Actor Charles Martinet, known as the voice of Mario, Luigi, and Wario in Nintendo’s Super Mario Bros. games for three decades, will no longer voice those characters, Nintendo announced Monday. Martinet will segue into the role of “Mario Ambassador,” in which he will continue to “travel the world sharing the joy of Mario,” the company said in a statement posted on Twitter.
“It has been an honor working with Charles for so many years and we want to thank and celebrate him,” Nintendo added, saying it would post a video message featuring Martinet and Mario creator Shigeru Miyamoto “at a future date.”
Nintendo fans first noticed a change to the voices of Mario and Wario in recent trailers for Super Mario Bros. Wonder and WarioWare: Move It, two new games coming to Nintendo Switch this fall. After weeks of silence, and speculation from fans, Nintendo finally confirmed the change.
Martinet, 67, has been the identifiable voice behind Mario since 1991. He first started performing Mario’s chipper, exaggerated Italian-flavored voice for Nintendo at trade shows, but went on to record the character’s voice, for the first time in a Nintendo game, in Super Mario 64, released in 1996. Since then, Martinet has been the voice of Mario in dozens of games, expanding his vocal range to include voices for Luigi, Wario, Waluigi, Baby Luigi, and Baby Mario.
But for The Super Mario Bros. Movie, Nintendo and Illumination enlisted Chris Pratt as the voice of Mario. For Luigi, Charlie Day stepped in. Martinet himself appeared in the film in two charming cameos: Giuseppe and Mario’s dad.
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