15 Black Celebs You Didn't Realize Are Military Veterans

Photo: Getty Images (Getty Images)
Photo: Getty Images (Getty Images)

Happy Memorial Day! Or for most Black folks, Another Excuse to Throw Somethin’ on the Grill Day.

For many others with family members who served the country in the various branches of the U.S. Military, the national holiday is a day to reflect on those who sacrificed their lives in service. Just in January, the families of Spc. William Jerome Rivers, Spc. Kennedy Ladon Sanders and Sp. Breonna Alexsondria Moffett had to receive the remains of the fallen soldiers who died in an attack in Jordan.

It might be surprising to know some of your favorite Black celebrities in entertainment served in the military. They all, fortunately, lived beyond their service to accomplish the great things we recognize them for now.

Here’s 15 Black celebrity veterans to honor this Memorial Day.

Richard Pryor

Photo: Yvonne Hemsey (Getty Images)
Photo: Yvonne Hemsey (Getty Images)

The renowned comedian joined the U.S. Army in 1959. However, he only spent a brief time there — mainly in the brig due to disciplinary issues — and left in 1960, per Military.com.

Melvin Van Peebles

Photo: Jack Mitchell (Getty Images)
Photo: Jack Mitchell (Getty Images)

The actor and director enlisted in the Air Force after graduating from Ohio Wesleyan University in 1953, per Military.com. Peebles was a navigator and bombardier in the Strategic Air Command for three years before leaving and joining cinema.

Marvin Gaye

Photo: Gary Gershoff (Getty Images)
Photo: Gary Gershoff (Getty Images)

The singer was 17 years old when he dropped out of high school to enlist in the Air Force, according to his bio in Medic in the Green Time. His superiors considered him uncooperative and lackadaisical. He faked being mentally ill and was given a general discharge after one year. The rest is history.

MC Hammer

Photo: Michael Putland (Getty Images)
Photo: Michael Putland (Getty Images)

The music legend joined the Navy and spent three years as an aviation storekeeper third class, per Military.com.

Sheryl Underwood

Photo: M. Caulfield/WireImage for BET Network (Getty Images)
Photo: M. Caulfield/WireImage for BET Network (Getty Images)

The comedian joined the Air Force as a field medic and was deployed to West Germany and South Korea, per the DOD.

Shaggy

Photo: Rob Verhorst/Redferns (Getty Images)
Photo: Rob Verhorst/Redferns (Getty Images)

The reggae star left Jamaica to come to the US to pursue his music career at 18 years old, per Military.com. However, he joined the Marine Corps in 1988 after struggling to find work and fought in the Gulf War. He didn’t stay in the military much longer after that and went AWOL to pursue music seriously once he returned home.

Ice-T

Photo: Roy Rochlin (Getty Images)
Photo: Roy Rochlin (Getty Images)

The rapper-actor served four years in the Army’s 25th Infantry Division, according to Military.com.

Robin Quivers

Photo: Charles Eshelman/FilmMagic (Getty Images)
Photo: Charles Eshelman/FilmMagic (Getty Images)

Quivers was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Air Force and served as a nurse. She transferred to the Air Force Reserve from her base in Texas, climbing to a captain and served there for over ten years.

Morgan Freeman

Photo: Michael Kovac (Getty Images)
Photo: Michael Kovac (Getty Images)

Freeman enlisted in the Air Force after high school and trained to be an automatic tracking radar repairman, per the Department of Defense.

James Earl Jones

Photo: Theo Wargo (Getty Images)
Photo: Theo Wargo (Getty Images)

The legendary actor joined the Pershing Rifles Drill Team and Scabbard and Blade Honor Society in college. Then, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Army. Finally, Jones was assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 38th Regimental Combat Team, per the DOD.

Sidney Poitier

Photo: Toni Anne Barson/WireImage (Getty Images)
Photo: Toni Anne Barson/WireImage (Getty Images)

The actor enlisted in the Army at age 16. At that time, he was sent to a hospital to provide aid to the medical staff, where he cared for mentally-ill veterans, per Veterans Advantage.

Sinbad

Photo: Shahar Azran/WireImage (Getty Images)
Photo: Shahar Azran/WireImage (Getty Images)

The comedian joined the Air Force in 1979, according to Air Refueling Wing Public Affairs. It was there that he realized his passion for making people laugh, working as a comic for Tops in Blue, a touring performance ensemble of active-duty airmen. After he won the show “Star Search” in the late 1980s, his comedy career took off and his military career came to a close.

Sunny Anderson

Photo: Daniel Boczarski (Getty Images)
Photo: Daniel Boczarski (Getty Images)

The Food Network star was an Air Force broadcast journalist in Seoul, South Korea and worked for Air Force News Agency radio and television in San Antonio for five years, per DOD.

Mr. T

Photo: Bob Riha, Jr. (Getty Images)
Photo: Bob Riha, Jr. (Getty Images)

The pop culture sensation joined the Army National Guard just after the Vietnam War and later joined the Military Police corps, rising to a squad leader at Fort McCoy, Wisconsin, per Military.com.

Jimi Hendrix

Photo: Don Paulsen/Michael Ochs Archives (Getty Images)
Photo: Don Paulsen/Michael Ochs Archives (Getty Images)

Hendrix had two options as a rebellious youth from Seattle: go to prison or join the Army. He chose the latter. He was assigned to the 101st Airborne Division and was discharged after the first year of his three-year contract because he distressed the captain, according to Military.com.

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