Azuka Oforka
British actress and playwright
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Azuka Oforka is an English actress, playwright, and screenwriter, now based in Penarth, South Wales.[1]
- Playwright
- Screenwriter
- Actress
Azuka Oforka | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1981 (age 44–45) London, England, U.K. |
| Occupation |
|
| Education | Academy of Live and Recorded Arts |
| Notable awards | The Stage Debut Award for Best Writer (2024) |
| Parents | Elizabeth Anionwu (mother) |
| Relatives | Lawrence Anionwu (grandfather) Charles Venn (cousin) |
As an actress, she is known for her role as nurse Louise Tyler in Casualty. Oforka's debut play was The Women of Llanrumney, which premiered at the Sherman Theatre in Cardiff in 2024 to critical acclaim.[2]
Early life and education
Oforka was born in 1981[3][4] in London and grew up in the neighbourhood of South Acton[5] Her mother is Dame Elizabeth Anionwu, a nurse and lecturer known for her work in sickle cell disease.[6] Her maternal grandfather was Lawrence Anionwu, a Nigerian diplomat.[7] Oforka was raised by her mother as a single parent.[3][8]
Career
Acting
Oforka worked as an actress before she started writing. She studied acting at the Academy of Live and Recorded Arts (ALRA), graduating in 2005.[9][10] Oforka is known for portraying Louise Tyler in BBC One's medical drama Casualty from 2011 to 2019.[11] Her most recent television role was as ICU nurse Anne Bowland on the ITV1/ITVX series Until I Kill You (2024).[12]
Writing
The Women of Llanrumney (2024)
Oforka was inspired to write the play after her visit to Llanrumney Hall in Cardiff, where she saw a portrait of Captain Henry Morgan displayed without any references to his "brutal legacy of slavery".[2] She wrote the play to address the lack of awareness and acknowledgement of Britain and especially Wales's links to slavery and colonisation.[13]
Set in 1765, on Llanrumney estate in St. Mary, Jamaica, the real-life plantation founded by Captain Henry Morgan[14] the play centred around the lives of enslaved housekeepers, Annie and Cerys, as well as their plantation owning enslaver, Elisabeth Morgan, who had mismanaged the estate to the point of financial collapse.[15][16] The play was premiered in May 2024 at Sherman Theatre, Cardiff,[16] where she had taken part in the writer development programme Unheard Voices two years prior.[17]
Starring Suzanne Packer and Nia Roberts, the production received highly positive reviews, including five stars from The Guardian.[16] The Women of Llanrumney was shortlisted for the Alfred Fagon Award for Black British playwrights in 2024.[18] In the same year, the play also won Oforka a Stage Debut Award for Best Writer, in a joint victory with Sam Grabiner for Boys on the Verge of Tears.[19] The play transferred to Theatre Royal Stratford East in March 2025 before returning to Sherman for an extend run between April and June in the same year.[20][21]
Cross the Line (2025)
Oforka wrote Cross the Line as part of an educational initiative by Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith and Hammersmith and Fulham London Borough Council, developed to teach children in the borough about the signs of county lines drug trafficking and exploitation.[22] The play was performed in touring productions across schools in Hammersmith and Fullham in 2025, and is set to run at Lyric Hammersmith in July 2026.[23] Cross the Line was recognised at the 2025 UK Theatre Awards for Excellence in Arts Education.[24]
Upcoming works
Oforka has been commissioned to write a play for the Welsh National Theatre, newly established by Michael Sheen.[25]
Oforka's next play, ... that last summer, is set to run at the Sherman Theatre in May 2026.[26][27]
Personal life
Oforka moved to Cardiff in 2012 and has resided in Wales since.[1][2]
She has openly spoken about her experience of racism at ALRA and was among the signatories of an open letter that called for the drama school's leadership to take action against racism at the institution.[28]
Oforka is a cousin of her Casualty castmate Charles Venn.[29]
Filmography
Television
| Year | Title | Role | Network/ Production company | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | Casualty | Tania Kearton | BBC One | guest role; Series 19 – Episode 47[30] |
| 2011–2019 | Louise Tyler | regular character; Series 26 to 33[31] | ||
| 2013 | The Sarah Millican Television Programme | Herself | BBC Two | one episode[32] |
| 2021 | Pointless Celebrities | Herself (contestant) | BBC One | Series 13 – Casualty special episode[33] |
| 2024 | Until I Kill You | Anne Bowland | ITV1/ITVX | supporting role; two episodes[34] |
Stage
| Year | Title | Role | Venue(s) | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | The Electric Hills | Kelisha | Everyman Theatre, Liverpool | [35][36] |
Writing credits
Theatre
| Year | Title | Venue(s) | Refs |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | The Women of Llanrumney | 2024, 2025 - Sherman Theatre, Cardiff 2025 - Theatre Royal Stratford East, London |
[37][38] |
| 2025 | Cross the Line | Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith | [39][40] |
| 2026 | ... that last summer † | Sherman Theatre, Cardiff | [27] |
Awards and nominations
| Year | Awards | Category | Nominated work(s) | Result | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | Screen Nation Film and Television Awards | Female Performance in TV | Casualty | Nominated | [41] |
| 2024 | Alfred Fagon Award | The Women of Llanrumney | Shortlisted | [18] | |
| The Stage Debut Awards | Best Writer | Won | [19] | ||
| 2025 | UK Theatre Awards | Excellence in Arts Education | Cross the Line | Won | [24] |
| Standard Theatre Awards | Most promising playwright | The Women of Llanrumney | Nominated | [42] | |
| 2026 | The Offies | Industry and Inclusion | Pending | [43] | |