Every week, 91大神 will share the hustle stories of Nigerians making it big in and out of the country. With each story, we鈥檒l ask one crucial question in several ways: 鈥淗ow you do am?鈥
Jemima Osunde is a 26-year-old physiotherapist and actress. Fed up with the chaos of medical school, Jemima decided to pursue acting on the side. She called her big break pure luck, but through her story, we found out what it鈥檚 like to hustle as a newbie in Nollywood.

So Jemima, how did you do it?
I always tell people acting happened to me randomly. Physiotherapy was what I wanted to do. Things started in my first year at UNILAG in 2013. Post-JAMB messed up my grades, so I took a diploma program to get into 200 level the next year. Anyone who knows what UNILAG鈥檚 diploma is like knows it can be chaotic.
How chaotic was it, on a scale of 1-10?
Hmm. We鈥檇 be like 200 in one hall with no power. Lecturers would yell at the top of their lungs at the front of the hall, doing their best, but only the first 50 people could hear them. The rest of us were just there to sign attendance and fulfil all righteousness by being there.
So it broke the scale?
LOL. Yeah.
I did that for a few weeks and knew it couldn鈥檛 be my life for the rest of the year. That Christmas, I was at an uncle鈥檚 party, and we talked about how school was going. He suggested I consider acting since I was always talking everyone鈥檚 ear off. He felt it was a good way to make some money or just occupy my time.
What did you think?
It made sense actually. His words got stuck in my head for weeks. And after my next horrible day at school, I decided to experiment with acting while I was trying to get into the College of Medicine for my second year at UNILAG.
What was the first thing you did while experimenting?
I started following Nigerian production houses on social media and discovered that they usually posted open audition calls. It just made sense to me that to start acting I had to audition for roles, so I followed everyone from Africa Magic to EbonyLife. I followed producers too; from one producer’s page, I鈥檇 find another to follow.
Then, I followed young actors of that period. When I started, there was Olumide Oworu, Owumi Ugbeye who鈥檇 been on MTV Shuga 鈥 I just kept following everybody so I鈥檇 see every audition notice going out. Even though I didn鈥檛 immediately get roles, I learnt a lot from attending auditions and mingling with other aspiring actors who knew more than me. They鈥檇 give me the gist on what to do, what to look out for, who to meet and so on.
How did all of that play out in landing your first role?
I saw an audition notice for Tinsel in 2013. I didn鈥檛 get the part, but I got called back for Africa Magic Original Films [AMOF].
When I saw the email, I actually thought it was a scam because I hadn鈥檛 heard of AMOF or attended an audition for it. I had to call one of my uncles in the industry to verify. Then I had my mum come with me for the first few reads 鈥 till today, crew members at different sets still ask me about her.
I worked on five or six AMOFs. And through them, I got on The Johnsons, guest-starring in a few episodes as the character, Abby. These first few acting experiences were an exciting adventure for my mum and I. My parents used to drive me around to set locations.
What would you consider your big break into the acting industry?
MTV Shuga in 2014. I was 18 at the time so bagging my role as Leila on a show that big at the beginning of my career was significant for me.
How did that big break happen?
One of the actresses I followed at the start of my career and I were working on a film together. In passing, I said I really liked her character on MTV Shuga, and it鈥檇 be nice if it had a new character I could play. Like two days later, she texted about an audition and asked me to send my details to an email address. I did that, got a reply and went in for a reading. In a matter of three or four days, I was cast as Leila.
Just like that? Did you have any formal training as an actor?
No. Honestly, I was lucky.
That鈥檚 pretty much how things started for me. I only had to do three or four open auditions after Shuga.
Wait first. How was school going?
For some reason, most of my auditions were in Surulere, Lagos, so it wasn鈥檛 hard to go for them from the College of Medicine. Max, one bus, one okada, and I鈥檇 be at any casting.
It sounds like you were living a soft life
LOL. Not on the days I had to find my way to Ikeja or Lekki though. I鈥檇 get to Ojuelegba underbridge and be clueless. Or sit in a bus and wait for it to get full before my 10 a.m. call. That鈥檚 when I started to get frustrated. I had to beg my parents to drive me to auditions until I could afford to take Uber.
