Leung Ting
Leung Ting | |
---|---|
Born | British Hong Kong | 28 February 1947
Native name | 梁挺 |
Residence | Hong Kong |
Style | Wing Chun |
Teacher(s) | Leung Sheung
Yip Man |
Occupation | martial artist, publisher, choreographer, screenwriter, director, former actor |
Notable club(s) | International WingTsun Association |
Website | www |
Leung Ting (Chinese: 梁挺; pinyin: Liáng Tǐng; born 28 February 1947) was a student of Leung Sheung and a closed door student of Yip Man, and is the founder and president of the International Wing Tsun Association.
Leung chose the spelling of Wing Tsun to differentiate his teachings from those of other Wing Chun schools, and to keep them from passing off their style as his own. (There is no standard romanization of Cantonese; the Chinese characters remain the same.)
Among the achievements in his career outside of teaching and writing about Wing Tsun, Leung has been a fight director in some Hong Kong films. Leung was the director and screenwriter for It's a Mad, Mad, Mad Kung Fu World! (大踢爆), a humoristic documentary on the history and culture of kung fu. Leung appeared on episode 1 of the first season of the BBC show Mind, Body & Kick Ass Moves; a 10 part series on martial arts masters of the east hosted by Chris Crudelli. He has also served as head instructor on the board of directors for the Ving Tsun Athletic association from 1996 to 1997.
Background
Born in Hong Kong in 1947, he was originally a student of Leung Sheung, and later become a closed door disciple of Ip Man,[1] This was a claim disputed by Ip Chun, Ip man's eldest son and co-author of the book written with Leung 116 Wing Tsun Dummy Techniques (1981).,[2] but this accusation was considered closed after a public press conference by Leung Ting and fellow members of the martial arts community in May 2010. Leung has also served as head instructor on the board of directors for the Ving Tsun Athletic association from 1996 to 1997. Leung Ting is the founder and president of the International WingTsun Association.[3]
Filmography
- Fight choreographer: Five Deadly Venoms
- Fight choreographer: The Brave Archer Part II
- Fight choreographer: Ten Tigers of Kwangtung
- Fight choreographer: Heaven and Hell
- Fight choreographer: Stranger from Shaolin
- Fight choreographer: Invincible Shaolin
- Fight choreographer: Life Gamble
- Director and screenwriter: 'It's a Mad, Mad, Mad Kung Fu World! (大踢爆)[4]
Lineage controversy
Some of Yip Man's students have disputed whether Leung Ting ever directly studied under Ip Man, most notably of which include Yip Man's eldest son, Yip Chun claimed "我老豆最憎最嬲係梁挺呢個人!" (My father dislike this person Leung Ting the most !) and also "唔係葉問徒弟" (Leung Ting is not Yip Man's student).[5][6] In response to Yip Chun's accusations, Leung Ting organised a public press conference in Hong Kong in May 2010 to showcase photographic evidence of his own close direct relationship with Yip Man.[7] Existing photo evidence shows that Leung Ting did appear with Yip Man in numerous high-profile events, including the only 2 interviews Yip Man ever conducted,[8][9] private lessons,[10] Leung Ting's wedding,[11] and public martial art demonstrations. Leung Ting publicly threatened to initiate a defamation claim against Yip Chun if an apology and withdrawal of accusations was not received. Yip Chun has since been quiet on this matter.[12]
In other evidence, in one of the only 2 interviews Yip Man ever conducted, Leung Ting was mentioned by Yip Man as one of his closed door disciples in New Martial Hero magazine 1972, copy 56, page 31, paragraph 2, line 5 - 教師梁挺係其一位封門弟子[13] Photos from the interview show Leung was with Yip man during the time.
The controversy had been in part fueled by past allegations that a photo Leung presented showing him with Yip Man was altered from a photograph that shows Yip Man with the chief editor of the New Martial Hero magazine.[14] Leung has denied the head change.[15] Other photo evidence shows Leung at Yip Man's funeral with an armband that apparently denotes a rank other than first generation (i.e., an armband that indicates that Leung was a grand-student of Yip Man's rather than a direct student).[14]
Other controversy
On 20 November 2009, Leung was acquitted of a two-month prison sentence for allegedly assaulting his former girlfriend, Regina Lip Sik-ying, a claim which was later quashed. Lip testified that Leung hit her after a heated argument involving Leung's ex-wife. Leung testified that Lip fell when Leung pulled her down from a window where she threatened to commit suicide after Leung refused to provide $5000 for plane tickets and an abortion. On hearing the verdict Leung shouted 'Objection!', and even shouted bullshit at the judge during the court case.[16] On 29 April 2010, the conviction was quashed by Court of First Instance Judge Darryl Gordon Saw. Judge Saw ruled that the medical reports did not support Lip's testimony but did support Leung's. Leung was cleared of all charges.[17][18]
References
- ^ Leung, Ting. "About Dr Leung Ting". leungting.com.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Ip Chun, Chun (1981). 116 Wing Tsun Dummy Techniques. Leung Publications. p. 1.
- ^ "Wing Tsun Worldwide". Kung Fu Magazine. Retrieved 6 February 2010.
- ^ "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad Kung Fu World!!! (2000)". hkmdb.com.
- ^ "梁挺獲同門好友力撐清白". Archived from the original on 26 January 2018.
- ^ "被指非詠春宗師葉問弟子梁挺控葉準誹謗索償".
- ^ "被指非詠春宗師葉問弟子 梁挺控葉準誹謗索償". 30 May 2010 – via http://hk.apple.nextmedia.com.
{{cite news}}
: External link in
(help)|via=
- ^ "Interview with grandmaster Yip Man". Kwokwingchun.com. 1972.
- ^ "An interview with grandmaster Yip Man". New Martial Hero magazine. 1972.
- ^ "(Ip Man) Leung ting".
- ^ http://www.leungting.com/images/stories/newphoto-09-Le.gif [dead link ]
- ^ "梁挺駁葉準言論促道歉". 30 May 2010 – via oriental daily.
- ^ "an interview with grandmaster yip man". 1972.
- ^ a b Kung Tze, Hsuan (5 September 1979). "A Scandal of the Wing-Chun School". Archived from the original on 24 February 2007. Retrieved 20 November 2006.
- ^ Senft, Markus (5 September 1999). "The Change-head Incident Interview". Archived from the original on 12 March 2012. Retrieved 20 November 2006.
- ^ "Kung fu master found guilty of beating girlfriend". The Standard. 20 November 2009. Archived from the original on 1 March 2014.
- ^ Chiu, Austin (30 April 2010). "Kung fu master's conviction quashed". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 24 July 2019.
- ^ "Leung Ting assault involving former girlfriend acquittal". Hong Kong Daily News (in Chinese). Retrieved 8 May 2010.
External links
- Ting Leung at IMDb