Wambui Kairo is the director and owner of One Boy Productions, a film production company in Nairobi.
If
I am having a shoot, I wake up before 4am, but on other days I wake up
at 6am. The first thing I do is take a cup of tea as I respond to the
most urgent emails. I leave the house at around eight in the morning and
get to the office at around 9am.
At the office, I
confirm the day’s schedule and plan for the meetings I need to attend.
These include meetings with clients or with colleagues at the Creative
Content Task Force, the Kenya Oscars Committee, and Kenya Film and
Television Professionals Association where I sit in various capacities.
My company provides production services for local and foreign projects like advertisements, documentaries, films, and TV shows.
This
is not an industry for the faint-hearted. Personally, I operate under
the ‘ability to work long and odd hours’ cliché. I have worked my way up
from a production runner all the way to a producer and a production
company owner.
This is my sixth year since I started One Boy. I pride myself for having brought the Hollywood production crew for the movie First Grader
– a film about Kimani Maruge, the oldest pupil in the world then – here
rather than the destined production location in South Africa. It has
not been easy and the biggest virtue I have learned is the art of
working hard day after day.
HANDS-ON FILMAKER
I
am a hands-on person and apart from being a professional filmmaker, I
prefer to handle all aspects of production from administration to
logistics. It is a demanding job and the working hours are determined by
a production’s schedule.
Once in a while, we get
caught up in an interesting scenario on the job. For instance, there was
this time we got stranded in the middle of Amboseli National park while
filming. I arrived at the park’s airstrip en route to our next filming
location and while there, I realised that the chartered flight I had
ordered was less two seats.
Given the situation, a crew
member and I opted to stay behind, but after the plane had left it
dawned on us that we were literally stranded in the middle of a national
park full of wild animals. With no one in sight but wild animals, we
decided to work out a way out of the park on foot and despite the danger
lurking in the shadows, we went out safely.
Although I
come from a big family, I do not have a family of my own yet. So,
whenever I leave work early, you’ll find me dancing or eating out
somewhere. On a normal day, I arrive home by 7pm and watch a movie or
two. Movies are a must in my line of work. If I had a shoot, I work late
into the night and get home at around midnight.
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