The upcoming short film, now in post-production, follows the journey of Sadé, a young deaf girl navigating life in Lagos. Through silence, sound, and belonging, the film reframes deafness not as a limitation but as a gift.
At the heart of Ebun are two creative minds: Lucy Oigbochie “Abena”, the producer with a flair for meaningful storytelling, and John Ekeh, the writer-director who has built a career teaching, mentoring, and crafting stories grounded in intimacy and resilience.
In commemoration of Deaf Awareness Week, Pulse Nigeria sat down with both of them to talk about collaboration, representation, and the challenges of bringing Ebun to life.
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The birth of a creative partnership
Abena first met John as her cinematography teacher at EbonyLife Creative Academy. What started as a classroom connection quickly grew into mutual respect.
“He’s very responsible,” Abena recalls. “I knew he was someone I could trust with a project. I could sleep and be sure the work would get done.”
For John, it was Abena’s hunger to learn that stood out. “She already had producing experience,” he says. “But she wanted to understand cinematography deeply. I like people who want to explore filmmaking to the fullest. That’s when I knew we could work together.”
That spark eventually led to Ebun.
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Why “Ebun”?
While many assume the title is a character’s name, John clarifies that Ebun means gift in Yoruba.
“Sadé, the lead character, has lived with hearing loss from birth. Silence became her new normal,” he explains. “At some point, she realises, this isn’t something to fix. This is me. This is my gift.”
The film, then, is about reframing disability as strength, a radical departure from Nollywood’s history of reducing disabilities to mockery or a side narrative.
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