Mario Van Peebles (born January 15, 1957, Mexico City, Mexico) is an American actor and filmmaker of wide-ranging talent, as can be seen both in the comedies he has acted in as well as in the serious motion pictures he has directed.
Van Peebles is the eldest of three children of Melvin Van Peebles, a filmmaker, and Maria Marx, a photographer of German ancestry whose father worked for U.S. Pres Harry Truman. He grew up in Europe and San Francisco and spoke French and Spanish. In 1971 he acted in his father’s film Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song, which is credited with beginning the blaxploitation film genre. Having graduated from Columbia University, he acted in several Off-Broadway shows while working as a model. He gained prominence after appearing as a U.S. marine corporal in Clint Eastwood’s motion picture Heartbreak Ridge (1986) and in the television series Sonny Spoon (1988–90) as the titular private eye.
In 1991 Van Peebles directed a gangster motion picture called New Jack City, which starred Wesley Snipes. The film received favourable reviews, especially for Van Peebles’s directing. In 1993 he directed and starred in Posse, a western with African American stars, including his father. Set during the Spanish-American War, the film follows a unit of Black soldiers commanded by a racist white colonel. His next film, Panther (1995), retells the history of the Black Panther Party.
Van Peebles has appeared in many other television shows and motion pictures. In addition, he wrote a book with his father called No Identity Crisis: A Father and Son’s Own Story of Working Together (1990). The book concerns their collaborative film Identity Crisis (1989). They also collaborated as directors on the TV movie Gang in Blue (1996), in which Mario Van Peebles played a Black police officer who uncovers a gang of white supremacist cops. He further examined his relationship with his father in the film Baadasssss! (2003), a drama about the making of Sweet Sweetback’s Baadasssss Song, in which he played his father.
Later films in which Van Peebles acted include Ali (2001), in which he played Malcolm X, and A Letter to Dad (2009). Hard Luck (2006) reunited him with Snipes, who played a former drug dealer trying to go straight after prison. Van Peebles also made the films All Things Fall Apart (2011), about a college football player (portrayed by rapper 50 Cent) in his senior year; We the Party (2012), about five teenagers in Los Angeles; and USS Indianapolis: Men of Courage (2016), about that warship’s sinking and the rescue of its crew’s survivors. Van Peebles has directed episodes of many television series, including such acclaimed shows as Sons of Anarchy (2008), Law & Order (2008–09), Lost (2010), Boss (2011–12), and Empire (2015–19).