In an interview, she criticised the inauthentic accents used by non‑Nigerian actors when portraying Nigerians, and noted that it makes her cringe.
Pages
▼
Advertisement
Thursday, April 23, 2026
Actress Genevieve Nnaji Calls Out Hollywood Over Fake Nigerian Accents
Veteran Nollywood actress Genevieve Nnaji has said Hollywood is increasingly referencing Nigeria by using Lagos as a setting and adopting Nigerian names like Ayo and Chichi.
In an interview, she criticised the inauthentic accents used by non‑Nigerian actors when portraying Nigerians, and noted that it makes her cringe.
She argued that genuine representation requires casting real Nigerians, and says that Nigerian accents cannot be casually imitated and should be performed by Nigerian actors.
In an interview, she criticised the inauthentic accents used by non‑Nigerian actors when portraying Nigerians, and noted that it makes her cringe.
27 comments:
Disclaimer: Comments And Opinions On Any Part Of This Website Are Opinions Of The Blog Commenters Or Anonymous Persons And They Do Not Represent The Opinion Of StellaDimokoKorkus.com
Pictures and culled stories posted on this site are given credit and if a story is yours but credited to the wrong source,Please contact Stelladimokokorkus.com and corrections will be made..
If you have a complaint or a story,Please Contact StellaDimokoKorkus.com Via
Sdimokokorkus@gmail.com
Mobile Phone +4915210724141


She’s absolutely right π― authenticity matters. Good morning Queen Genny π wherever you are πππ
ReplyDeleteHardly will you watch an Hollywood movie or series and not see something about Nigeria there. Either they are taking about a place here or someone is portrayed as a Nigerian.
ReplyDeleteMovie POWER.
DeleteObi Okeke, Anya etc
And she said the truth even though I think this is an old interview
ReplyDeleteThat's exactly how they felt when them Emeka Ike and Jim Iyke were murdering America accent that year.
ReplyDeleteAboki why???πππππ
DeleteLol ππ
DeleteTell them. They actually learnt it from Nigeriansπ
DeleteDo me i do you. Miss Aboki you nailed it ππ
Deleteπ€£π€£π€£π€£π€£π€£π€£π€£π€£π€£
DeleteAs in anytime I want to laugh like a hyena, I just watch any of their I wanna ganna films.
Especially the one that Jim Iyke was feeling fly displaying his Idumota karate skills ππ€£π€£π€£π€£π€£
Hahahahaha π π π you no well! I don laugh tire π
DeleteLmao π€£π Jim Iyke is sitting comfortably on this table.
DeleteLol π o
DeleteYou wicked
As long as they recognize Nigeria
ReplyDeleteI agree with her i find it very offensive and cringy .
ReplyDeleteOriginality Is Authentic π
ReplyDeleteHello iya Boys
I heard the name Dayo in "the RIP" movie and I was surprised.
ReplyDeleteShe is just pushing for the inclusion of Nigerian actors in Hollywood. This is good. The truth is that imitation is the core of the acting profession. Anything and anyone can be imitated. Any good actor can understudy and mimick any language or accent.
ReplyDeleteExactly! She is genuine, and I hope that interview resonates with people especially Hollywood filmmakers/producers.
DeleteI agree Anon. A good actor should know their onions.
DeleteI agree
DeleteShe is right
ReplyDeleteAbegyy Genny,what if they call some of you Nollywood actors for your awful American accent?? Genny I like you wella but I no agree with you this time.
ReplyDeleteWe're not talking about Nigerians imitation American accents.
DeleteWe're talking about Americans imitating Nigerian accents.
Don't get confused.
FOCUS.
Finally, someone has spoken up. She’s absolutely right!! Nigerian accents are nuanced, with unique expressions, and sometimes they often come with distinct body language as well, which non-Nigerian actors may struggle to replicate. I’m not even sure AI can fully grasp it lol! Imagine A.I giving us H-factor, like howww π
ReplyDeleteHahahahaha π€£
DeleteYour last line is the bomb jare
So apt! This is one thing that made me cringe over The Woman King!
ReplyDelete