Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Buyile Mdladla is one smooth criminal in ‘Mother of All’

- DEBASHINE THANGEVELO debashine.thangevelo@inl.co.za

I’VE DONE my fair share of celebrity interviews over the years.

And you never know what kind of feedback you are going to get as some artists can be monosyllab­ic while others are so engaging that they leave an indelible impression. Buyile Mdladla is of the latter ilk.

Aside from being such a consummate profession­al, the passion with which he spoke about his role as Duke in eVOD’s sixth local series, Mother of All, was impressive.

He also revealed an innate understand­ing of how the technical aspects feed into the storytelli­ng process.

The series centres on a faceoff between Nolwazi “Nono” Mathebula (Zenande Mfenyana), an ex-cop who has spent time behind bars. She returns to her daughter and mother and tries to establish some kind of normalcy.

But it’s easier said than done when her path crosses with that of the local gangster, Duke, and, to protect her loved ones, she raises hell with her all-women army of ex-convicts.

Mdladla was head-hunted for the role by director Zuko Ndada. He said: “This is one of the very few projects that I’ve ever been headhunted for. I normally audition and go for callbacks, chemistry tests and screen tests before I land a role.

“For this one, I got a call from the director, Zuko Ndada. I had done one episode of ‘Housekeepe­rs’, which he directed a few months earlier.

“And he gave me a call out of the blue and said, my next project in September is in Durban and there is a role in it that you would be perfect for.

“And then he explained to me what the role was… and the conversati­on didn’t take more than five minutes and I was already jumping up and down …”

The seasoned actor pointed out that he wasn’t swayed at the start of the conversati­on. But when the director pointed out that he wasn’t your garden-variety criminal but an erudite gangster, it sealed the deal.

He added: “He (Duke) is smooth. He’s a cool cat and every bit the Renaissanc­e man. He reads poetry, listens to classical music, collects art, is a connoisseu­r of whisky and expensive cigars and that kind of stuff.

“And that really made me think he is different from the other gangsters, hoodlums, thieves, killers and molesters that I have played.”

That being said, Mdladla expressed a yearning for a more altruistic role.

He laughed: “Please do me a favour, I get typecast a lot in these types of roles. So I’m always the villain who ends up going to jail or I’m dead. So in this article … I would like to, just once, play a character that helps a lady across the street.”

Interestin­gly, this is the first time he is working with Mfenyana but they met years before on the set of SABC1’s flagship soapie, Generation­s. He was shooting his exit scenes and she was just joining the show.

He admitted: “So this collaborat­ion was a lot of fun and some journey.

“It was actually fantastic and I don’t know if you know this but she was the last person to be cast in this because the person who had originally been cast could not make it.”

His high praise of his co-star continued when he spoke of the plethora of fight scenes.

“It is something she had never

done before and, without giving too much away, there are some scenes where she and I have a go at each other and it is quite hectic. And she really holds her own.

“We have stunt co-ordinators on set and they would take us through training and I was very impressed by how she would apply herself; how she would just go all out.”

With the series shot in Durban, a lot of actors from the city were cast in supporting roles. And Mdladla was

blown away by some of them.

He shared: “The young man who plays my son, Irvine, he’s just amazing. The first time I met him, we had been asked to come for a photo shoot and he was sitting there and looking shy. I got a little bit concerned, considerin­g how big his storyline is, that he might struggle to be this flamboyant, goodfor-nothing spoilt brat.

“As soon as the camera started rolling, he just came alive, I was like wow, amazing. That is one person who really impressed me. His name is Linda Brian Khumalo.”

The actor continued: “I was also impressed with Lynn Nelisa Willem, who plays Fufu. I had never seen any of her work before. Also, just like Brian, she seemed very introverte­d but as soon as somebody called ‘action’, she just came alive. And I loved their sense of profession­alism as well.”

For someone who has been in the industry for some time, it is clear that Mdladla takes his craft seriously. Not only that, he appreciate­s others who do the same.

And that is why he loved working with Ndada as well.

He explained: “Zuko is a lovely director. I love directors who let you, as an actor, express yourself. He would come tell you how he’s going to frame the scene.

“Before I even flew to Durban, he sent me a PowerPoint presentati­on of how he had conceptual­ised the whole thing… ”

Mdladla added: “Another thing I really liked is the storyline itself. It’s not just a narrative about a gangster who goes around killing people. It’s a very interestin­g story about crime and consequenc­es, about people who punch above their weight and beat their odds.

“This group of female ex-convicts who have nowhere to go and get adopted by this middle-aged woman; she gives them the opportunit­y to reintegrat­e into society and, through that, they cross paths with Duke and that is where the story is.”

Before our chat ended, Mdladla revealed he was in Durban once again to film a Netflix offering. But that remained conversati­on for another time as he had to return to the set.

 ?? All. Mother of ?? BUYILE Mdladla as Duke with newcomer Linda Brian Khumalo as his son Irvine in
| Supplied
All. Mother of BUYILE Mdladla as Duke with newcomer Linda Brian Khumalo as his son Irvine in | Supplied

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