive
Macked, Hammered,
Slaughtered and Shafted (2004) – Executive #4
Afro Ninja (2009)
– Cleavon Washington
Television
Highway to Heaven
(1985/1986) – Reporter (2 episodes)
No comments:
Post a Comment