Age is irrelevant – you don’t have to be a teenager to play one on TV.
That’s the first thought that immediately pops into my mind when I meet ingénue Mapula Mafole. She cuts an enviably tiny, youthful figure, has a pinch-able baby face and is soft-spoken.
It’s thanks to her pint-sized frame that the 29-year-old actress has managed to fool the nation, becoming a household name in the process, playing high school teenager Mapula on e.tv soapie Rhythm City.
For our tête-à-tête, Mafole is rocking a lustrous wig, full face make-up and a pair of jeans, styled with a biker jacket and All Star sneakers.
But despite her cool and trendy look, it’s hard to shake off her on-screen persona and see her for the grown-up she really is.
“I’ve a child-like spirit for sure. I just look really young, but I’m an adult. I’m trying to grow into myself and become the woman that I’m meant to be,” she says.
“Sometimes it’s so frustrating [looking like a teen], like when I’m driving and I get pulled over. I do get hit on by small boys, which is so weird, because I’m just like, ‘dude, calm yourself, I’m actually old enough to be your [big] sister’.”
Although an underdog in her craft, after three years on Rhythm City her hard work is beginning to pay off. Mafole is nominated for Best Supporting Actress in a TV Soap/Telenovela at the 12th annual South African Film and Television Awards (Saftas) taking place on March 24 in Sun City. She will duke it out against Gold Diggers starlet Zimkhitha Nyoka and Suidooster actress Tarryn Lamb.
“I have prayed for this for the longest time. It just came at the most unexpected time.”
Mafole delivers a devastating, nuanced and brutally relatable performance on Rhythm City, playing an orphaned teen caring for her two younger brothers, while juggling her school work.
There always seems to be a dark cloud around her character, who has conquered sexual abuse and violence.
Mafole reveals that she has battled anxiety and depression almost all her life and playing such a meaty role has offered her solace.
” For this role she’s always crying and in a dark place. I know pain, even though it’s not as severe as hers,” she confesses.