Kevin Darnell Hart was born on July 6, 1979, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the younger of two children. His father Henry Witherspoon was a cocaine addict who was frequently absent, leaving his mother Nancy Hart to raise the children largely on her own. She worked as a systems analyst at the University of Pennsylvania and kept a strict household that Hart has described as the foundation of his work ethic and his discipline. He was a bright student who found comedy as a coping mechanism โ the funny kid who could control a room through laughter, which was power in a world where most power was beyond his reach.
Hart attended Community College of Philadelphia before dropping out to pursue stand-up comedy. His early years in comedy were difficult โ he describes his first performance as so bad that he was booed off stage โ but he persisted through the long apprenticeship of open mics and small clubs, developing material and finding his voice. His first significant national exposure came through a recurring role on the sitcom Undeclared (2001-2002) and appearances on various comedy tours. His first major stand-up special I'm a Grown Little Man (2009) established him as a significant comedic voice; subsequent specials Laugh at My Pain (2011), Let Me Explain (2013), and What Now? (2016) built his audience to stadium scale.
Hart's film career developed alongside his stand-up profile: the Ride Along franchise (2014, 2016) with Ice Cube demonstrated that he could anchor mainstream comedies; Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle (2017) and its sequel showed he could hold his own in ensemble action comedies alongside Dwayne Johnson, Jack Black, and Karen Gillan. His ability to self-deprecate about his height โ using it as material rather than defending against it โ became a distinctive element of his persona, demonstrating the ESTP quality of working with reality rather than against it. His energy on screen and in live performance is genuinely exceptional: he is one of the few comedic performers who can sustain sixty thousand people's attention in an arena.
Hart's personal life has included a 2019 car accident that left him with serious spinal injuries requiring surgery and months of rehabilitation โ a period he documented publicly and that he has credited with changing his relationship to his own limitations and vulnerability. His marital difficulties (he was photographed in a compromising situation with a woman while married to Eniko Parrish in 2017, disclosed the situation publicly, and apologized) were navigated in public with a candor and accountability that his fanbase largely accepted. His production company Hartbeat has expanded his presence as a producer and executive, extending his influence beyond performance.