Peter Gene Hernandez was born on October 8, 1985, in Honolulu, Hawaii, into a family of Filipino, Puerto Rican, and Ashkenazi Jewish heritage, immersed in music from birth. His father Peter Hernandez had a rock and roll band and performed in the local music scene; his mother Bernadette San Pedro Bayot was a hula dancer and singer. The family was large and musical — Bruno and his siblings performed as The Love Notes from childhood. He acquired the nickname 'Bruno' as a young child after his parents noted his physical resemblance to wrestling star Bruno Sammartino. He performed as a child Elvis impersonator at a tourist venue in Honolulu.
Bruno Mars moved to Los Angeles after high school to pursue a music career, spending years as a songwriter and session musician before his own recording career took off. He wrote songs for artists including Brandy, Adam Levine, and Matisyahu; co-wrote and contributed vocals to B.o.B's 'Nothin' on You' (2010), which reached number one and introduced him to mainstream radio audiences. His debut single 'Just the Way You Are' (2010) was an immediate commercial success, establishing his signature combination of romantic warmth, extraordinary vocal range, and production that referenced multiple genres without committing exclusively to any of them.
The subsequent albums — Doo-Wops & Hooligans (2010), Unorthodox Jukebox (2012), 24K Magic (2016) — were commercially dominant and critically appreciated, each demonstrating musical fluency across soul, funk, pop, and R&B while maintaining a consistent sense of joyful entertainment. 'Uptown Funk' (2015), produced with Mark Ronson, became one of the best-selling singles in history and one of the most-played songs on streaming platforms of the decade. His live performances — the musicianship, the choreography, the production values, the evident pleasure he takes in entertaining — established him as one of the finest live pop performers of his era.
Bruno Mars's collaboration with Anderson .Paak as Silk Sonic — producing An Evening with Silk Sonic (2021) and the number-one single 'Leave the Door Open' — demonstrated a genuine musical partnership that elevated both artists, winning multiple Grammy Awards and sustaining critical interest beyond their individual commercial platforms. His positioning as a preserver and celebrant of Black music traditions — soul, R&B, funk — has been accompanied by thoughtful engagement with questions of cultural appropriation and authenticity, given his own mixed heritage. His connection to Hawaii, including the performance of benefit concerts during the 2023 Maui wildfires, has been consistent and genuine.