1. Gordon Liu

    Gordon Liu (born November 30, 1955) is a Chinese martial arts film actor. He was born in Guangdong Province, China and is the adopted brother of famed Shaw Brothers director and actor Lau Kar-leung (Liu Chia-Liang). Best known by Western moviegoers for his role as Pai Mei in "Kill Bill: Volume 2" (2004), and as Johnny Mo in "Kill Bill: Volume 1", the head general of the Crazy 88, O-Ren Ishii's (Lucy Liu) personal army.

  2. Chiu Chi Ling

    Chiu Chi Ling is an actor that appears mostly in Kung Fu style movies produced in Hong Kong. He also teaches Hung Gar Kung Fu at Chiu Chi Ling Hung Gar Kung Fu Association, a San Francisco-based martial arts school he founded, and at the old Chiu Family Kwoon in Hong Kong. Every year he visits his students and grand students around the world. He has appeared in over 70 movies, both as an actor and stunt man.

  3. Paul Vunak

    Paul Vunak is a California-based martial artist and known as the founder of Progressive Fighting Systems (PFS). By fourteen, he had achieved his first black belt. Paul began to explore other styles such as Kenpo and Hung Gar (Tiger Crane) Gung Fu. Within three years, he had earned another black belt (in Kenpo). In August of 1976, the school where Paul studied Kenpo closed and he enrolled in Dan Inosanto's Filipino Kali Academy, …

  4. Wong Kei Ying

    Wong Kei Ying (or Huang Qi-Ying) (18?? - 1886) is best known as the father of the Chinese folk hero and martial arts master Wong Fei Hung. Kei-Ying was himself a master martial artist and, though not as famous as the son he trained, was renowned enough to be included in the Ten Tigers of Canton, a group of ten of the top Chinese martial arts masters in Guangdong (Canton) towards the end of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1912). In the many movies made about Wong Fei-Hung, …

  5. Mark Houghton

    Mark Houghton is an actor and stunt coordinator. He began his career acting in a number of Hong Kong action films. He is currently teaching Hung Gar Kung Fu at the Lau Family Kung Fu School. Mark has recently been confused with a Canadian actor by the same name.

  6. Bey Logan

    Bey Logan (born November 15, 1963) is a respected expert on Asian cinema, particularly Hong Kong action cinema. He is also notable as a screenwriter and as a martial artist (trained in Hung Gar) who has had (usually minor) roles in a number of films, including "The Twins Effect". He is the author of "Hong Kong Action Cinema", an introduction to the subject, was a founder and editor of Impact magazine, …

  7. Hung Hei-Gun

    Hung Hei-Kwun was the founder of Hung Gar Kung Fu.

  8. Adrian Paul

    Adrian Paul Hewett (born May 29, 1959), better known as Adrian Paul, is an actor best known for his role on the television series "Highlander: The Series" as Duncan MacLeod. He was born in London, England in 1959, the first of three brothers to an Italian mother and a British father. Paul first became a model, then a dancer and choreographer. In 1985, he left Europe for the United States to pursue a dance and modeling career.

  9. Alexander Popov

    Alexander Popov (Born 1958) is a Martial Artist and President of the "Spetsnaz Training Association". Trained under Master Sang Ming Chong (who served in the GRU staff), he has over 30 years of experience in martial arts and 20 of those years was dedicated to Shaolin Hung Gar Kung Fu. He also has experience is various other Shaolin Kung Fu styles. Popov developed a version of a military hand-to-hand combat style for the Spetsnaz GRU, …

  10. Tit Kiu Saam

    Tiit Kiu Saam (1815 - 1887) was known as 'the great master of the Hong Fist' and was one of the Ten Tigers of Canton, a group of ten of the top Chinese martial arts masters in Guangdong towards the end of the Qing Dynasty (1644-1912). Born 'Liang Kun' in 1815, he studied martial arts in his youth under the famous Shaolin master Li Huzi ("Bearded Li", also known as 'Golden Hook').

  11. Frank Monsalve

    Frank Monsalve is a martial arts instructor who resides in Las Vegas, Nevada. He is the head instructor and founder of the Hybrid martial art Hurricane Combat Arts. "Hurricane Combat Arts" was designed for military, executive protection/bodyguard and reality street defense. It is built on the theories of Russian Systema, Bruce Lee's Jeet Kune Do, Muay Thai, Indonesian Pentjak Silat Serak and American military hand-to-hand combative concepts.

  12. Jee Sin Sim See

    Jee Sin Sim See is said to have been one of the legendary Five Elders, survivors of the destruction of the Shaolin Temple by the Qing Dynasty (1644-1912). He is linked to many southern Chinese martial arts including the five major family styles of Hung, Lau, Choy, Lee, and Mok; Wing Chun, and Hakka Kuen. The stories disagree as to whether Jee Sin was a survivor of the destruction of the original Shaolin Temple in Henan or the supposed Southern Shaolin Temple in Fujian.