WASIA MOHAMED: THE STRENGTH OF SILENT LOYALTY
As screenwriters, we often craft characters who serve as mirrors — reflections of resilience, of quiet strength, of the loyalty that endures even when it fractures under its own hidden weight. In Kan’bulo, that mirror is Maree. And bringing her to life with sincerity and depth is the talented Wasia Mohamed, a young actor whose performance has exceeded every expectation.
Maree’s character was always designed to walk a delicate line. On the surface, she is the steadfast friend — the one who remains when others fade, the one who stands shoulder-to-shoulder with Kan’bulo even when the world feels impossible. But beneath that loyalty is complexity. Maree carries layers the audience may not see at first glance — contradictions, internal struggles, and choices born from survival. These dimensions required an actor who could convey strength without bravado, vulnerability without overt displays of weakness. Wasia brought precisely that.
What struck me most while watching the dailies and the rough cut is Wasia’s understanding of emotional rhythm. She knows when to hold back. She knows when to let the cracks show. And more importantly, she understands that Maree’s impact is not in dramatic declarations but in her presence — her being there, quietly, consistently, even when it costs her something.
From a writing perspective, Maree is a vital piece of the film’s emotional architecture. She softens the darkness while never being spared from it. Watching Wasia step into this role with such maturity and nuance affirms why emerging talents deserve space in stories like this. Her work doesn’t demand attention; it earns it, moment by moment, scene by scene.
In Kan’bulo, loyalty and friendship aren’t written as easy. They’re written as choices — and Wasia Mohamed reminds us, through Maree, just how powerful those choices can be.
Kan’bulo is set to be released on 31 August 2025.
