JP Martial Arts Academy

JP Martial Arts Academy JP Martial Arts Academy offers classes for children and adults in Karate, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, MMA, Goju-Ryu Karate - Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu – Self Defense.

Free trial class in any of our Adult or Children’s Martial Arts Programs. (781) 530-7974; [email protected]

Great kids karate class today. We worked on basics and practiced kata.
05/17/2026

Great kids karate class today. We worked on basics and practiced kata.

05/09/2026

In 1964, no Black man in America was building a career in karate. Jim Kelly looked at the boxing money, looked at Joe Louis, looked at a young Cassius Clay, and said no thanks.

He drove to Lexington, Kentucky, started training Shorin-ryu under a Korean master named Sin Kwang Thé, and seven years later took the World Middleweight title at Long Beach. The boy went the long way on purpose.

A coach said the word out loud in a University of Louisville football locker room, sometime in the early 1960s, and an eighteen-year-old freshman from Bourbon County, Kentucky, named James Milton Kelly heard it and decided he was leaving.

The word was aimed at one of his Black teammates. The teammate stood there and kept dressing, the way Black men in the South had been keeping dressing for generations.

Kelly didn't. He gave back the football scholarship, packed up the dormitory, and walked off the campus before his first year was over.

That decision is the one most articles about him skip. It is also the decision that explains everything that came after.

Bourbon County, Kentucky, is a small horse-country town an hour east of Louisville, named for the bourbon, full of farms and fences and a Black community that knew how to send its talented kids out into a wider America without giving them up entirely. Kelly had come up through Bourbon County High School in Paris, Kentucky, where he played basketball, ran track, and lit up the football field hard enough to earn the scholarship that was supposed to be his way out.

His mother had run a locker rental service for Navy personnel. His father had worked the kind of small steady jobs that kept six children fed.

Football was supposed to be the door. The locker room was supposed to be the threshold.

Instead, the locker room was a man in a coach's uniform calling a Black kid by a word that had been used on Kelly's grandfather and his great-grandfather and back through every page of the family Bible. Kelly was not built to absorb that and walk back onto a practice field and pretend it had not been said.

So he closed the door behind him and went looking for a different one.

He found it in Lexington, Kentucky, in a dojo run by a Korean master named Sin Kwang Thé. Kelly walked in and started learning Shaolin-do, then Shorin-ryu, then Okinawan karate, training under teachers named Parker Shelton, Nate Patton, and Gordon Doversola.

In 1964, this was an unusual room for a young Black athlete in America to choose. Most Black men with that kind of natural ability went into boxing, where the money was, where the lineage from Joe Louis to Sugar Ray to a young Cassius Clay was already cut into the ground.

Kelly chose karate. He chose the slow, unsentimental, unforgiving work of a tradition almost no Black man in America was building a career inside.

Seven years later, in 1971, he stood in the Long Beach Arena and won the World Middleweight title at the International Karate Championships. He won four major championships that calendar year alone.

He was, by then, one of the most decorated karate champions in the world. He moved to Los Angeles, opened his own studio in the Crenshaw district, and let Hollywood, which always finds the rooms it needs, come to him.

It started with the actor Calvin Lockhart, who needed martial arts training for a 1972 film called Melinda. Lockhart's writer was introduced to Kelly through a student, and the production cast Kelly himself in a small role as a karate teacher named Charles Atkins.

It was his first screen credit. It put his name on a list, in a town that runs on lists.

A year later, the producer Fred Weintraub had a problem. He was about to fly to Hong Kong to shoot a Bruce Lee picture called Enter the Dragon, and the actor he had cast for the role of Williams, a man named Rockne Tarkington, had dropped out days before production.

Weintraub had heard about a karate champion with a studio in Crenshaw. He drove out to the dojo, watched Kelly move on the mats, and signed him on the spot.

That casting accident put a Black American martial artist on screen with Bruce Lee in what became one of the most famous martial arts films ever made. Kelly played Williams, a man invited to a tournament run by a renegade Shaolin monk, and he walked through that Hong Kong set with an afro you could see from across a soundstage and a half-smile that made him look like he was the only person in the picture who knew the joke.

The lines he delivered have stayed in the ear of American moviegoers for over fifty years. The villain Han lectures him about preparing for defeat, and Williams says he doesn't waste his time on it, that when defeat comes he won't even notice.

Han asks him how. Williams answers, "I'll be too busy looking good."

He was the only Black lead in the film. He held the screen with Bruce Lee, and he made it look like he had nothing to prove.

Years later he told Salon what working with Lee had meant to him, and his voice was simple, almost shy. "Bruce was just incredible, absolutely fantastic," Kelly said.

He added that he had learned more from working with Lee than from anyone else he had worked with in the movie business. They were, he said, both martial artists, and that was the difference.

A few weeks before Enter the Dragon premiered, Bruce Lee died in Hong Kong. The studios that had been figuring out what to do with martial arts cinema suddenly had a void where Lee was supposed to be, and they turned to the man Lee had shared the screen with.

Warner Brothers signed Kelly to a three-picture deal. The first was Black Belt Jones in 1974, a film whose title alone announced that a Black man was now the lead in a martial arts picture, and the genre would never look quite the same after.

