Biography

Martin Amini: Age, Height, & Ethnicity Revealed

Martin Amini's specific age, height, and ethnicity are detailed. This covers background facts about the Iranian-Bolivian comedian.

Martin Amini is one of those comedians who has built a significant following before the background-facts page of the internet fully caught up with him. His TikTok clips went viral, his tour dates sell out, and a growing number of fans are arriving at his shows having already sent three different clips to three different people — but wanting to know more about who he actually is before they get there.

This is the clearest answer available to the most common questions.

Age

Martin Amini was born in 1987, which puts him in his late 30s as of 2026. He grew up in Silver Spring, Maryland, in the DC suburbs. The Iranian-Bolivian household he grew up in, the Georgia Avenue neighborhood that appears in his Kennedy Center special, the DC comedy scene he came up through — all of that context comes from a childhood and young adulthood in the DC metro area in the late 1980s and 1990s.

His age places him in an interesting position in comedy: young enough that the big theatrical touring moment feels like it's arriving at the right time, old enough that there are two filmed specials and a decade-plus of club work behind the confidence he brings to a room. He's not a prodigy and he didn't blow up at 23. He built something real over time. The momentum feels earned because it is.

Height

Martin Amini is approximately 5'10". He's not a physically large presence on stage, but he has a particular way of taking up space — the kind that comes from confidence and stillness rather than physicality. He moves purposefully. He doesn't pace. When he's still, he's still in a way that commands attention. When he moves toward someone in the crowd, it registers.

In an intimate room like Room 808 — fifty seats, close enough to the stage to see his expression shift — his physical presence is part of how the show works. He can hold eye contact with someone in the third row and make them feel like the conversation is private even though the whole room is watching.

Ethnicity: Iranian-Bolivian

Martin Amini is half Iranian and half Bolivian. His father Hassan emigrated from Iran and built a life in the Maryland suburbs of DC, driving an ice cream truck on Georgia Avenue in Silver Spring — the central subject of Martin's first comedy special, Son of an Ice Cream Man, filmed at the Kennedy Center in 2020. His mother is Bolivian.

That combination is unusual in American comedy, and Martin doesn't flatten it into a simple "immigrant story" arc. What he draws from his background is specific: a particular kind of household warmth that doesn't match the cultural stereotypes attached to either heritage, a multilingual upbringing that gave him an ear for how people talk when they're being themselves versus performing for an audience, and a DC childhood that put him in contact with the full range of the city's demographics from an early age.

He references his background in his material — the Kennedy Center special is organized around it — but he's not a "Persian comedian" or a "Latino comedian" in the sense that his identity is the primary frame for the comedy. He's a comedian whose specific background shows up in the specific texture of the work.

Family Background

Hassan Amini is Martin's father. He came to the United States from Iran and spent years driving an ice cream truck through the Silver Spring neighborhoods of Montgomery County, Maryland. The image of his father on those routes — an immigrant building a life in a country that wasn't his, in a job that put him inside the daily rhythms of a suburban American neighborhood — is the emotional core of Son of an Ice Cream Man.

Martin's mother is Bolivian. She appears less prominently in his public material, but the dual cultural inheritance — Iranian warmth and hospitality on one side, Bolivian family culture on the other, both expressed through a very American DC upbringing — shaped the person who eventually stood up in a Room 808 show and started asking strangers about their lives.

Where He's From

Silver Spring, Maryland. That's the suburb. The city is Washington DC, where he went to school, where he built his comedy career, where he founded Room 808, where his audience first found him.

DC is not a traditional comedy city. It doesn't have the clubs-per-square-mile density of New York, the industry adjacency of Los Angeles, or the stand-up tradition of cities like Chicago. What DC has is a specific kind of audience: educated, politically aware, culturally diverse, and — when they find a comedian they trust — intensely loyal. Martin built his career in that city, and the DC stamp is on everything he does. The Kennedy Center as a filming location for his first special was a DC choice. Room 808 in Petworth is a DC choice. The specific way he reads a room has the DC sensibility baked in.

Career Trajectory

Martin started performing stand-up in the DC comedy scene in his early 20s. He worked the circuit — open mics, local clubs, the grind of building material and stage time in a city that wasn't making it easy. He built Room 808 in 2021 as a place where that grind could become something with a roof over it and fifty people in front of it every night.

The Kennedy Center special in 2020 was the first major document of where the work had arrived. The I'm Transcending special at Lincoln Theatre was the second. The 2026 Live Nation tour — taking him to theaters across the US and internationally to London, Sydney, and Toronto — is the third inflection point, and the most visible sign of where the momentum is going.

Personal Life

Martin is married to Charlene Amini. They live in Washington DC. She maintains a private profile and Martin has been deliberate about keeping his personal life separate from his public one. He references marriage in his material — the "Hot Breath Summer" bit, which produced one of the more memorable crowd reactions of recent touring years, is about long-term relationship intimacy — but he doesn't mine his specific relationship for content in the way that some comedians do.

The most useful fact about Martin Amini's personal life isn't biographical. It's that his comedy is clearly built by someone who is grounded at home, and that groundedness is audible in the work. The warmth isn't performed. It comes from somewhere real.