Charles Martinet

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Charles Martinet
Charles Martinet Game World 2010.jpg
Martinet at Game World 2010
Born (1955-09-17) September 17, 1955 (age 68)
San Jose, California, United States
Residence San Francisco, California, United States
Alma mater University of California, Berkeley
Occupation Actor, voice actor
Years active 1986–present
Known for The voice of Mario, Luigi, Wario, Waluigi, Baby Mario, Baby Luigi, and Toadsworth for Nintendo
Paarthurnax in The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
Notable work Mario series
Super Mario (series)
Mario & Luigi (series)
Mario Kart (series)
Mario Party (series)
Mario Sports games
Wario Series
Super Smash Bros. (series)
Website Official website

Charles Martinet (born September 17, 1955, in San Jose, California) (English /mɑːrtɪˈn/; French: [maʁtinɛ]) is an American actor and voice actor best known for voicing Mario in the Super Mario video game series. He has voiced Mario, the titular character in Nintendo's flagship video game franchise since 1995. He also voices Luigi, Wario, Waluigi, Toadsworth, Baby Mario, Baby Luigi, and others.

Career

Working for Nintendo since 1994, Martinet started voicing Mario at video game trade shows in which attendees would walk up to a TV screen displaying a 3-D Mario head that moved around the screen and talked.[1] This system was called Mario in Real-Time or MIRT and was developed by Pasadena based SimGraphics.[1] Martinet could see the attendees by means of a hidden camera setup, and a facial motion capture rig recorded his mouth movements in order to synchronize Martinet's mouth movement with the on-screen Mario mouth movement. This digital puppetry, with Martinet's comic performance, was a novelty at the time.[citation needed]

Martinet was told by his friend that there was going to be an audition at a trade show in which you "talk to people as a plumber". He went to the audition at the last minute as the casting directors were already putting away their equipment. Charles Martinet walked in and asked, "Can I please read for this?". The directors let him audition and told him, "You're an Italian plumber from Brooklyn". At first Martinet planned to talk like a stereotypical Italian American with a deep, raspy voice (which is how Mario sounded in the Super Mario Bros. Super Show, Super Mario Bros. 3 and Super Mario World cartoons). He then thought to himself that it would be too harsh for children to hear, so he made it more soft-hearted and friendly, resulting in what Mario's voice is today. Martinet has also stated that he kept on talking with his Mario voice until the audition tape ran out.[2] He says that Petruchio from William Shakespeare's Taming of the Shrew was an inspiration for his portrayal of Mario.[1]

Martinet's video game voice over debut was as Mario in the 1995 Windows release of Interplay's game Mario's FUNdamentals. However, most were first exposed to Mario's voice in the landmark 1996 game Super Mario 64. He has voiced Mario, Luigi, Wario, Waluigi, Toadsworth, Metal Mario, Shadow Mario,[3] Piantas (Male), Mini-Mario Toys, Baby Mario, Baby Luigi and Baby Wario in most games wherein these characters speak. He also voiced the enemies Wart, Mouser, Tryclyde, and Clawgrip in Super Mario Advance. His voice work appears in the English and Japanese language versions of the games.

Martinet provided voiceover acting for the boxers and the announcer in the Super NES title Super Punch-Out!!. He voiced the character Vigoro in Sega's Dreamcast and Nintendo GameCube role-playing video game, Skies of Arcadia. He did the voice of Homunculus in the Konami PlayStation 2, Xbox and Windows game Shadow of Destiny, and provided voices for Reader Rabbit and The ClueFinders games. Charles Martinet wanted to voice Link in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, but Shigeru Miyamoto told him that Link would remain without a voice. However Link's grunts have been voiced by various Japanese voice actors.

In addition to video game voice overs, Martinet has worked as a voice actor in commercials, cartoons, and promotions. At the Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) trade show in 2005, Charles (as an Animal Crossing character) could be found roaming the virtual village featured in the playable demo of Animal Crossing: Wild World. Martinet did Mario's voice as the announcer for Pac-Man Vs. on the Nintendo GameCube.

Other than the Mario series, Charles has also done work for the video game Cel Damage as the voice of Fowl Mouth, as well as the primary voice work in several educational game series such as LeapFrog.[3] He also voiced the dragon Paarthurnax in the 2011 video game The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim, and narrated the cutscenes and menus for the 2013 video game Bit.Trip Presents... Runner2: Future Legend of Rhythm Alien.[4]

Public appearances

As 'the voice of Mario', he has become a well-known personality among fans of video games. As such, he has made several public appearances at several video game related events. Besides performing his well-known Mario voice, fans can meet him and take pictures with him, or ask for his autograph. He has made regular appearances at game events such as Electronic Entertainment Expo, Gamescom, and the Eurogamer Expo, as well at launch events of games like Super Mario Galaxy and Super Mario Galaxy 2.

Personal life

Martinet is of French descent and speaks fluent French[5] and Spanish. His family moved to Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain when he was 12 years old, and later his family moved to Paris, France.[6] He attended the American School of Paris and graduated in 1974.[7]

Martinet attended the University of California, Berkeley, where he originally intended to study international law. His senior year, he decided to discontinue his studies after a tutor told him to "regurgitate information he'd written in his book, chapter-by-chapter". A friend suggested him to take acting classes to combat his fear of public speaking. His first role was a monologue from the Spoon River Anthology.[6] Eventually, Martinet earned an apprenticeship at the Berkeley Repertory Theatre. After training with the Berkeley Rep for several years, Martinet went to London to attended the Drama Studio London, where among other skills, he discovered his talent for accents and dialects.[6] Upon returning to California he joined the Berkeley Reparatory Theatre. He went on to become a founding member of the San Jose Repertory Theatre for four years.[6]

Filmography

Film

  • Brotherhood of Justice (1986) (TV) .... Deputy
  • Hard Traveling (1986) .... Dist, Atty, Cobb
  • The Dead Pool (1988) .... Police Station Reporter #1
  • Mom (1990) .... Mr. Hernandez
  • The Last of His Tribe (1992) (TV) .... Assistant Museum Director
  • Criminal Hearts (1995) (as Charles Martinez) .... Juan
  • Nine Months (1995) .... Arnie
  • Death in Granada (1997) .... Gravedigger
  • The Game (1997) .... Nicholas' Father
  • A Thousand Men and a Baby (1997) (TV) .... Seattle cab driver
  • Sheer Passion (1998) .... Lou
  • The Californians (2005) .... City Councilman

Television

Video games

Vandalism to Wikipedia page and subsequent semi-protection

In late 2016 and early 2017 respectively, Martinet's Wikipedia article was vandalised by a member of the site known as The1337gamer, who deleted his filmography from the page. An unregistered user attempted to restore the deleted content, only to receive insults, personal attacks and death threats from The1337gamer, who constantly undid all of the unregistered user's edits. Even though there was no vandalism involved from the unregistered user but rather a registered member of the site, the article is now semi-protected indefinitely (as of May 2017) without warning by an authoritative left-wing administrator by the name of EdJohnston, who himself is known for attacking and threatening those with conservative political opinions.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. The Voice of Mario - Charles Martinet Interview on YouTube (at 2:20 mark)
  3. 3.0 3.1 charlesmartinet.com - Charles Martinet Voice Over
  4. http://gaijingames.com/blog-post/what-flavor
  5. Interview in French for Express magazine on YouTube
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links