
South Africans were glued to their screens on Saturday 1 August as Beyoncé’s visual album, Black Is King, premiered. Yet the focus wasn’t just on Queen B but on the many familiar faces closer to home.
Read more | M-Net to screen Beyoncé’s Black is King across Africa
Actor Nyaniso Dzedze is one of those faces, portraying a grown Simba in the visual album.
“It started with an unexpected phone call last year where I was asked me to change my second honeymoon trip. I said yes and the rest is unfolding as we speak,” the actor says.
Some of things the actor enjoyed about the project was “taking a step back after being part of creating it, watching it and watching the world receive it”.
Nyaniso, who some may know from his role as Jack Mabaso’s right-hand man Luzuko in Generations: The Legacy, is still finding the moment surreal.
“To be honest, I still haven’t landed from the magical whirlwind that is Black Is King and I haven’t made sense of it for myself either. It just feels very divine. Bigger than me and bigger than everyone who was part of it. Yet at the same time, it needed every single being who contributed to make it what it is,” he says.
The actor and dancer was also a part of South African dance movie Hear Me Move back in 2014. He played protagonist Muzi, the son of a famous street dancer, who is trying to discover the truth about his father's tragic death. Nyaniso also played Tsietsi Namane in e.tv telenovela Ashes to Ashes.
DRUM gets to know the actor better and finds out what else he has planned for 2020.
“I’m a South African Xhosa man. I’m an actor and overall performing artist. My biggest drive is to build a bridge of health for people through my art primarily, and through many other magical ways that God has placed within me. My latest mantra is, ‘Beckon the black man to heal. Inspire the black child to dream’.”Nyaniso
studied at the Wits University where most of his performance skills were
crafted. “As for how I got into acting, I
would say it got into me first when I found myself on stage performing in a
major theatre production in high school. Since then one door has led to another
and I’ve found myself working with people I admire, and continue to do so,” the
34-year-old says.
He has been
keeping busy during lockdown by starting Facebook group Acting with Nyaniso
Dzedze where he offers free acting tips to aspiring actors, and being a part of
his friend Ayanda Makayi’s Lockdown Heights Instagram drama series.
Nyaniso
says the page is a platform for men who are ready to face the things that hurt
them. The space is for men to heal, support one another and call one another out
when one of them goes astray. “The mantra there is: ‘Become the man you want
your child to be raised by’,” he explains.
“Connecting
with ancestors is a big part of my daily reality. However, this doesn’t
disconnect me from the Christian God that my mother raised me to know. In fact,
this helps me fill in the many blanks I’ve experienced growing up.”
Nyaniso has had a fruitful 2020 despite the pandemic that’s taken centre stage. Black Is King isn’t the last of his major career moves though.
“2020
has been a big mirror! It’s showing me every nook and cranny in my life that I
need to look at in order to grow in the direction I feel called to. Just when I
least expect it, something as big and beautiful as Black Is King finally lands
and shows me just how much I am living my purpose.
“I’m
already working on two projects. One the world already knows about, Generations:
The Legacy. The second the world is yet to find out about, and the rest God
will reveal to me in time,” he says.