Martin Lawrence
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- In full:
- Martin Fitzgerald Lawrence
- Born:
- April 16, 1965, Frankfurt am Main, West Germany [now Germany] (age 58)
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Martin Lawrence (born April 16, 1965, Frankfurt am Main, West Germany [now Germany]) starred in the hit television sitcom Martin from 1992 to 1997. He parlayed his success on the small screen into an active film career. He is also credited with popularizing the greeting “wassup?”
Lawrence was born in West Germany (now Germany), where his father, a U.S. Air Force serviceman, was stationed. The family soon returned to the U.S., settling in Landover, Maryland. After graduating from high school, Lawrence decided to try his luck as a stand-up comic. He also briefly worked at a Sears call center with future hip-hop duos Salt-N-Pepa and Kid ’n Play. He appeared on the television talent show Star Search in 1986, and, although he did not win the competition, the following year he landed a recurring role on the TV series What’s Happening Now!! (1985–88). Lawrence eventually earned small roles in several films, including Do the Right Thing (1989); House Party (1990) and House Party 2 (1991), with his former coworkers Kid ’n Play; and Boomerang (1992). He served as host of the cable television program Def Comedy Jam from 1992 to 1993.
On Martin Lawrence played a radio DJ, and he showed his versatility by playing many supporting characters on the show, often in prostheses or drag. The popularity of Martin helped catapult Lawrence into larger film roles. His first major lead role on the big screen was with Will Smith in the hit action comedy Bad Boys (1995), the feature debut of director Michael Bay.
Lawrence next starred in, wrote, and directed the romantic comedy A Thin Line Between Love and Hate (1996). During the making of that film, Lawrence was hospitalized after an outburst on the set. In May 1996 he was arrested and again hospitalized after standing in an intersection in Los Angeles and yelling at passing cars.
However, Lawrence’s career continued unabated. He played a bumbling carjacker alongside Tim Robbins in the comedy Nothing to Lose (1997). In Life (1999) he and Eddie Murphy played two strangers who become friends after being sentenced to life in prison in the 1930s for a crime they did not commit. Lawrence again displayed his facility with prostheses by playing an FBI agent who must disguise himself as an elderly woman in Big Momma’s House (2000) and its sequels, Big Momma’s House 2 (2006) and Big Mommas: Like Father, Like Son (2011). Among his numerous other films are Open Season (2006), Wild Hogs (2007), and College Road Trip (2008). He reunited with Smith for Bad Boys II (2003) and Bad Boys for Life (2020).