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Photo of Marc Mezvinsky

Photo: Chwagen / CC BY-SA 4.0 (source: Wikimedia Commons)

Marc Mezvinsky

マーク・メツビンスキー / まーく・めつびんすきー

American investment banker

December 10, 1977 (age 48) ・ Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

  • Pennsylvania
  • investment banker

My Take

Marc Mezvinsky interests me as a study in keeping your own name inside an overwhelming family narrative. Married into the Clintons, he could easily have lived as a permanent footnote, yet he built a legitimate finance career — Stanford, a vice chairman role at Social Capital, now a partner at TPG — largely away from the cameras. I respect that discipline. The temptation to trade on proximity to power must be enormous, and the quieter path of professional competence is far less glamorous. To me he represents the rare political-family spouse who chose substance over visibility, and in an era that rewards the opposite, that restraint feels almost countercultural.

Overview

Marc Mezvinsky (born December 10, 1977) is an American investor and partner at TPG. He has served previously as vice chairman at Social Capital. He is the husband of Chelsea Clinton, daughter of former president Bill Clinton and former secretary of state Hillary Clinton.

Summary adapted from Wikipedia, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.

1. Profile

Name (English)
Marc Mezvinsky
Name (Japanese)
マーク・メツビンスキー
Reading
まーく・めつびんすきー
Born
December 10, 1977 (age 48)
Zodiac / Chinese zodiac
Sagittarius / Snake
Origin
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Blood type
Private
Height
Private
Agency
Private
Occupation
investment banker

2. Background

Elementary school
Private
Junior high
Private
High school
Private
University
Stanford University

3. Relationships

Spouse
Private
Children
Private
Parents
Private
Siblings
Private

4. Personality

Motto

Private

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7. About this entry

Tags

  • Pennsylvania
  • investment banker
Last updated
2026-06-10

Facts are limited to publicly available information up to 2024; non-public items are marked "Private / Unknown". English text is machine-assisted (facts translated by Sonnet, "My Take" written by Opus 4.8). The Japanese page is the source of record.