Then came Three the Hard Way, also 1974, where Kelly stood between Jim Brown and Fred Williamson as Mister Keyes, the three of them running through a story about a white-supremacist plot to poison the country's water supply with a chemical lethal only to Black people. The plot was pulpy and the politics were not subtle, and the image of Kelly, Brown, and Williamson on a movie poster together was the kind of image Black audiences had simply never seen on a major Hollywood marquee before.

Take a Hard Ride followed in 1975, Hot Potato in 1976, Black Samurai in 1977. For about four years, Jim Kelly was a Black leading man in a Hollywood that had spent most of its history insisting Black leading men did not sell tickets.

Then the scripts changed. By the late 1970s, the writing arriving at his agent's office was not the writing he could put his name on.

The blaxploitation wave had crashed, the studios were retreating to safer types, and what they wanted from a Black martial artist was a flatter, harder, less human version of him than the Williams he had played in Hong Kong or the Mister Keyes he had played alongside Brown and Williamson. He was very specific about it later, in interviews, and his answers have been quoted often enough that they read now like a kind of Kelly philosophy.

"The scripts I was getting were bad scripts," he told one interviewer, "and the character they wanted me to project, they weren't the type of characters I wanted to project."

He went on. "I wanted to do action films, but in Hollywood, they usually have a steel-type Black guy they want to project, and I wasn't willing to do those things."

This was the second time in his life that he walked out of a room where the work being asked of him would have meant accepting a smaller version of himself. The first time, he had given up a college scholarship.

The second time, he gave up Hollywood.

In 2010, near the end of his life, he sat for an interview about why he had been gone from the screen so long. His answer was patient, almost cheerful, the way a man sounds when he stopped explaining himself a long time ago.

"I never left the movie business," Kelly said. "It's just that after a certain point, I didn't get the type of projects that I wanted to do."

He still got at least three scripts a year, he told the interviewer, and most of them did not put forth a positive image. There was nothing he really wanted to do, so he did not do it.

If it happened, it happened. If not, he was happy with what he had accomplished.

Three scripts a year, every year, for thirty years. That was the math of his refusal.

While the unsigned pages stacked up on a table somewhere in Crenshaw and later in San Diego, he was building a quiet second life on a tennis court. He had played amateur tennis through the early 1970s on the public courts of Plummer Park in West Hollywood, and in 1975 he joined the USTA Senior Men's Circuit.

He climbed the rankings the way he had climbed the karate rankings, with a discipline that had nothing to do with applause. He reached number two in California in senior men's doubles, top ten in the state in senior men's singles, and eventually moved south and became the owner and director of a tennis club in the San Diego area.

A man who had once stood on a Hong Kong soundstage with Bruce Lee was now spending his afternoons stringing rackets and walking the lines of his own court. He seemed to find that it suited him.

On June 29, 2013, James Milton Kelly died of cancer at his home in San Diego. He was sixty-seven years old.

His wife of thirty-three years, Marcia Bentley, was with him. His daughter Sabrena, from his first marriage to his college sweetheart Marilyn Dishman, was a grown woman.

The obituaries led with Enter the Dragon and Black Belt Jones, the way obituaries always do. Most of them did not mention the Louisville locker room, or the dojo in Lexington, or the unsigned scripts piled on a table in San Diego.

There is a kind of quiet courage that gets confused for stubbornness while a man is alive and only becomes legible after he is gone. It is the courage of the small refusal repeated across decades, the willingness to walk out of every room where the work or the word would shrink you.

Jim Kelly walked out of those rooms, again and again. He was the first Black martial arts film star in American history, and he was that for exactly as long as he could be it on his own terms, and not one minute longer.

Then he picked up a tennis racket and went home.

I put a lot of effort into researching and sharing stories that matter. If you'd like to support the work, here's the link:
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Kids are moving well in BJJ. Today we worked on the single leg under pass.
05/04/2026

Kids are moving well in BJJ. Today we worked on the single leg under pass.

04/29/2026

Eric and Liam practice Kobudo: striking, and blocking and countering with swords.

Back takes and some rolling tonight at BJJ.
04/29/2026

Back takes and some rolling tonight at BJJ.

04/24/2026
04/23/2026

Sensei David with Eric, demonstrating a takedown application from Heian 2 kata.

04/22/2026

Carlos and Eric spar… reminds me of Bruce and Kareem! 🙂

Sensei David and Sensei Lucy visited the second grade at the JFK School in Jamaica Plain to talk about JP Martial Arts a...
04/17/2026

Sensei David and Sensei Lucy visited the second grade at the JFK School in Jamaica Plain to talk about JP Martial Arts and our role in the JP community. We see excited to see our students Luke and Simon, as well as Reese, the brother of our former student Lydia!

Address

JP Martial Arts Academy 363A-B Centre Street
Jamaica Plain, MA
02130

Opening Hours

Monday 4:30pm - 8:30pm
Tuesday 4:30pm - 9pm
Wednesday 4:30pm - 9pm
Thursday 4:30pm - 8pm
Saturday 10am - 3pm

Telephone

+17815307974

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