Roles of Actors Have Mental Consequences - Adwoa Pee

Veteran actress, Adwoa Pee, explains how the roles of screen performers can impact their personal lives

Roles of Actors Have Mental Consequences - Adwoa Pee
Lilwin in his role

Adwoa Pee has explained that the roles that actors play on TV affect them in real life.

The screen goddess, in an interview with Oman Channel, pointed out that actors are artistes who take up the roles as if it's their lives, and the more skilled actors bond deeply with their roles.

According to her, this is why the public ascribes the characteristics of some movie roles played by an actor to his real-life image.

“I used to play the role of a husband snatcher and because of that people tend to perceive me as a husband snatcher in real life. It is very true that the roles that we play as actors have an effect on us. Sometimes when you are paired with someone as a mother and a daughter when you are even offset you relate to that role."

"The relationship continues. That’s how come myself and the late Suzzy Williams came to relate in real life as a mother and a daughter. It made her death affected me a lot,” she explained.

Known for her amiable face in the industry, Mama Pee as she is fondly called complained about how the crop of actors tend to ignore the significance of the role veterans have played in paving the way for them.

“We paved the way for the industry to be attractive but the current crop doesn’t seem to appreciate that. They have forgotten that some people paved the way for them to have the money they are enjoying now,”

Per her words, nobody values skill in the industry now; directors only want actors with beauty and popularity instead of performers.

“The competition back then was channeled into our performance. Now it’s not about how you can perform. It’s about the number of buildings you have, the number of cars and material possessions. We were acting with our natural beauty but now the industry is full of cosmetic surgery and all this sometimes makes the current crop look down on the veterans."

"They choose who to roll with based on the cars they drive and their riches. That has led to the collapse of the industry,” she concluded.