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Rorion
Gracie
The oldest son of Helio Gracie, Rorion put on a gi before he could walk. At
2 years old, he was already doing public demonstrations with his father. At
an early age, he grasped the concepts and learned to teach under the tutelage
of his father. He has embraced the principles and techniques established by
Helio and is responsible for the tremendous explosion of Jiu-Jitsu around the
world.
Around Christmas 1969, Rorion came to
the United States for a 3 month vacation. After visiting
relatives in New York and Washington, DC, he moved on to
California and stayed at the Hollywood YMCA.
He had kept his return airline tickets,
along with his cash, in a safety box at the Y. A few weeks
later when the time came for his return to Brazil, he found
out that a receptionist had stolen his money and his ticket.
Not wanting to alarm his parents, he told them he had decided
to stay longer in California. Through a friend, he got a
job at a hamburger stand in the San Fernando Valley, just
northwest of Los Angeles. Within a few days, he moved in
with the family of a coworker.
Remember, the setting is 1970, the days
of peace, flower-power and rock and roll. Jimi Hendrix and
Janis Joplin are atop the charts. After 6 months, Rorion
started to get bored and eager to return home to Brazil.
Because he was so close, though, he thought he'd stick around
long enough to see Hawaii.
Hawaii was wonderful -- until the money
ran out. Then, the tropical paradise changed dramatically.
While looking for a job, he was so broke that he actually
had to panhandle and sleep on newspapers on the streets.
Eventually, by late 1970, he made his way back to Brazil.
In 1972, he returned to America for the
summer, then went back to Brazil where he attended the Federal
University of Rio de Janeiro for 5 years and graduated with
a Bachelors Degree in Law. At that point, following a brief
marriage and two children, Rorion made the most important
decision of his life: In 1978, he landed in New York with
a little over $2,000 in his pocket and a dream: to make
his family's jiu-jitsu popular worldwide.
Rorion moved to Southern California and,
through friends he met on his first trip, got jobs working
as an extra in movies and television. At the same time,
he put some mats down in his garage and every person he
met was invited for a free introductory class. If they brought
a friend along, they got another free class. Ten friends,
ten free classes, and so on. Boy, did he take a beating!
It was working, though; the word was getting around.
By 1989, Rorion had remarried and had
five more children, and 120 students coming to take classes
in his garage, with an additional 80 people on a growing
waiting list. By then, Royce had come to the U.S. and was
living with and teaching along side Rorion to help strengthen
the establishment of Gracie Jiu-Jitsu here.
Through his contacts in Hollywood, Rorion
started choreographing fight scenes for movies including
those in "Lethal Weapon" and "Lethal Weapon
3" where he worked with Mel Gibson and Rene Russo.
Playboy Magazine and leading martial arts publications all
over the world were helping to spread the word through articles
profiling Rorion and his Brazilian jiu-jitsu style.
The video, "Gracie Jiu-Jitsu In
ActionTM" had been released in 1988 and quickly gained
international popularity. Some of the most prominent martial
artists in the country were coming to Torrance to take classes
as they began to recognize the importance of incorporating
the benefits of Gracie Jiu-Jitsu into their own styles.
By 1989, having long outgrown the boundaries of Rorion's
garage, the Gracie Academy opened its doors.
After opening the Academy, releasing
the first instructional video series, "Gracie Jiu-Jitsu
BasicsTM", was a natural consequence. Other videos followed,
and by 1993, Rorion developed the concept of the Ultimate
Fighting Championship. Royce stepped into the octagon and
showed everyone, once and for all, what Gracie Jiu-Jitsu
was all about. The world of martial arts would never be
the same.
Rorion, the visionary, has produced several
videotapes, both instructional and documentary, as well
as the first interactive instructional CD-ROM, "Gracie
Total Defense". He also developed the concept of combining
jiu-jitsu instruction with fun in the sun on official Gracie
Cruises. His G.R.A.P.L.E.® program (Gracie Resisting
Attack Procedures for Law Enforcement) has reached every
major federal law enforcement agency and military organization,
as well as most state and local police departments. The
demand is overwhelming. His RAPESAFE® instructional
course and video are the most realistic and complete form
of self-defense for women available today. G.A.R.D. (Gracie
Air Rage Defense) is the latest in Rorion's line of specialized
self-defense programs, empowering flight attendants with
the ability to subdue and control unruly passengers. This
renaissance man never runs out of ideas that eventually
become realities.
Rorion, who lives in Southern California
with his wife, Silvia, is assuring the world that the legacy
does not stop with him. On any given day, some of his nine
children can be found at the Gracie Academy teaching, training
and learning what it takes to carry on the Gracie tradition.
"It's like my family's art,"
smiles Rorion. "Timing is everything. We win by staying two moves ahead of
the other guy."
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