Entertainment
ACTOR AINEA OJIAMBO OPENS UP ON WHY HE LOVES PLAYING THE BAD GUY
Ainea Ojiambo is perhaps Kenya’s most prominent and busiest TV bad guy, from his days in Makutano Junction, Nairobi Half Life and Demigods to his recent roles like the dirty cop Juma on Kina, and the crooked prison warden Musa in the thriller series Igiza.
Now, in the new Showmax political thriller series County 49, Ojiambo takes on the role of Okusimba Sibi aka Ox, the deposed Governor of Bwatele County. Ox plays a stereotypical African politician – charismatic, deeply corrupt, deeply loved by his supporters, and with just enough capacity for dictatorship if left to his own devices.
Why does Ojiambo like to play bad guys? He gets asked this question a lot, more so this year, “Most directors think that I’m able to portray such characters so well,” he says. “And you know what they say, ‘If you can play a bad guy then you must be one of the best because playing a good guy is easy. Everybody can do it.’”
He’s mastered the art of playing corrupt men who are either at the top or very close to the top. “Maybe it’s the authority that I have that makes me play those parts well,” he says. “I study a lot of men in power, but I think maybe the roles find me because of my physique.”
Like any good TV villain, Ojiambo has had his fair share of hate from fans. “Being a bad guy also comes with the hate, and this has been the case from my days in Makutano Junction to Demigods to Igiza,” he says.
When he first read the script for County 49, he called director Likarion Wainaina. He wanted to understand what Likarion saw in him that made him the perfect actor for such a role which he describes as his most challenging yet. “I want you to do something that you’ve never done before,” Likarion told him.
Likarion and Ojiambo have worked together before on stage, a few movie projects, and on the telenovela Kina, where Likarion directed some episodes in season one. “He’s one of the directors who really challenges me a lot, and who really understands me. Every time I do a project with him, there’s a new me that comes out,” Ojiambo says.
As he ponders his next role, Ojiambo jokes about moving away from bad guys to a more romantic role. “I think next time, I’ll go for an Alejandro type of character, a romantic guy so that I can show people I can also do romance, the kind of role that will make people cry when they see me frustrated in love,” he says.
Fun fact about Ojiambo: A licensed gun holder, he lent his weapon expertise to the cast of County 49, teaching them how to handle guns since the show is heavy on the action and gun fights.
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