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Bruce Lee Was On Live TV When The General Drew His Medal “Fight Me!” — NBC Never Aired It

The studio is Stage One at NBC Burbank, 10,591 square feet of floor space, 42 feet high, the largest production stage on the lot. Tonight it’s decorated with American flags, military banners, a stage designed to look like a ceremony platform. Red, white, and blue bunting draped across every surface, professional lighting, six cameras, full orchestra in the pit.

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This is network television at its most expensive, most carefully produced, most controlled. The host is Bob Hope, America’s entertainer, the man who has performed for troops on every continent. He’s wearing a navy blue suit, pocket square, standing behind a podium with the NBC peacock logo. Comfortable, confident, he’s done a thousand of these.

Military appreciation is his specialty. Nobody does it better. The audience is 400 people, half military personnel in dress uniforms, half civilians, families, invited guests, seated in rows that stretch back into the darkness beyond the stage lights. The front two rows are reserved, brass, generals, admirals, men with stars on their shoulders and ribbons across their chests, men who command thousands, men who have fought wars.

Tonight’s format is simple, musical performances, comedy segments from Bob Hope, recognition of decorated veterans. And between segments, featured guests, celebrities who support the military, athletes, actors, public figures. Bruce Lee is one of the featured guests. He’s been invited to demonstrate martial arts, a cultural segment, East meets West.

The network wants something visual, something exciting between the speeches and the music. Bruce Lee is perfect for this. His show, Longstreet, aired on ABC last year. He’s gaining recognition. Not a superstar yet, not a household name, but building, always building. Bruce sits backstage in a small dressing room, black pants, black shoes, no shirt.

His physique is visible, 5’8, 141 lb, every muscle defined, not from bodybuilding, from function, from thousands of hours of training that turned his body into something closer to a weapon than a human frame. His forearms are disproportionately developed. His lats flare even when relaxed. He looks like he was built in a wind tunnel. Everything aerodynamic, everything purposeful, nothing wasted.

His segment is scheduled for 9:47 p.m., 12 minutes of demonstration, the one-inch punch, speed drills, a brief explanation of Jeet Kune Do philosophy, standard material. He’s done this before on other programs. He knows exactly what he’ll show, exactly how he’ll present it. Professional, prepared, but sitting in the front row, third seat from the left, is someone who has already decided that Bruce Lee’s segment is an insult.

Brigadier General Raymond Holt, United States Army, 58 years old, 6’2, 229 lb, silver hair cropped military short, face like carved granite, jaw set permanently forward, three stars worth of ribbons across his chest, Distinguished Service Cross, Bronze Star with two oak leaf clusters, Purple Heart, Vietnam veteran, two tours, commander of the Third Infantry Division’s combat training program at Fort Benning, Georgia.

General Holt has spent 34 years in the United States Army. He has trained more soldiers in hand-to-hand combat than any active commander in the service. His program at Fort Benning is legendary, brutal, effective. Soldiers enter his 12-week course as men. They leave as weapons. His philosophy is simple, size wins, strength wins, aggression wins, discipline wins.

Everything else is theater. And tonight, watching the production crew set up mats and wooden boards for some small Chinese martial artist to break things and perform tricks on a stage meant to honor real warriors, General Holt’s patience has already begun to thin. Bob Hope is on stage delivering his opening monologue, military jokes, clean, safe. The audience laughs on cue.

Generals in the front row smile politely. This is familiar territory, comfortable, controlled. The orchestra plays patriotic transitions between segments. Everything runs on schedule. Everything runs on script. This is NBC. Nothing goes wrong on NBC. Backstage, a production assistant with a clipboard and headset approaches Bruce Lee’s dressing room. Knocks twice. “Mr.

Lee, you’re up in 14 minutes.” Bruce nods, stands, rolls his shoulders, loosens his neck, slow circular movements, his body warming itself from the inside out. Not stretching the way athletes stretch, something different, something internal. Energy moving through pathways that Western medicine doesn’t have names for.

He walks to the stage wing, stands behind the heavy black curtain, watches the monitor mounted on the wall. Bob Hope is introducing a musical act. The United States Army Band plays Stars and Stripes Forever. The audience applauds. Flags wave. Cameras sweep the crowd. Close-ups of veterans, medals catching stage light, proud faces, American faces.

Bruce watches, patient. His hands are still at his sides. His breathing is slow, 4 seconds in, 6 seconds out, a rhythm he’s maintained since he was 16 years old. Standing in the wing of a national television broadcast, waiting to perform for 11 million people, his heart rate is 58 beats per minute, resting, calm.

The man does not experience nervousness the way other people do. He has trained it out of himself the way a surgeon trains out the tremor in their hands. In the front row, General Raymond Holt is not watching the Army Band. He’s reading the program, a folded cardstock pamphlet with the evening’s schedule printed in gold lettering.

His eyes find the entry for 9:47 p.m., Bruce Lee. Martial arts demonstration, cultural exchange segment, sponsored by the Asia Pacific Cultural Foundation. Holt reads it twice. His jaw tightens. Cultural exchange on a night honoring warriors, real warriors, men who bled in jungles and deserts, men who carried rifles and buried friends.

And between their recognition segments, the network has scheduled a man to break wooden boards and perform choreographed kicks. Entertainment, circus tricks dressed up as combat. The officer sitting next to Holt is Colonel David Mercer, Holt’s aide-de-camp for the past 3 years. West Point graduate, quiet, observant. He notices Holt’s expression change, sees the jaw set harder, the eyes narrow.

He’s seen this look before, in Vietnam, in training facilities, before decisions that other men regret. “Sir?” Mercer says quietly. “Everything all right?” Holt doesn’t answer. Folds the program, places it on his knee, stares at the stage. His right hand moves to his chest. Fingers touch the Distinguished Service Cross, the medal he earned in the Ia Drang Valley in 1965, the medal that represents the worst 72 hours of his life.

37 men under his command, 11 came back. He carried two of them, literally carried them through jungle with bullets cutting the air around his head. That medal isn’t decoration. It’s a gravestone he wears over his heart. And in 12 minutes, a man who has never seen combat, never held a rifle, never watched a friend die, is going to stand on a stage built to honor that sacrifice and perform tricks.

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