What’s the average amount of time you’d spend on set?
For movies, two weeks at most, and I鈥檇 be on set ten out of 14 days. We鈥檇 shoot until we stopped, which meant several hours of shooting per day.
Only Shuga took longer than a month to shoot. I was in one season each, on the Naija version and on Down South. I was on set every other day for three weeks for the first, and in Jo鈥檅urg for five to six weeks for the second.
How did things change after Shuga?
I kept grinding in between filming. I had a 9-to-5 as a researcher at One Music, and I was still a student at the College of Medicine. It was really hard to keep up. I was also just figuring out my life as a teenager, making friends 鈥 which didn’t quite work out because I don鈥檛 have many friends. Then I was always sending emails and DMs to every big director and producer I admired, even Shonda Rhimes!
But I got to a point where people would send me emails asking me to audition. A few months after we finished shooting Shuga, one of the producers cast me in her short film. Some months after that, I got calls from people I鈥檇 worked with on the set or I鈥檇 emailed earlier, who realised they had a role I was a good fit for.
I moved from needing to attend open auditions to being invited for table reads or screen tests. Instead of walking in with 500 people hoping to get a role, I scaled through to a more selected phase with maybe 20 people.
Were the chances of getting a role much higher in a table read or screen test?
Pretty much, but other upcoming actors get this access too. That makes it more competitive because you have to show what makes you special. Like why should it be Jemima and not the 20 other girls they know could play the character well too?
And did you have an answer to that?
For me, it was talking to the right people. People you work with mention your name in the right rooms.
Every time I got on set, I made sure I interacted with the crew members, not just the actors. There鈥檚 a vast amount of knowledge you can get from them because production typically uses the same crew. These people have gone from one project to another amassing experience. I always stress them out with questions about things like cameras and lenses. And that鈥檚 one way to get informal training.
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What鈥檚 another?
Imagine being on a set with Kate Henshaw or Stella Damasus and not learning anything. I don鈥檛 have any shame in asking for help when I can鈥檛 connect with a character, for example. I remember meeting Adesua (Etomi-Wellington) on the set of MTV Shuga. We instantly clicked, and she鈥檚 been a strong support system ever since. She saw I was a young girl just trying to navigate the industry and could sense my silent cry for guidance, so she took me under her wing.
She was fairly new to Nollywood, but she’d been doing theatre and a bunch of creative projects in the UK. She鈥檇 ask things like, 鈥淲hat do you think should be a priority at the beginning of your career?鈥 鈥淲hat are you trying to do?鈥 and just genuinely be a friend I can call anytime. It鈥檚 necessary to surround yourself with good people who鈥檒l keep you grounded and remind you of your purpose even when you forget. That’s who she is to me. Our relationship has just evolved and metamorphosed into many different things over the years.
I don鈥檛 think I could鈥檝e come this far without the older women in the industry TBH. They tell you what they went through and ways to skip all the stress.
And younger actresses?
There鈥檚 a bunch of us that know we fall into the same criteria. If they鈥檙e not casting me then it鈥檚 Sharon Ooja, Tomike Alayande, Ini Dima-Okojie or maybe Efe Irele and a couple of others. It鈥檚 an unspoken thing, but we know ourselves. When a job comes, and one person isn鈥檛 available or interested, we refer each other.
How do you manage the competition since you all fall into the same category?
Being friends helps. My girls know how to stick together. And to make sure no one is getting the short end of the stick when jobs come. We know that for certain gigs within a certain duration, there鈥檚 a flat rate. No one goes below it. We basically set the standard for ourselves.
Beyond networking, what skills did you have to pick up fast as your career took off with MTV Shuga?
Omo, so many things. I didn鈥檛 get a representative until 2020, so I had to learn how to multitask on a large scale. Sometimes, I had classes from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m., with a call time at 2 p.m. and Lagos traffic to beat. So if I allocate one hour to something, and someone shows up 30 minutes late, that鈥檚 not my business. In my head, I have 30 minutes left. Till today, I鈥檓 still my own manager.
With the way things were going, why not just focus on acting?
In Nigeria, acting can鈥檛 be the only thing you do for income and fulfilment. How many good films do we make in a year compared to the number of actors we have? You can鈥檛 be busy from January to December.
