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star of the tv series Kung Fu

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David Carradine was born John Arthur Carradine on December 8, 1936 in Hollywood, California. Carradine is best known for his roles as Kwai Chang Caine in the 1970s television series Kung Fu (as well as the sequels in the 1980s and 1990s), 'Big' Bill Shelly in Martin Scorsese's Boxcar Bertha (1972), folksinger Woody Guthrie in Bound for Glory (1976), Abel Rosenberg in Ingmar Bergman's The Serpent's Egg (1977), and as Bill in Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill (2003,2004).

 

David Carradine

David Carradine
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David Carradine

David Carradine
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Kill Bill Vol. 2

Kill Bill Vol. 2
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David Carradine

David Carradine
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David Carradine

David Carradine
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David Carradine

David Carradine
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David Carradine

David Carradine
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David Carradine

David Carradine
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David Carradine

David Carradine
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Cloud Dancer

Cloud Dancer
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David Carradine

David Carradine
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David Carradine - Kung Fu

David Carradine - Kung Fu
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David Carradine - North and South, Book II

David Carradine - North and South, Book II
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David Carradine - Kung Fu

David Carradine - Kung Fu
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David Carradine - Kung Fu

David Carradine - Kung Fu
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How Watching TV As A Boy Made Me A More Disciplined Adult
By Yoshi Kundagawa

When I was a kid at primary school, way before I graduated to the darker days of high school, I used to believe there were three kinds of hero: · The superhero - guys like Batman who could kick butt despite looking pretty dodgy in their day-glo outfits · The anti-hero - like the Incredible Hulk who tried to do good but still got treated like an outcast · the everyday hero - normal people like you and me who could do superhero things, with just a little bit of training Although the first two kinds were cool enough, you never felt like you could be just like them. I mean, how many times would an overdose of gamma personally hit you? But the third kind… Anybody could be like them, even a scrawny little kid like me, and nowhere was this more true than with the 'Kung Fu' TV series.

Maybe it was because it was so normal that I liked it so much. The hero didn't look like the Hulk on steroids, and he didn't have need to wear a mask to hide who he was – he'd take on everyone and be proud to show who he was. All I knew was that between 1972 and 1975, at exactly 6.00pm in the evening, I'd be in front of the TV, hunched just like a meditating Chinese martial artist myself.

It was also the first thing to introduce me to one of my favorite actors as well, David Carradine, who played the main character, Kwai Chang Cain. Okay, so he may not be the greatest actor on the planet, but you show me someone who is as laid-back cool as him and I'd bet David Carradine could lay the smack down on them. The fact that he was actually a trained martial artist made 'Kung Fu' an even better TV series, since he was just as scrawny as I was!

Born of an American father and Chinese mother, Cain is orphaned and becomes an outcast, and maybe I related to that, as my father died when I was very young, too. Taken in by Shaolin monks, they turn this scrawny little kid into the guy that even Bruce Lee would respect. Discovering he has a half-brother called Danny, Cain (as an adult) sets out on a journey across America to find him.

Although no specific episodes stood out for me as a kid, I always remembered the little sayings in every episode – the philosophy of why I should strive to become a better person through discipline and honor. It must have worked, because 30 years later, I'm one belt away from achieving my black belt in karate.

When I found out that you could get the complete 'Kung Fu' TV series, I almost peed my pants (my strong karate discipline stopped me, of course!), since I never enjoyed the newer version of the series (which also starred Carradine as a descendent of Cain, and was shown in the nineties). Now all I need is my own little brood in my dojo, so I can share with them what made me the man I am today.

Yoshi Kundagawa is a freelance journalist covering the martial arts world. Too much time at his computer eating donuts reduced him to couch potato status. He's on a quest to recapture his youth and fitness. You can read his blog at http://www.martialarts3000.com