In 2018, before she knew about , a screenplay writing software, Uzoamaka Power sat down and wrote three pages of a screenplay about her experience as a call centre agent. She wrote it on Microsoft Word, closed the document and walked away from it.
Eight years later, Uzoamaka Power literally brings back to life for the world to see.

鈥淚 got tired of it, and I stopped,鈥 she says. Call of My Life is a romantic comedy about a woman named Soluchi, a call-centre agent still nursing old heartbreak when a single phone call pulls her toward something new. The film is set to hit Nigerian cinemas on May 15th and stars Uzoamaka herself as one of the main characters. The story of how it went from three abandoned pages on a Word document to a full feature film is just as mind-blowing as the .
The Three-paged Story from Eight Years Ago
It was Blessing Uzzi, the producer of Call of My Life, who forced the resurrection. She knew Uzoamaka had old writing hidden away. The sort of early drafts writers typically shy away from. Blessing had a hunch and convinced Uzoamaka to start looking.
鈥淪he called me, and she was like, 鈥楨ven if you wrote them when you were two years old, they mean something. And when you鈥檙e able to look at them critically, revisit them and do better.鈥欌
So Uzoamaka sent Blessing the existing pages of Call of My Life, and Blessing loved the premise of the story. Just like that, Call of My Life was back in the world. The thing about revisiting something you wrote eight years ago, though, is that you鈥檙e not the same person who wrote it. You鈥檝e lived more, felt more, gotten more honest with yourself about what you actually want to say.
鈥淚n 2018, I wanted to write about my experience at the call centre,鈥 Uzoamaka says. 鈥淏ut fast forward to 2026, and I鈥檓 asking different questions. What is the story I want to tell? Is the call centre the centre of this story? Am I telling a love story about this person? Can I remove this person from this job and have them live life outside their work?鈥
Those are not the questions of someone who just wants to document what happened to them. Those are the questions of a person ready to create something beautiful and different from their personal experience.
What Actually Makes a Story Worth Telling?
There鈥檚 something Uzoamaka says in conversation that sounds almost like a joke but isn鈥檛. When she was building Soluchi, the character at the centre of the film, she had to make peace with an uncomfortable truth.
鈥淪ometimes, your life is not that interesting,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 given you a foundation to begin something.鈥
In real life, the phone call Uzoamaka received while working at that call centre didn鈥檛 change anything. It didn鈥檛 redirect her path. It was just a funny call, and then it was over. But in the film, a similar call becomes the thing that changes Soluchi鈥檚 life.
鈥淚n writing the screenplay, I could have decided that the phone call was funny or annoying, or made decisions outside of the real thing that happened,鈥 she explains.
This is actually the most freeing thing about the way she talks about writing. Uzoamaka doesn鈥檛 treat her experience as sacred. It鈥檚 raw material. You take what happened, ask what it could mean if something different had followed, and then you follow the character wherever she goes. 鈥淭he more open-minded you are, the more questions you ask, the more the character tells you where they鈥檙e going,鈥 she says. 鈥淎t some point, it鈥檚 out of your hands. You鈥檙e serving the story now.鈥
A Lover That Yearns
The thing Soluchi does that makes people regard her as relatable is simple. She does too much. Soluchi loves too much. She gives too much. She cares too much. In the film鈥檚 trailer, someone says this to her face disapprovingly, like it鈥檚 a problem.
Uzoamaka has feelings about this.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 believe that there鈥檚 any love where you should have to pretend,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou have to perform wickedness so that somebody can love you? If you鈥檙e going to perform nonchalance in love, what is the point? Just get out of it.鈥
Uzoamaka is not describing a character flaw when she talks about Soluchi being a lover girl. She鈥檚 describing a superpower. 鈥淭he person who loves wins. Even in heartbreak, even in hurt, even in pain. You loved, you won.鈥
The dominant romantic playbook right now is all about withholding. Wait ten minutes before texting back. Don鈥檛 call twice. Make yourself seem unbothered. Soluchi does none of these things, and she gets hurt for it, But Uzoamaka鈥檚 argument is that she still won.
鈥淲e see her mother saying, you will not be too much for someone who truly loves you,鈥 Uzoamaka notes. 鈥淎nd I hope that Soluchi collects herself and loves even more fiercely again. Because what are we doing in this world? If we stop loving, we鈥檙e dead.鈥
The Woman Who Shows Up for Her Own Work
Concerning her love and excitement for Call of My Life, Uzoamaka is not performing humility. She says she鈥檚 very happy with the work. 鈥淚鈥檓 very happy with the story that I wrote,鈥 she says. The award-winning writer and actress says that she has plans to go to the cinema every day once Call of My Life is released. Every day, in as many cinemas as she can get to in Lagos.
When the idea of shrinking her excitement comes up, she says, 鈥淚鈥檓 not doing that. When I was shouting for , I was shouting because I loved the film. Now, I鈥檓 shouting for Call of My Life, and that鈥檚 because I love the film from the depths of my heart.鈥
Uzoamaka wrote this screenplay and stars as the lead actress. She watched it come together across Lagos, Abuja and Enugu, because that鈥檚 what the story needed. Blessing Uzzi took her writing seriously enough to make her work on it. Now she鈥檚 standing on the other side of it, refusing to be modest about what she made.
It matters, the way she says it, because there鈥檚 a specific kind of pressure on women in creative industries to qualify every good thing they鈥檝e done with a disclaimer. Uzoamaka doesn鈥檛.
will be out in cinemas from May 15th. Uzoamaka will be there watching. Probably every day.
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