Chiwetel Ejiofor is a British Nigerian actor who is a consummate professional and an incredible actor. In other words he doesn’t give us much to gossip about. I really enjoyed his directorial debut, The Boy Who Harnessed The Wind, out now on Netflix. it’s based on a true story, Chiwetel put so much of himself into it and it shows. He’s in a supporting role as the father of the lead character. It’s the true story of William Kamkwamba, a Malawian inventor who was just 13 when he invented a windmill that brought electricity to his family’s small village and changed everyone’s fortunes.
My favorite performances of Chiwetel’s are in 12 Years a Slave and Kinky Boots. He was also great in Children of Men, I just watched that a few weeks ago but I didn’t love him in it because he plays someone you root against! In an interview with Fast Company, Chiwetel talked about his performances and work in his most iconic movies.
On Love Actually
By about mid December until just after Valentine’s Day is now kind of Love, Actually season. I always feel like that wedding [scene] was such an incredible, emotional, happy and fun experience. I’m thrilled and excited that people love the movie so much.On Kinky Boots
Lola [was] one of the most interesting and most dynamic people that I’ve ever played. [Kinky Boots] is kind of ahead of its time. It had an impact at that time and that moment. Also there was a kind of deep and emotional resonance to that character. It was talking about serious issues in a really fun way.On Children of Men
What Alfonso Cuaron (director) and Emmanuel Lubezki (cinematographer) were trying to achieve cinematically on Children of Men had never been attempted before and was so vast [and] ambitious. It’s why he’s such a extraordinary, talented, innovative filmmaker. He was wonderful to watch and be on the set of. What they had been able to achieve in days with that huge battle sequence was a real lesson of how you can push the limits of cinema.On 12 Years a Slave
What I love about working with Steve McQueen was that… he’s very sensitive to what every individual needs to understand and develop their own work within the context of the film. [Yet] everybody’s making the same film in the end. He’s somebody who really gets that.On The Boy Who Harnessed The Wind
I read the book in 2009 and completely fell in love with this story. I was really surprised that… I never felt that [it] was finished. There’s always more that you could give to it even after 10 years.
Chiwetel learned another language for The Boy Who Harnessed The Wind, Chichewa, in order to switch between English and the language that Malawians use at home. That felt natural in the film, as did a lot of other moments. (In his interview with NPR he explained how he got the masked characters, the Gule Wamkulu, to appear. They’re a secret society and it was a big deal that they appeared in the movie.) It was one of only a handful of big budget films to be filmed in Malawi, they shot it right where William Kamkwamba grew up. I highly recommend it and found it both entertaining and inspirational.
In Kinky Boots, Chiwetel plays a drag queen who helps revive a shoe business by working with the owner (Joel Edgerton) to make shoes for queens. Here’s a link to the trailer, it’s such a fun movie. It’s no longer available streaming for free but it’s so worth renting. That came out in 2005, about four years before RuPaul’s Drag Race premiered. It became a Broadway musical in 2013 and has been performed around the world. He was so great in it and has played such a wide variety of roles. I have such a crush on Chiwetel but he’s not playing up his heartthrob status or talking about his personal life, he’s just pouring himself into his work and it shows.
photos credit: WENN, Netflix Press and screenshot from YouTube
Brilliant!!! My absolute favourite actor. Reading this has made my dinner break. Thank-you CB for featuring such an incredible talent.
Chiwetel is such a nice start for a Monday morning.
He’s such a talented actor. Loved his performance in Kinky Boots and he was outstanding in 12 Years a Slave. Will check out his Netflix movie.
I absolutely ADORED Kinky Boots! I wasn’t aware of it and ended up catching it on HBO one night and it was just so damn fun and funny and poignant… I really hate that so many people miss stories like this because they think it’s only a “LGBTQ+” story. Like, stories need to be both individual and universal and that movie did it SO well. Stories about minorities and women and LGBTQ+ ppl can be universal and the cornerstone of business is being able to pivot and set yourself apart but there are millions of business men who have never seen this movie because they don’t think it’s applicable to their lives. *sigh*
Oh my goodness, I totally forgot that was him in Children of Men. Talk about retroactive recognition, damn. (Incredible film, by the way.)
That’s because he played a different type of character. He’s such a versatile actor.
I’m pretty sure he played the really horrible gang boss in Four Brothers too. That movie was pretty good
His performance is really excellently nuanced there, too – morally awful but still empathetic in his intent. He’s unfortunately one of those actors that I have total facial blindness for, but that may honestly be to his benefit as an actor. There’s a point in success where actors become a little too common, and you lose the ability to see them as part of the story rather than an actor playing a part in it.
He’s been in a bunch of good movies. Seems like a quality actor that raises the bar for everyone. My pick is Dirty Pretty Things from 2002 where he stars alongside Audrey Tatou and Sophie Okonedo.
He was pretty good in the mini-series about the jazz club in the 1930s too… Dancing on the Edge. And, of course, one of my all time faves: Inside Man.
Oh, Dirty Pretty Things? I saw that when it came out & didn’t know any of the actors. I do remember it as a great movie.
I love that he’s so fond of all his previous work!
I first remember watching him in Melinda & Melinda. Chiwetel & Jonny lee Miller in the same film set my heart racing. He was fantastic in kinky boots, saw it years ago & still remember how amazing he was. He also seems such a decent & humble man & such an underrated actor.
What he said about Children of Men, never thought of it that way, just thought it was fantastic from stem to stern.
And when he brings the villain, Serenity and Four Brothers, he brings the villain.
In the 90s, I lived on the other side of Africa and it was also a big deal to photograph secret societies or some jujus. I remember I once bought and shared a bottle of palm wine so I could take a photo of my favorite juju, it looked like a crocodile and was called in to solve disagreements. Later my colleague told me I had wasted my money because you couldn’t take a picture of that juju. Mysteriously my film disappeared for a few months. However it did eventually show up and the pictures were fine.
When people talk about casting a Black James Bond, Chiwetel Ejiofor was always my pick. People went on and on (and on 🙄) about Idris Elba, but to me he’s totally the wrong physical type for Bond. Bond is such an arrogant SOB that looking more physically vulnerable helps him work as the hero. Idris is many things…but “physically vulnerable” is not one of them. Just a personal preference but I always thought people were sleeping on Chiwetel as a possible Bond.
Also watch DIRTY PRETTY THINGS. He is brilliant in that.
He’s a great actor who is a very attractive women LOL.
This man has SERIOUS range. He portrays an assassin in “Serenity” and his characterization was absolutely chilling. I’ve seen him in romances, comedies, drama, action: he does it all.
I don’t really feel the whole Idris Elba thing, but I think CE is beyond dreamy.
I love this man and have always felt he is the height of sexy. Dirty Pretty Things is my all time favorite.
We saw Kinky Boots on 3/9 in NYC and LOVED it! In all honesty,I just went for a good ol’ time, but ended up as the receiver of a loving message: tolerance and acceptance can turn into genuine friendship and even success. Callum Francis was divine as were his castmates.