PHOTO: Proud dad Kevin Hart teaches 16-year-old daughter to drive

Kevin Hart
Photo credit Stuart C. Wilson/Getty Images

Is the sequel to Kevin Hart’s “Night School” going to be called “Driving School”?

The proud papa, who turned 42 on Tuesday, recently shared a sweet selfie from the passenger seat of a car his 16-year old daughter, Heaven, was driving.

“My little girl is growing up” wrote the actor in the photo’s caption, quickly spurring his fans and friends alike to congratulate him and tease him, including Nelly, who wrote “all downhill from here champ.”

Meanwhile, Michael Ealy wrote “Whaaaaaaaaaaat?” presumably sharing his surprise that Heaven, who was seven years old when “Think Like a Man,” the first of the three films he and Hart have co-starred in, is now old enough to drive.

Heaven, 16, and Hendrix, 13, are Hart’s children from his previous marriage with Torrei Hart. Along with his two teenagers, Hart also shares two young kids, Kenzo Kash, 3, and Kaori Mai, 8 months, with his wife Eniko Hart, reports People.

In an interview with Entertainment Tonight, Hart recently shared that he loves having kids with such a wide age range. “We got teenagers and two toddlers, man. It's the perfect separation of age. It's the perfect household. It's everything that you would think it is plus more,” he said.

However, he joked that four kids is enough for him. “Is the house not loud enough? I think it is, right? I think it's loud enough around here. It's good. We're in a good place, a family of six and a couple of dogs, it's a lot going on right now. I say that jokingly but, you know, look, if it's what the universe calls for and it's what we've decided, then it is what it is.”

Things are not always easy in the Hart household though. In a Father’s Day interview on “The Red Table Talk,” Hart opened up to Will Smith about his 2017 familial strife after it was revealed that he was unfaithful to his wife, Eniko, who was pregnant at the time.

“You’re never prepared for that side of it,” Hart said as he explained how he told his children about what he did. “Having a little girl in my life, it’s tough. You don’t realize the impact that your mistakes can truly have. When the kids get involved, it’s a different feeling.”

“My daughter was tough on me, until this day my daughter is tough on me,” he said. “Getting my daughter to understand that I was sorry, that I made a mistake — that was real. Through my public debacles, I’ve got on some armor. It’s very hard to bother me.”

”But when your child shows disappointment, shows emotion, shows, ‘I don’t understand why,’ and you’ve got to have those conversations — (your) head drops for the first time. You realize there’s an emotional cord that nobody else has the privileges of ever touching,” Hart continued.

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Featured Image Photo Credit: Stuart C. Wilson/Getty Images