Sunday Times

Enter lion, so film star exits cage left

- By CRAIG JACOBS

● He’s battled eerie monsters alongside Angelina Jolie in Tomb Raider, joined Russell Crowe’s band of brave warriors in Gladiator and shone the spotlight on the illegal gem trade in Blood Diamond.

But this week’s role was the most nerveracki­ng for Hollywood heartthrob Djimon Hounsou. His co-star was a 200kg lion named Vayetse.

Hounsou, 55, was in SA to film a campaign about the plight of Africa’s lions, whose population is estimated to have dwindled to 20,000 in the wild. Lions are now being killed by poachers for their skeletons, a substitute for sought-after tiger bones in Asia.

“Lions play a significan­t role in balancing our natural world,” Hounsou said. “It is imperative that we make sure that we don’t extinguish our African animal heritage. They are on the brink of extinction. It is our inherent obligation to make sure that the lions are free and preserved for generation­s to come.”

Hounsou was in SA as part of WildAid’s project to stop illegal wildlife trade. The San Francisco-based environmen­tal organisati­on believes that suppressin­g the demand for wildlife products, among them ivory, rhino horn and shark-fin soup, would support conservati­on.

And rather than preaching or using scare tactics, WildAid uses celebritie­s to convey its message: when the buying stops, the killing can too. Other celebritie­s drawn into the campaign are footballer David Beckham, martial arts exponent Jackie Chan, Academy Award winner Lupita Nyong’o, animated panda Master Po Ping of Kung Fu Panda fame and Hounsou’s Blood Diamond co-star Leonardo DiCaprio.

On Thursday, at the Kevin Richardson Wildlife Sanctuary in Cullinan near Pretoria,

Hounsou looked the picture of a calm Hollywood action man as he waited in a black metal cage for his cue to appear with Vayetse.

The sanctuary belongs to Richardson, the “lion whisperer” who has attracted a global YouTube audience enthralled by his bonding with lions named Meg, Amy and Bobcat. He is regularly seen taking the lions on walks in online videos.

“I didn’t realise it was Kevin that we were coming to see this morning,” said Hounsou. “I thought: I know this face, wow, we are in the right place to be looking at and reporting on the lions.”

In the scene being shot, which will form part of the WildAid campaign highlighti­ng the plight of the lions and will be released next year, he was expected to say the line, “Because poaching steals from us all.”

All the while, out of his line of sight, Vayetse looms behind his shoulder, with Richardson, who is armed with only a stick upon which he puts a chunk of meat to lure the lion, just out of camera shot.

With no fancy Hollywood CGI tricks employed, nerves of steel are needed as the lion comes within a ruler’s length of the actor.

However, Hounsou puts his acting skill to good use, delivering the line before quickly escaping into the safety of the metal cage.

The actor said he felt comfortabl­e placing his trust in Richardson for his safety. And rather than feeling threatened, he was in awe of the powerfully built cat.

“I kept thinking how clearly insignific­ant we really are in front of such a beautiful creature,” said Hounsou.

 ?? Picture: Sebabatso Mosamo ?? Actor Djimon Hounsou and his co-star Vayetse, who feature in a campaign on wildlife protection.
Picture: Sebabatso Mosamo Actor Djimon Hounsou and his co-star Vayetse, who feature in a campaign on wildlife protection.

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