Fair point
Yeah. Getting to MTV Shuga took a year. For me, it didn鈥檛 feel like such a long time because school kept me busy. If acting were all I had, that would鈥檝e been difficult.
What happens when absolutely nothing works?
That happened to me during the pandemic. I had to find ways to keep myself busy. That鈥檚 why . But I also tried to get roles on TV series so I could shoot weekly, like a monthly subscription to being an actress.
Let鈥檚 move to the medical side of things. Are you currently practising?
Not for the past two months. I finished my NYSC in the first quarter of 2022 and took a break. Medical work in Nigeria is the ghetto. If you know people in the medical field, check up on them. Na them need mental help pass.
LOL. What鈥檚 doing them?
It鈥檚 so much work for such little pay and zero recognition. I鈥檓 at the point where I want to do it voluntarily, pick a few hospitals I鈥檒l work at on the days I鈥檓 not filming. But for now, I鈥檓 on a break.
I鈥檓 curious: how has being a health worker made you a better actress?
Outside handling financial stress, the toughest part of being a health worker is seeing people die every day. Somehow, that鈥檚 helped me get into character without being so attached to the trauma I play, since it鈥檚 all fiction. It鈥檚 much more difficult when you actually know the person in reality.
And how does it work the other way around?
I鈥檝e never thought about that. I think acting makes me a lot more sensitive and empathetic. Treating someone is very different from being able to become that person in your head and possibly picture your life like that.
Best in acting
LOL. So even when I want to lose my cool with their family members 鈥 because patients are never really the issue 鈥 I can somehow put myself in their shoes. I guess that鈥檚 one of the ways being an actress helps my medical career.
How do you manage to keep both careers apart?
I don鈥檛 keep them apart o. My self-given nickname is 鈥渙ne true self鈥. I鈥檓 an acting physiotherapist, doctor-actress, health worker-entertainer, whatever version people prefer. I鈥檓 one person living the best of both worlds, that鈥檚 what makes me who I am. I鈥檓 currently doing a Master鈥檚 in Public Health, and people like to ask me what I need it for. I don鈥檛 have an answer for them. They should just watch and see.
And how do you handle people recognising you when you’re in hospital mode?
I actually prefer when people recognise me in the hospital than outside, on the streets, in the supermarket. It helps me cheer my patients up. It makes it easier to find a common ground with them, which is important in my line of health work. Apart from that, I鈥檓 a very public but private person. You鈥檒l see me banter a lot on Twitter, or post random things when I鈥檓 in my lover girl stage, but I鈥檓 very deliberate with the details I share.
What鈥檚 a trick every newbie needs to learn in the film industry?
Characters become more challenging when you realise they鈥檙e not fictional. Anyone can read a script and have a flow. But sometimes, you have to create a backstory that helps you connect more with the character. That鈥檚 not something on a script. And that鈥檚 what some directors tell you to do, to actually become a character.
What were some roles that put you to the test?
There was Nkem, the sex worker I played in The Delivery Boy in 2018. But one of the toughest characters I鈥檝e played is . The babe was mean and controversial. I couldn鈥檛 play her until I could come up with a reason why someone could deliberately publish horrible stuff about their friends on a blog. Though there鈥檚 no justifiable reason to hurt people, giving her a defendable backstory helped me embody her character better. And that process makes it easier to get into challenging roles.
I have to ask: what does it take to get to the level you鈥檙e at in the industry?
Quality over quantity of films you shoot. And that鈥檚 why you need an extra source of income. But the best advice I received as a newbie was, 鈥淣ever be afraid to take multiple cuts.鈥 Because even when you think it鈥檚 perfect, a scene can always be better.
How do you know when to stop then?
Sometimes, you just need to take multiple cuts to give the director different portrayal versions to choose from. You know when to stop by reading the room. People on set 鈥 the director, cinematographer, DOP 鈥 are very honest. If the cut is just there, it鈥檇 show on their faces. Or you could get a standing ovation because the take was just that good. You don鈥檛 have to wait for an ovation, but make sure everyone is satisfied before you stop. They鈥檇 even be the ones to reassure you that you don鈥檛 need another take.





